Oklahoma Sooners Football Blog

Oklahoma Sooners Blog

GNEXTINC.com: Oklahoma Sooners Football

Subscribe to Oklahoma Sooners Blog: RSS - XML

2009 Info: I've updated roster, depth chart and schedule pages for 2009.

 
Web GNEXTINC.com

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

NCAA Lays the Law Down to Oklahoma -- Sooners to Vacate Wins

The University of Oklahoma to vacate 2005 wins: The NCAA Division I Committee on Infractions has penalized the University of Oklahoma for major violations in its football program.

These violations involve three football student-athletes receiving payment for work not performed at a Norman, Oklahoma automobile dealership. The impermissible benefits totaled approximately $17,000 in unearned wages and led to the committee finding that the institution failed to monitor the employment of football student-athletes.

Penalties for the violations include adding two years to the university's current probationary period, a reduction in allowable financial aid, and a vacation of records for the 2005 season including a bowl game victory.

The committee stated in its report that, "although this case centered on a few violations involving three student-athletes, the committee finds this case to be significant and serious for several reasons." These reasons include the value of the extra benefits provided by a booster; the fact that the violations continued over several months, which led to two of the student-athletes competing while ineligible; and the university had appeared before the committee only one year earlier for a case in which the committee found that the institution failed to monitor the men's basketball staff's telephone contacts with prospective student-athletes.

The violations were intentional on the part of the involved student-athletes and the dealership's manager, who was also a representative of the university's athletics interest. Two of the involved student-athletes received payment from the dealership for time that they were participating in football practices and voluntary workouts, attending class and otherwise away from the dealership.

As a regular practice, the two student-athletes clocked in for work, left the dealership, then returned later to clock out of work. On other occasions, one of them would clock the other in or out, so that both would be paid when only one was present. Based on records obtained from the dealership, it was also found that the third student-athlete was also clocked in and paid for times that he did not work, including time that was spent participating in a scrimmage and game.

In finding that the university demonstrated a failure to monitor, the committee noted the university failed to follow established procedures for the monitoring of student-athletes' employment when it did not timely collect gross earnings statements for 12 student-athletes who notified the university of their employment at the auto dealership during the 2005 summer vacation period. It was also found that the university failed to detect that football student-athletes worked at the auto dealership during the 2004-05 and 2005-06 fall and spring academic terms.

The university disagreed that facts of the case demonstrated a failure to monitor, stating that the compliance monitoring system was adequate and effective, but could not have been expected to detect this specific situation. The university noted that the situation involved student-athletes, in concert with the dealership's manager, engaging "in a deliberate scheme to deceive both the employer's payroll system and the university's employment monitoring system in an attempt to violate NCAA rules of which they were well aware."

However, the committee found that the university "made several mistakes in a narrow, but significant area – the employment of football student-athletes at the dealership, which resulted in a breakdown of its monitoring. When such mistakes result in significant violations of NCAA legislation, as in this case, a finding of failure to monitor is appropriate and justified."

The committee stated that because the dealership was the apparent largest employer of student-athletes, the university should have undertaken more extensive efforts to monitor the student-athletes' employment. It was noted that the university relied on the initiative of the football student-athletes to register their employment with the school as the only means of triggering the monitoring process. The committee also stated that the delay in detecting the violations meant that two of the student-athletes were able to compete during the entire 2005 season and practice during the spring of 2006.

In determining the penalties, the Committee on Infractions considered the university's self-imposed penalties and corrective actions. The penalties, some of which were self-imposed by the institution and adopted by the committee, are as follows:


-Public reprimand and censure.

-Two additional years of probation to be added to the conclusion of the institution's current probationary period. As a result, the institution's extended probationary period will expire on May 23, 2010.

-The institution permanently dismissed two student-athletes from the football team at the point when it determined they had knowingly and willfully been involved in receiving payment for work not performed. The third student-athlete had been previously dismissed for violations of team rules (self-imposed by the university).

-During the 2006-07 academic year, the university did not re-award or reallocate the financial aid awarded to the two dismissed student-athletes, resulting in a reduction of two scholarships in football (self-imposed by the university). The university shall further reduce football scholarships by two for each of the 2008-09 and 2009-10 academic years. This limits the university to a total of 83 football scholarships for those two years.

-Vacation of all wins in which the two ineligible student-athletes competed during the 2005 football season. The individual records of these student-athletes shall be vacated as well. Further, the university's records regarding football as well as the record of the head coach will be reconfigured to reflect the vacated wins and so recorded in all publications in which football records for the 2005 season are reported, including, but not limited to, university media guides, recruiting material, and university and NCAA archives. Finally, any public reference to these vacated contests, including the bowl game, won during this time shall be removed from athletics department stationary, banners displayed in public areas and any other forum in which they may appear.

-The institution disassociated the dealership's manager who supervised the student-athletes at the center of this case. This period of disassociation will be for at least five years (until Aug. 21, 2011) (self-imposed by the university).

-The committee further requires that the dealership manager be restricted from supervising or otherwise overseeing, in an employment capacity, any of the university's student-athletes during the five-year period.

-The university will reduce the number of football coaches who can recruit off campus by one during the fall 2007 evaluation period (self-imposed by the university).

The Committee on Infractions consists of conference and institutional athletics administrators, faculty and members of the public. The committee independently rules on cases investigated by the NCAA enforcement staff and determines appropriate penalties. The committee's findings may be appealed to the Infractions Appeals Committee.

Members of the Committee on Infractions who reviewed this case are Paul Dee, director of athletics at the University of Miami, formerly the university's general counsel, and acting chair; Eileen Jennings, general counsel at Central Michigan University; Alfred "Jim" Lechner, Jr., attorney with the Westfield, N.J., law firm of Lerner David and formerly a federal district judge in New Jersey; Gene Marsh, James M. Kidd Sr. Professor of Law at the University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa School of Law; Thomas Phillips, attorney with the Austin, Texas, office of the law firm Baker Botts and formerly the chief justice of the Texas Supreme Court; Bonnie Slatton, professor of physical education and sport science, University of Iowa; and Dennis Thomas, the commissioner of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference and formerly director of athletics at Hampton University. (NCAA PR)

As a result Oklahoma will finish the 2005 season record as 0-4. Forfeiting all regular and post-season games. Including, Oklahoma's 2005 Holiday Bowl victory over Oregon.

More to come....

*Updated

Labels: , , , , ,

Comments:

Anonymous JAY said...

When does the NCAA come down on USC for the Reggie Bush infractions?

8:14 PM

 

<< Home

Sponsor: SeanJohn.com
Sean John - Shop Now!

MySpace Graphics: Show your Oklahoma pride, add Oklahoma Sooners Graphics to your MySpace profile!

Add Oklahoma Sooners Blog: MySpace

 

Businesses start advertising today!

Oklahoma Sooners Blog

Editor: Gilbert Sam, Jr.

Tip? Comment? Error? Email Me: gilbert.sam.jr@gnextinc.com

Add on Twitter
Add Facebook page

Add to Homepage

Add to Google

Add to MyYahoo

Add to My AOL

Oklahoma Sooners Links

Oklahoma Sooners Blog

2009 OU Schedule

Next Game

Depth Chart

Polls/Rankings

Recruiting

Roster

Stats

Video

Media/Radio/TV

Newsletter and Group

Oklahoma Sooners Shop

OU MySpace Graphics

OU Links

OU Football History

All-Americans

All-Conference

Awards History

Bowl History

Championship History

Coaching History

OU Passing Records

OU Rushing Records

Sooners in the NFL Draft

Sooners in the BCS

Yearly Record

OU Football Post

NCAA Announcement on Oklahoma Violations Today

AD Featured in '08 NCAA Football Commerical

Oklahoma vs. Cincinnati Slated for 2008 and 2010?

Former Sooner Making a Name in the AFL

(7/10) Big 12 Media Days Around the Corner

(7/9) Oklahoma Sooner Football Articles

(7/6) Oklahoma Monitors Athletes to Alert of Head ...

The New SoonerSports.com

Update: Ryan Reynolds' Injury Rehabilitation

(6/27) Bob Stoops Extended Through 2013, 50k Incre...

Oklahoma Sooners Archives

October 2004

November 2004

December 2004

January 2005

February 2005

March 2005

April 2005

May 2005

June 2005

July 2005

August 2005

September 2005

October 2005

November 2005

December 2005

January 2006

February 2006

March 2006

April 2006

May 2006

June 2006

July 2006

August 2006

September 2006

October 2006

November 2006

December 2006

January 2007

February 2007

March 2007

April 2007

May 2007

June 2007

July 2007

August 2007

September 2007

October 2007

December 2007

January 2008

February 2008

March 2008

April 2008

May 2008

June 2008

July 2008

August 2008

September 2008

October 2008

November 2008

December 2008

January 2009

February 2009

March 2009

April 2009

May 2009

June 2009


 

OU Football Players

Sam Bradford

DeMarco Murray

Auston English

Chris Brown

Lendy Holmes

Serving

website stats

Ads

-

Our Partners

Mobile.OUFootball.info

Oklahoma Racing News, Articles and Tidbits

-

GNEXTINC.com l Teen Capitalist l RacewayReport.com l OklahomaRaceConnect.com
© 2009 GNEXTINC.com. All rights reserved. - Site Map - Terms of Service - Advertise with GNEXTINC.com - Search
GNEXTINC.com is in no way associated, affiliated, endorsed with or by The University of Oklahoma, Big 12 Conference, or NCAA. - All material is copyrighted by their respective owners.
7 National Championships | 1950 | 1955 | 1956 | 1974 | 1975 | 1985 | 2000