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Syracuse did not control athletics; basketball coach failed to monitor | NCAA Home Page - NCAA.org
So basically, Syracuse had a bunch of violations. They did lots and lots wrong over a long period of time. The end result is sanctions that as outlined in the article... 3 scholarships a year for four years (HUGE in basketball), 1 year post-season ban, suspension for Boeheim, and vacated wins.
One of the violations they harped on was "extra benefits" for athletes vis a vis impermissible academic assistance from tutors. Here's the kicker... the school actually concluded in it's investigation that no misconduct occurred, but the NCAA said "nah, we know better, that was cheating" and cited it as a violation. Apparently, a sticking point is that this work was done to keep athletes eligible to compete.
A couple takeaways... first, UNC is about to get sodomized. Second, this new tact taken by Emmert (an SEC guy ironically guilty of his own academic scandals to improve graduation rates, eligibility, etc. at LSU) seems to be a real thing. Third, the NCAA is probing a couple dozen schools on academics right now and it follows that Notre Dame is one of them. Fourth, the fact that Eilar Hardy was cleared by the NCAA for reinstatement at least means that his eligibility wasn't completely compromised. Fifth, that doesn't mean that other players (including ones out of school by the time the Frozen Five scandal broke) aren't in hot water or that they would be retroactively ineligible causing Notre Dame to vacate wins. Sixth, whether or not the trainer in question is deemed a representative of the athletic department probably has a huge bearing on whether or not this is a big deal at all... if all the cheating involved students just helping other students AND it's determined ND did it's due diligence in monitoring the work then there is no possibility of extra benefits... but it's scary knowing how hard the NCAA stretches at times to make its case. Seventh, it's hard to see how coverup isn't the best option with how the NCAA is now approaching self-reported penalties.
So basically, Syracuse had a bunch of violations. They did lots and lots wrong over a long period of time. The end result is sanctions that as outlined in the article... 3 scholarships a year for four years (HUGE in basketball), 1 year post-season ban, suspension for Boeheim, and vacated wins.
One of the violations they harped on was "extra benefits" for athletes vis a vis impermissible academic assistance from tutors. Here's the kicker... the school actually concluded in it's investigation that no misconduct occurred, but the NCAA said "nah, we know better, that was cheating" and cited it as a violation. Apparently, a sticking point is that this work was done to keep athletes eligible to compete.
A couple takeaways... first, UNC is about to get sodomized. Second, this new tact taken by Emmert (an SEC guy ironically guilty of his own academic scandals to improve graduation rates, eligibility, etc. at LSU) seems to be a real thing. Third, the NCAA is probing a couple dozen schools on academics right now and it follows that Notre Dame is one of them. Fourth, the fact that Eilar Hardy was cleared by the NCAA for reinstatement at least means that his eligibility wasn't completely compromised. Fifth, that doesn't mean that other players (including ones out of school by the time the Frozen Five scandal broke) aren't in hot water or that they would be retroactively ineligible causing Notre Dame to vacate wins. Sixth, whether or not the trainer in question is deemed a representative of the athletic department probably has a huge bearing on whether or not this is a big deal at all... if all the cheating involved students just helping other students AND it's determined ND did it's due diligence in monitoring the work then there is no possibility of extra benefits... but it's scary knowing how hard the NCAA stretches at times to make its case. Seventh, it's hard to see how coverup isn't the best option with how the NCAA is now approaching self-reported penalties.