Dennis Dodd: UNC should get death penalty in academic fraud case, but it won't
It's not going to end with North Carolina's administration throwing itself on a flaming pyre of regret and reform. Or coaches moving on after I-don't-remember answers too hard, burning questions about their athletes' matriculation through fake classes.
Some sort of burn-to-the-ground sanction seems to be in order. Death penalty, why not? It's just a matter of who you pin it on. Football, where four coaches have to share some sort of blame. If nothing else, Mack Brown, Carl Torbush, John Bunting and Butch Davis were charged when some of their players -- as part of that free education -- seemingly got free grades. Basketball, where the corruption stretches all the way back to Dean Smith.
And all the way to the desk of basketball coach Roy Williams who didn't ask enough questions. Instead -- quoting from the internal report --"delegated academic responsibilities" to an assistant coach and academic counselor.
That's part of the reason why this massive scandal stinks back two decades. You only find out what you want to find out. It's part of the reason some sport somewhere has to be shut down.
Death penalty? It won't happen, of course. The NCAA doesn't have the stomach for it. There are TV contracts to fulfill, arenas to sell out. It got there, almost, with Penn State. Then the association took most of the penalties back.
http://www.cbssports.com/collegebas...th-penalty-in-academic-fraud-case-but-it-wont
Go Gophers!!