TN Volunteers avoid bowl ban as NCAA finds over 200 violations

BleedGopher

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 11, 2008
Messages
61,981
Reaction score
18,172
Points
113
per ESPN:

The Tennessee football program avoided a bowl ban but was fined more than $8 million by the NCAA Division I Committee on Infractions, which announced its punishment for the Volunteers on Friday after finding more than 200 individual infractions committed by the school during former coach Jeremy Pruitt's tenure.

Among the penalties handed down, Tennessee has been placed on five years' probation, was given an $8 million fine among other financial penalties that will push the total closer to $9 million, and will see a total reduction of 28 scholarships.

The $8 million fine, which the NCAA said was "equivalent to the financial impact the school would have faced if it missed the postseason during the 2023 and 2024 seasons," is believed to be the largest ever levied in an infractions case.

"The panel encountered a challenging set of circumstances related to prescribing penalties in this case," the infractions committee said in its decision. "The panel urges the Infractions Process Committee and the membership to clearly define its philosophy regarding penalties -- which extends beyond postseason bans -- and memorialize that philosophy in an updated set of penalty guidelines."

The NCAA will require Tennessee to vacate all wins and individual records in any game in which 16 individual sanctioned players participated. The specific games will be announced later.

The Volunteers were credited for their self-imposed 16-scholarship reduction over the past two years and will cut two more scholarships this year, meaning 10 additional scholarships will be taken away over the five-year probation period.

Tennessee had been charged with 18 Level 1 violations -- the most severe in the NCAA rules structure -- in July 2022. Included among the more than 200 infractions were charges of $60,000 in impermissible benefits and both Pruitt and his wife, Casey, making cash payments to players' families.


Go Gophers!!
 


Fining a school the prospective bowl game payout for the period that the ban would take place, along with scholarship restrictions, might be the new punishment.

The program is punished, but the players still have a bowl game to play for.
 

SEC! SEC!

Just another day in that rotten league.
They are not the Gophers who were handed down one of the harshest penalties in college basketball. The NCAA is about the hands that feed it.
 





Anyone know how the scholarship reductions work? Do they have to field a team of less than 85 players on scholarship for a certain number of years with the amount under each year adds up to 28?

For example: They field 78 scholarship players for four years, a 7 scholarship reduction, which adds up to 28. Anyone know if this is how it works?
 
Last edited:

Jeremy Pruitt, an Alabama alum, willingly takes over as head coach for Alabama rival and down-on-their-luck-but-sleeping-giant, Tennessee, and sloppily runs the program by committing hundreds of infractions…

Sus AF, fr, fr, no cap.

the-departed-drama.gif


Rawl tahd!
 




per ESPN:

The Tennessee football program avoided a bowl ban but was fined more than $8 million by the NCAA Division I Committee on Infractions, which announced its punishment for the Volunteers on Friday after finding more than 200 individual infractions committed by the school during former coach Jeremy Pruitt's tenure.

Among the penalties handed down, Tennessee has been placed on five years' probation, was given an $8 million fine among other financial penalties that will push the total closer to $9 million, and will see a total reduction of 28 scholarships.

The $8 million fine, which the NCAA said was "equivalent to the financial impact the school would have faced if it missed the postseason during the 2023 and 2024 seasons," is believed to be the largest ever levied in an infractions case.

"The panel encountered a challenging set of circumstances related to prescribing penalties in this case," the infractions committee said in its decision. "The panel urges the Infractions Process Committee and the membership to clearly define its philosophy regarding penalties -- which extends beyond postseason bans -- and memorialize that philosophy in an updated set of penalty guidelines."

The NCAA will require Tennessee to vacate all wins and individual records in any game in which 16 individual sanctioned players participated. The specific games will be announced later.

The Volunteers were credited for their self-imposed 16-scholarship reduction over the past two years and will cut two more scholarships this year, meaning 10 additional scholarships will be taken away over the five-year probation period.

Tennessee had been charged with 18 Level 1 violations -- the most severe in the NCAA rules structure -- in July 2022. Included among the more than 200 infractions were charges of $60,000 in impermissible benefits and both Pruitt and his wife, Casey, making cash payments to players' families.


Go Gophers!!
Phil Fulmer says, Fulmer Cup coming back to its rightful resting place

 





Losing scholarships hurts, but it’s not much more than a slap on the hand if they still are bowl eligible. Over 200 violations, some with impermissible benefits? The gutless NCAA is afraid to go after the big boys or in Tennesee’s case, the wannabe big boy. They ignored the UNC academic scandal that should have resulted in major sanctions. Now this. But if Missouri State or Idaho did the same things heads would roll. Pathetic!
 

Someday a future star attorney will look into the NCAAs history of uneven punishment and it will become a major case that hopefully we all get to watch play out.

Until then im going to get a coffee and fresh croissant
 




Top Bottom