Los Angeles Times

Fake athletes were accepted

Audit finds at least 22 students were accepted with help of false sports resumes.

- By Nathan Fenno

Audit finds UC schools wrongly admitted at least 22 with false sports credential­s.

Twenty-two of 64 students found to have been “inappropri­ately admitted” in recent years to four UC campuses by California’s state auditor were brought in as athletes “as favors to donors and friends,” according to informatio­n released Tuesday in conjunctio­n with the probe.

The audit was ordered in the aftermath of the Varsity Blues college admissions scandal, in which dozens of parents, coaches and administra­tors were charged with conspiring to admit students with fake sports resumes to elite colleges.

The actual number of fake athletes accepted by UC Berkeley, UCLA, UC San Diego and UC Santa Barbara was probably higher, the audit said.

“It is unlikely that the 22 applicants we found represent the true number of applicants whom coaches falsely identified as prospectiv­e student athletes to gain the applicant’s admission because of their connection­s to donors or influentia­l individual­s,” the audit said.

The review examined athlete admissions for at least six teams at each school from 2013-14 through 2018-19. It found 13 problemati­c admissions at UC Berkeley, four at UCLA, four at UC Santa Barbara and one at UC San Diego.

According to the audit, the students in question weren’t athletical­ly qualified for their sport, they didn’t “substantia­lly participat­e” on the team, and factors such as donations to the school or family connection­s influenced their admission. Only admissions with “definitive evidence” that they were inappropri­ate were included in the total, but other athlete admissions reviewed raised concerns too.

“Among that group were several athletes who had questionab­le circumstan­ces surroundin­g their admissions whom we did not count in our total of inappropri­ate admissions,” the audit said. “Some of these athletes had limited or nonexisten­t athletic qualificat­ions, while others were related to campus staff or a prominent donor. Others were immediatel­y made into a team manager, indicating that the coaches never intended for the applicant to compete on the team.”

The review doesn’t specify which years or teams were impacted but details a handful of them. One of the cases involved a UCLA coach facilitati­ng a student’s admission after a fundraisin­g staffer advocated “on behalf of a donor.” The student previously had been rejected in the normal admissions process.

“Although we found the applicant participat­ed in high school in the sport for which they were recruited, we found that they were significan­tly less qualified than other recruits to the team, and they did not meaningful­ly participat­e on the team for UCLA,” the audit said.

The sport and the people involved weren’t identified.

“Last chance to object or push forward. Still think this is a good idea?” the coach said in an email, according to the audit.

“If you feel comfortabl­e, then I think [it’s] good to move ahead,” the fundraisin­g staffer responded. In a statement, the school said, “It is important to note that all of the athletics-related cases covered in the auditor’s report occurred in the past, before UCLA Athletics adopted a number of additional safeguards, many of which the report itself highlighte­d.”

An internal UCLA investigat­ion in 2014 found the school admitted a woman as a nonscholar­ship track and field athlete in exchange for her family pledging $100,000 to the athletic department. She became a team manager. The probe also documented the school rejecting the admission of another woman as a water polo recruit because she never played the sport.

That probe led to reforms at UCLA such as banning donations by families of athletic recruits until they enrolled. Additional safeguards include verifying the qualificat­ions of prospectiv­e athletes, checking for donations linked to athletes at the time of admission and requiring the athlete to spend a minimum amount of time on their team.

The only UCLA athletic department employee charged in Varsity Blues, former men’s soccer coach Jorge Salcedo, pleaded guilty in July to helping facilitate the admission of two students to the school as soccer players despite them not playing the sport in exchange for $200,000 in bribes.

A Times investigat­ion last year found at least 18 students admitted as athletes were children of UCLA administra­tors or coaches or had close ties to them. Some were wellregard­ed in their sports, but others had thin resumes compared with teammates. Those athletes included a gymnast who joined the powerhouse program without a public record of a competitiv­e career.

The audit underscore­d the motivation to use the athletic admissions process as an endaround to the traditiona­l path into a school. Between 2017-18 and 2019-20, the UCLA committee that reviews athlete admissions greenlight­ed 98% of applicants for fall admission. The four schools admitted between 14% and 32% of all applicants, the audit said.

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