Roys name is carved under so many desks in the NCAA office.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
UNC Academic Scandal
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by The Mad Hatter View PostI get the notion that the NCAA doesn't have jurisdiction over the courses themselves since it isn't an exclusively athletics issue, but as others have noted, what I don't understand is how the NCAA could argue that said classes have no bearing on the eligibility of UNC athletes (and therefore the wins of UNC athletics by playing ineligible athletes). The NCAA regularly declares students ineligible based on failing to meet academic standards in their coursework (especially high school coursework). In what world does the NCAA not have jurisdiction to likewise rule that known academic fraud at UNC invalidates the eligibility of athletes involved and therefore requires wins from those athletes to be vacated (and even the claim that the students and coaches didn't know it was wrong - which itself seems dubious - is irrelevant since the NCAA's ruling on eligibility based on coursework are not about intent, but about academic standards).Last edited by another shocker; October 15, 2017, 12:07 AM.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Walker View PostI wonder if Louisville can come back after all of this and say, "Hey, we should have our 2013 title reinstated because we made hookers and blow available to non-athlete students as well. We can verify that 47% non-athletes benefited from the hookers and blow program, and those numbers climb to a stout 53% when you count the the students that chose either hookers or blow rather than both."
Comment
-
Doesn't the NCAA not only require a minimum GPA to be eligible, but also certain "core course" credits and recently tightened what credits would transfer from Jucos. How is accreditation of classes once on campus different?"I not sure that I've ever been around a more competitive player or young man than Fred VanVleet. I like to win more than 99.9% of the people in this world, but he may top me." -- Gregg Marshall 12/23/13 :peaceful:
---------------------------------------
Remember when Nancy Pelosi said about Obamacare:
"We have to pass it, to find out what's in it".
A physician called into a radio show and said:
"That's the definition of a stool sample."
Comment
-
Originally posted by im4wsu View PostDoesn't the NCAA not only require a minimum GPA to be eligible, but also certain "core course" credits and recently tightened what credits would transfer from Jucos. How is accreditation of classes once on campus different?
Comment
-
Originally posted by im4wsu View PostDoesn't the NCAA not only require a minimum GPA to be eligible, but also certain "core course" credits and recently tightened what credits would transfer from Jucos. How is accreditation of classes once on campus different?
Comment
-
Originally posted by mattdalt View PostI think the NCAA is within its boundries to require certain courses, and maybe even a certain level of proficiency within that course. But to think the NCAA is in the business of accredidaton is wrong. Schools are responsible for the academic integrity of their courses, with oversight from the appropriate accrediting agency. These classes by UNC were not fraudulent. They were real classes, just not real hard classes. They also did not meet the academic standards of UNC or of the accrediting agency, therefore they were put on academic probation.
https://www.cbssports.com/college-basketball/news/major-national-accreditation-agency-considered-dropping-north-carolina/Last edited by The Mad Hatter; October 15, 2017, 02:38 PM."Cotton scared me - I left him alone." - B4MSU (Bear Nation poster) in reference to heckling players
Comment
-
The NCAA is run by a bunch of old soulless bastards. No surprise that they kneeled before the Tar Heel.The boundaries which divide Life from Death are at best shadowy and vague. Who shall say where the one ends, and where the other begins?
Comment
-
Originally posted by mattdalt View PostThey were real classes, just not real hard classes. They also did not meet the academic standards of UNC or of the accrediting agency, therefore they were put on academic probation.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Shockers5150 View PostMost of you just want power 5s punched. You should maybe read more about the issue before spouting off.
So, yeah. I want the Power 5 punched. Obviously you were right (and what a burden it was, I'm sure) and there was no case, but it was the best shot we had at justice. I suppose we'll have to settle for UNC having to admit that it gave sham classes (I've already replaced "Close enough for government work" with "Close enough for UNC Coursework" in my daily lexicon), but all that shame does is bring them slightly down to the level of Kentucky. They still got to hang a banner on Friday.
Comment
-
Great take I'll paraphrase from Gary Parrish on their recent podcast -
The NCAA has always attested that student athletes held amateur status and were rewarded with a great education. In the last three weeks, we've been shown that they're clearly not amateurs (because they get paid hundreds of thousands of dollars) and that the education they receive is practically non-existent."Say it slowly and savor it..."
Nothing worse than sCUm/sKUm
Comment
-
Originally posted by another shocker View Postany other school pulling this stunt would have been screwed, blued and tattooed.
And here we go...
Here's two more times the NCAA is failing to rule sensibly on players' academic issues
Oakland's Jalen Hayes and Colorado's Evan Battey both got ridiculous rulings from the NCAA
""It's a little bit ironic to me with all the things that are going on in college basketball," Colorado coach Tad Boyle told reporters Thursday when he announced Battey has been ruled ineligible to compete as a freshman. "North Carolina academic scandal, they lawyer up and fight the NCAA for two years, and they win on a technicality. They get off scot-free. There's an FBI investigation going on. There's four assistant coaches that have been arrested by the FBI. As of today, nothing has happened to those four schools. No ramifications for those sorts of things. But you have a kid who struggled a little bit when he was 13 years old in the classroom due to a lot of personal and family issues he was dealing with at the time, and he gets stuck sitting out this year."
https://www.cbssports.com/college-ba...ademic-issues/"You Just Want to Slap The #### Outta Some People"
Comment
Comment