Well, well, well…the plot thickens

KozmasAgain

All-American
Sep 23, 2016
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When schools like Louisville, Memphis, Cincinnati or other urban schools get investigated nobody cares. So the NCAA will hammer them just to prove they’re still relevant. When state schools get investigated like sUcK, North Carolina or Kansas then the politicians step in and threaten the NCAA so nothing happens. I am hoping for them to dismantle the NCAA . They are corrupt from top to bottom including the selection committee.
 

CommodoreCard

All-Conference
Jun 10, 2005
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When schools like Louisville, Memphis, Cincinnati or other urban schools get investigated nobody cares. So the NCAA will hammer them just to prove they’re still relevant. When state schools get investigated like sUcK, North Carolina or Kansas then the politicians step in and threaten the NCAA so nothing happens. I am hoping for them to dismantle the NCAA . They are corrupt from top to bottom including the selection committee.
They love to nail the HBCUs all the time too. They know these schools have limited recourses to fight back. Seems like every year some member of the SWAC gets put on probation. For little things, nothing big like Kansas and LSU.
 

2330859

All-American
Nov 28, 2002
12,145
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Thanks for sharing this OP Oldham!

I have little expectation this trend will result in the NCAA releasing UL of any further sanctions, as the momentum we are witnessing may take more time before the sanctimonious COI acknowledge their own hypocrisy. I am most encouraged however by these development, as the NIL essentially makes these recruiting violations appear as legitimate.
 

Thecycle27

All-Conference
Sep 17, 2017
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The NCAA is trying to please too many people instead of focusing on their whole purpose taking care of the student athlete. Their attempt to level the playing field is an impossible goal.

I think the backlash from Oklahoma State will help. I think that as much as anything has impacted how they have shifted to penalizing the coach instead of the kids.

Coaches are big boys they know the game. They cheat they should be held accountable. I think the Mack suspension is a great example of how suspending a coach for significant time can impact the team. That is much more effective than issuing post season bans.
 

MikesMarbles

All-Conference
Dec 31, 2002
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I don't think any of the enforcement is effective. The best thing to come along that will limit cheating is NIL. Literally, you have to be either lazy or stupid to get caught giving players money under the table now.
 

Thecycle27

All-Conference
Sep 17, 2017
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I agree because NCAA can’t or won’t enforce the rules equally. The NCAA doesn’t have the bodies to properly police their rules. Their enforcement process has built in bias/conflicts of interest. It is a broken system.
 

MikesMarbles

All-Conference
Dec 31, 2002
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I think the idea behind NCAA enforcement was to give schools cover, and to keep the government from looking too closely. Now that the Supreme Court has weighed in, and it looks like Congress is taking a strong look at them, NCAA enforcement is a complete failure and should be dismantled.