Chattanooga Times Free Press

Bayou Bengals have bowl ban

-

BATON ROUGE, La. — LSU has self-imposed a one-year ban on postseason play for its football team this season as part an effort to cooperate with an NCAA probe into rules violations.

“LSU leadership made this decision after careful deliberati­on and review of the NCAA rules violations that have been discovered in the university’s cooperativ­e investigat­ion with the NCAA” and Independen­t Accountabi­lity Resolution Process, the athletic department said in a release. “This decision reflects LSU’s commitment to compliance with NCAA regulation­s and maintenanc­e of institutio­nal control.”

Much of the NCAA’s investigat­ion of LSU’s football program covers time before the promotion of Ed Orgeron to head coach during the 2016 season and the hiring of current athletic director Scott Woodward in 2019.

“I respect the university’s decision to proactivel­y address NCAA issues from the past,” Orgeron said. “I share the disappoint­ment of our student-athletes who will not be able to compete this season in a bowl game.”

Some of the more serious allegation­s involved LSU booster John Paul Funes, who is a former chief executive for a Baton Rouge hospital foundation. He has been accused of paying a player’s father $ 180,000 for a “no-show job” from 2012 to 2017.

The bowl ban comes in addition to sanctions LSU already has self- imposed, including a reduction of four scholarshi­ps in each of the next two seasons. LSU also has banned NFL and former Tigers receiver Odell Beckham Jr. from formally participat­ing in an LSU functions for two years. Beckham was recorded on video handing cash to LSU football players during on-field celebratio­ns immediatel­y after a 42-25 victory over Clemson in last season’s College Football Playoff title game in the Superdome.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States