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superman7515
February 13th, 2012, 07:47 AM
This isn't up anywhere yet that I can find, but if I find that he has published it to a site, I'll give the link....

STORM WARNING II FOR HBCU ATHLETICS?
New rules being considered for implementation as early as August should make HBCUs examine their athletic operations

By ALVIN HOLLINS JR.
Email redacted by superman7515

Sunday, Feb. 12 – Last Friday’s announcement by the NCAA that defending men’s basketball national champion Connecticut (UConn) would be banned from the 2013 basketball tournament because of chronic rules compliance and substandard academics issues was the first salvo in the Association’s latest crusade reassert control over intercollegiate athletics.

The UConn bombshell, came the same week that the NCAA informed Southern University, that its’ waiver application to have the current one-year postseason ban on its’ men’s basketball team lifted would not be heard, which was disappointing in the wake of the Jaguars’ dramatic turnaround this season with 13 wins versus nine the previous two years combined.

But the NCAA, recognizing that the general public, politicians and the media have questioned its’ capacity to govern its’ member institutions, who have in the past year alone have plumbed the depths of what it means to be outlaw, with coaches and administrators covering up violations, players and athletic personnel engaging in illegal activities and receiving improper benefits, has begun its’ push back against the apparent corrupting influences and behaviors that have threatened to bring the house down.

So as conferences break up and realign, while negotiating billion dollar media deals which only create more distance between the haves and have nots in college athletics, the NCAA has decided to become a 21st Century version of the legendary Eliot Ness and the Untouchables, proposing a new set of guidelines for Division One that at first glance might appear to be slightly less draconian than Prohibition.

NCAA president Mark Emmert has promised a more nimble and effective organization—and one that more severely punishes rule breakers, and the panel formed by the NCAA to propose stiffer penalties for major rules violations has suggested punishments that are eye catching to say the least.

The plan clearly lays out proposed sanctions aimed at hitting hard those who commit academic fraud, willfully provide illicit benefits for athletes and for programs found guilty of a lack of institutional control, penalties which would include postseason bans of three or more years, fines that could reach $1 million or more, season-long suspensions for coaches and 10-year show-cause penalties for coaches and administrators.

The plan is currently being mulled over by the NCAA membership—that is, schools and conferences—for feedback. Then, the plan will go to the Division I board of directors in late April. If approved, the penalties would go into effect in August.

The proposed penalties include:

— A postseason ban of three or more years in severe cases or standard length of one or two years.

— A fine of up to 5 percent of a program’s budget. The standard would be 1-3 percent, the paper reports.

— A loss of up to half of a team’s scholarships, while the standard would be 12-1/2 percent to 25 percent.

— Season-long coach suspensions. The standard would be 20-50 percent of scheduled events.

— Up to 10 years in which a coach or administrator would have a show-cause penalty attached to his record, far more than the standard two to five years.

— Probationary periods of as many as six to 10 years, above the standard two to six years.

So what does this mean for the Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) that moved to Division One in the late 1970s and early 1980s, many of whom find themselves languishing in the backwaters of the division, because of not having had any long term strategic plans to effectively operate at this level?

It means that the day of reckoning has finally dawned, and the crossroads have finally been reached for many, if not all Division One HBCUs.

For years, these schools have played a game of Russian Roulette, all but ignoring it seems, the ever-increasing academic and rules compliance edicts from the NCAA, requiring the specialized staffing most HBCUs did not provide, who instead diverted more and more of their limited financial resources toward administrators, and the coaches of the football and men’s basketball programs, in the vain hopes that revenues from those sports would trickle down and lift the entire department.

Perhaps because these institutions moved up together as conferences – the Mid-Eastern Athletic (MEAC) and the Southwestern Athletic (SWAC) – some of the pain of transition was eased by staying with familiar faces, but that initial comfort zone bred a false sense of security which inhibited the necessary growth and the embracing of new ideas to transition into the NCAA mainstream as viable and competitive entities, leaving the whole in dire straits today.

And now, the NCAA is now calling the bluff of not only HBCUs, but those Division One programs in all conferences to straighten up and fly right, because the alternative is nothing nice, as some schools who have already received a taste of the Association’s castor oil can attest to.

So what must happen now is that the stakeholders in the athletic programs at HBCUs must take a cold, hard, unvarnished look at their situations and decide once and for all if Division One is a neighborhood they can afford to live in.

=========================================

Alvin Hollins Jr., is a former Assistant AD for Communications at Florida A&M University, and now works as a free lance writer and occasional consultant.

Lehigh Football Nation
February 13th, 2012, 10:06 AM
Meanwhile, Auburn, USC and Ohio State are allowed to keep the hundreds of millions of dollars of bowl money they received fielding teams that committed NCAA violations, all of which were known and reported before the bowl games actually happened.

henfan
February 13th, 2012, 11:52 AM
The NCAA is powerless to enact tougher measures without protection for and complete buy in from the power conferences. If the legislation threatens to impact any but the very worst offenders or those schools the top non-BCS conferences, it will either be gutted or rejected outright.

Jiggs
February 13th, 2012, 12:41 PM
Meanwhile, Auburn, USC and Ohio State are allowed to keep the hundreds of millions of dollars of bowl money they received fielding teams that committed NCAA violations, all of which were known and reported before the bowl games actually happened.

And, specifcally, what were the violations committed by Auburn?

Lehigh Football Nation
February 13th, 2012, 01:04 PM
And, specifcally, what were the violations committed by Auburn?

They fielded a non-amateur athlete.


On November 30, Auburn declared Cam Newton ineligible after the NCAA found evidence that Cecil Newton solicited Mississippi State $120,000 to $180,000 in exchange for Cam Newton's athletic service, a violation of amateurism. Auburn immediately filed to have him reinstated on the basis that Kenny Rogers could not be considered an agent and that Cam Newton was not aware of his father’s illegal activity. The NCAA eventually sided with Auburn and reinstated Newton the next day on December 1, declaring him eligible for the 2010 SEC Championship Game three days later, stating that there was not sufficient evidence that Cam Newton or anyone from Auburn had any knowledge of Cecil Newton's actions.

The NCAA "sided with Auburn" in saying said Newton supposedly didn't know of the actions of his own father in securing a scholarship for him. But his father's actions with Mississippi State, which nobody is denying as untrue, at that moment made him ineligible to play football. I suppose you can say that it cannot be proven that Auburn violated any NCAA rules, but they unquestionably bent the rules on Newton's eligibility in order for them to win an SEC championship and a BCS crystal ball.

Jiggs
February 14th, 2012, 04:29 PM
They fielded a non-amateur athlete.

They never fielded a non-amateur athlete. They self-reported a situation that could have jeopardized Newton's amateur status. The NCAA determined that Newton's amateur status remained. Why else would they have allowed him to play?