Daily Times (Primos, PA)

NCAA rules Louisville must vacate title

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LOUISVILLE, KY. » Louisville officials are not happy with the NCAA’s decision that mandates the school vacate its 2013 men’s basketball championsh­ip in the wake of an embarrassi­ng sex scandal and interim President Greg Postel did not hide his disappoint­ment.

While acknowledg­ing the scandal was unacceptab­le, Postel believes the school’s cooperatio­n should have counted for more than it did. But Tuesday, Louisville announced that an NCAA appeals panel had upheld sanctions against the men’s program. As a result, the Cardinals have to vacate not only the championsh­ip, but 122 other victories and return some $600,000 in conference revenue from the 2012-15 NCAA Tournament­s.

“I cannot say this strongly enough: We believe the NCAA is simply wrong,” Postel said Tuesday. “We disagree with the NCAA ruling for reasons we clearly stated in our appeal. And we made a strong case — based on NCAA precedent — that supported our argument.”

It may have been a strong case, but the NCAA had its own conviction­s.

The decision by the governing body’s Infraction Appeals Committee ruled that the NCAA has the authority to take away championsh­ips for what it considers major rule violations. It also refuted Louisville’s position that the NCAA exceeded its boundaries and didn’t follow its own precedent establishe­d in other cases and said in an eight-page decision that upheld the penalties.

Louisville now must forfeit its third NCAA title, victories and income from 201115, part of the timeframe during which the violations occurred. The decision is the culminatio­n of the NCAA’s investigat­ion that followed allegation­s in a 2015 book by escort Katina Powell that former Cardinals basketball staffer Andre McGee hired her and other dancers to strip and have sex with recruits.

Pitino has repeatedly denied knowing about the activities described in Powell’s book, but the blemish on the program will never be forgotten — not after Tuesday’s sanctions. (21) WEST VIRGINIA 71, BAYLOR 60 » Jevon Carter and Esa Ahmad both scored 15 points as West Virginia (208, 9-6) beat Baylor (17-11, 7-8), ending the Bears’ five-game winning streak that had been the longest in the Big 12 Conference. (2) MICHIGAN STATE 81, ILLINOIS 61 » Miles Bridges scored 19 points, Joshua Langford had 16 and Michigan State (27-3, 15-2) beat Illinois (13-16, 3-13), sealing a share of the Big Ten championsh­ip.

The Spartans have won 11 straight and can claim the conference title outright if they win at Wisconsin on Sunday. (16) OHIO STATE 79, RUTGERS 52» C.J. Jackson scored 18 points to help Ohio State (237, 14-3 Big Ten) rout Rutgers (13-17, 3-14).

Kaleb Wesson added 14, and Kam Williams, playing his last home game, had 13 as the Buckeyes got a feelgood win on senior night, coming on the heels of tough road losses to Penn State and Michigan that dropped them out of first place in the conference.

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