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UNC

  • The sh!t hits the fan at 2:30 pm today. Includes bowl ban, more scholies lost than expected, bigger fine than expected.

    HokieJeff

  • How do you know what it includes?

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    vtfan_90

  • All lies. I just talked with willbill and this should be resolved by August, 2010, with nothing coming of it.

    As I mentioned before, if the NCAA uses the new penalty matrix, and I think they have to, UNC will get hammered with mimimum of 1 bowl ban, 2 is very possible. 10 schollies per year is very realistic. We'll know soon.

    VTSmitty

  • Hoping this is not cosmetic.....want to see the hammer come down........

    78hokie

  • vtfan_90 said...

    How do you know what it includes?

    This is what is being reported by UNC insiders on their scout site right now

    John Iezzi

  • jnl123 said...

    This is what is being reported by UNC insiders on their scout site right now

    OK thanks just curious hammer

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    vtfan_90

  • Plus HokieJeff knows all things UNC

    HokieHigh

  • One year bowl ban
    20 schollies over 4 years
    UNC will not appeal

    HokieJeff

  • that's the announcement?? I was hoping for multiple year bowl ban!

    Platinum_Hokie

  • Platinum_Hokie said...

    that's the announcement?? I was hoping for multiple year bowl ban!

    Yeah me too hoping for multiple bowl bans....

    hokietitan25154898

  • one year bowl ban? no fines? what kind of a joke is that? Will 20 scholarships really harm a school? wow.. 9 violations or whatever it was and that's it?

    DEXTERITY

  • That a pretty big hammer on them. They had a crap class last year. They news to get to a bowl to lose one.

    HNB

  • HokieJeff said...

    One year bowl ban 20 schollies over 4 years UNC will not appeal

    failbummer

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    vtfan_90

  • twitter claiming 15 scholies only

    Platinum_Hokie

  • Slap on the wrist it is. That is way to light with as many different BS things that were going on there.

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    govt83

  • And with that announcement, cheers arose from agents around the country.

    josgood

  • It's 15 over 3 years...they shouldn't appeal, just shut up an be thankful.

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    govt83

  • govt83 said...

    Slap on the wrist it is. That is way to light with as many different BS things that were going on there.

    20 schoarlships is a ton of schollies not to mention the bowl ban.

    This is not a slap on the wrist at all.

    Champ289

  • per ncaa site, 15 scholarships... what a f'n joke!!!!

    The penalties in this case include:

    Public reprimand and censure.
    Three years of probation from March 12, 2012, through March 11, 2015.
    Three-year show-cause penalty for the former assistant football coach prohibiting any recruiting activity. The public report contains further details.
    Postseason ban for the 2012 football season.
    Reduction of football scholarships by a total of 15 during three academic years. The public report includes further details.
    Vacation of wins during the 2008 and 2009 seasons (self-imposed by the university). The public report includes further details.
    $50,000 fine (self-imposed by the university).
    Disassociation of both the former tutor and former student-athlete who served as an agent runner (self-imposed by the university).

    Unknown Titlke

    http://ncaa.org/wps/wcm/connect/public/ncaa/resources/latest news/2012/march/unc receives postseason ban scholarship reductions

    ncaa.org

    DEXTERITY

  • josgood said...

    And with that announcement, cheers arose from agents around the country.

    Not only agents...sends the message that's been around forever...if you ain't cheating, you ain't trying.

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    govt83

  • DEXTERITY said...

    per ncaa site, 15 scholarships... what a f'n joke!!!!

    The penalties in this case include:

    Public reprimand and censure. Three years of probation from March 12, 2012, through March 11, 2015. Three-year show-cause penalty for the former assistant football coach prohibiting any recruiting activity. The public report contains further details. Postseason ban for the 2012 football season. Reduction of football scholarships by a total of 15 during three academic years. The public report includes further details. Vacation of wins during the 2008 and 2009 seasons (self-imposed by the university). The public report includes further details. $50,000 fine (self-imposed by the university). Disassociation of both the former tutor and former student-athlete who served as an agent runner (self-imposed by the university).

    Didn't they recently get a new LOI? Could it be possible that they've already broken their probation?

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    HokieStone91

  • HokieStone91 said...

    Didn't they recently get a new LOI? Could it be possible that they've already broken their probation?

    Rumor out there a new LOI was coming, but nothing official.

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    govt83

  • supposedly that was the rumor out there.. this is mind boggling.. read the info below then tell me how that is the only punishment they receive:

    UNC receives postseason ban, scholarship reductions

    University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill is responsible for multiple violations, including academic fraud, impermissible agent benefits, ineligible participation and a failure to monitor its football program, according to the decision announced today by the Division I Committee on Infractions.

    Over the course of three seasons, six football student-athletes competed while ineligible as a result of these violations, and multiple student-athletes received impermissible benefits totaling more than $31,000.

    Public Infractions Report

    Read the Public Infractions Report here.

    While employed by the university, a former assistant football coach was compensated by a sports agent for the access he provided to student-athletes and failed to disclose the income to the university. The former assistant coach and a former tutor both committed unethical conduct and failed to cooperate with the investigation.

    “This case should serve as a cautionary tale to all institutions to vigilantly monitor the activities of those student-athletes who possess the potential to be top professional prospects,” the committee stated in its report. “It should also serve to warn student-athletes that if they choose to accept benefits from agents or their associates, they risk losing their eligibility for collegiate competition.”

    Penalties for the case include a one-year postseason ban, reduction of 15 football scholarships, vacation of records and three years probation. The former assistant coach received a three-year show-cause penalty restricting any recruiting activity.

    The academic fraud violations stemmed from the former tutor constructing significant parts of writing assignments for three football student-athletes. The tutor wrote paragraphs for papers, revised drafts, composed “works-cited” pages, researched and edited content and inserted citations, among other violations. The tutor also provided more than $4,000 in impermissible benefits, including airfare and paying for outstanding parking tickets, to 11 football student-athletes after she graduated and was no longer a university employee. The tutor also refused to cooperate with the investigation.

    The former assistant football coach was also cited for a failure to cooperate and unethical conduct. According to the committee, not only did he refuse to provide information relevant to the investigation, but he also furnished false and misleading information. At the hearing, in a reversal of his previous refusal to provide information, the former assistant coach expressed a willingness to provide the pertinent records. However, he did not provide the documents for more than three months following the hearing, resulting in a significant delay in bringing this case to conclusion.

    The former assistant coach also did not report $31,000 in athletically related outside income from a sports agency. According to the committee findings, the former assistant coach was either employed or compensated by the sports agent. It was found that even after returning to college athletics, the former assistant coach continued recruiting clients for the sports agency, including student-athletes he was coaching.

    The committee also found the university failed to monitor its football program, in part when it allowed a former student-athlete to have regular access to current student-athletes at its athletic facilities without any scrutiny. The former student-athlete was deemed an agent runner during the NCAA investigation. In addition, the university failed to investigate information it obtained suggesting one student-athlete, who accepted the most in impermissible cash and benefits, may have violated NCAA agent rules.

    This case also included the provision of thousands of dollars in impermissible benefits to multiple student-athletes. Seven football student-athletes accepted more than $27,500 in benefits from various individuals, some of whom triggered NCAA agent rules. These impermissible benefits included cash, flights, meals, lodging, athletic training, admission to clubs and jewelry, among others. While the value of the benefits the student-athletes accepted varied, one student-athlete received more than $13,500 cash and gifts.

    The university took decisive action after discovering the academic fraud violations and when the former assistant coach’s violations came to light. In addition, the school cooperated fully during the investigation.

    The penalties in this case include:

    Public reprimand and censure.
    Three years of probation from March 12, 2012, through March 11, 2015.
    Three-year show-cause penalty for the former assistant football coach prohibiting any recruiting activity. The public report contains further details.
    Postseason ban for the 2012 football season.
    Reduction of football scholarships by a total of 15 during three academic years. The public report includes further details.
    Vacation of wins during the 2008 and 2009 seasons (self-imposed by the university). The public report includes further details.
    $50,000 fine (self-imposed by the university).
    Disassociation of both the former tutor and former student-athlete who served as an agent runner (self-imposed by the university).

    DEXTERITY

  • Didn't UNC forfeit 5 scholarships as well as part of their own self-penalties?

    jc4vthokies

  • govt83 said...

    Rumor out there a new LOI was coming, but nothing official.

    Probation period begins today.

    VTSmitty