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Louisville must vacate basketball title

The NCAA denies the school’s appeal, meaning the Cardinals will have to vacate 123 victories and return some $600,000 in conference revenue from the 2012-15 NCAA Tournament­s.

- By Gary B. Graves AP Sports Writer

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.

It’s the first time a Division 1 men’s basketball program has been stripped of a national title. While acknowledg­ing the scandal was unacceptab­le, Postel believes the school’s cooperatio­n with the NCAA 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,

University of Louisville interim President Greg Postel said, “I cannot say this strongly enough: We believe the NCAA is simply wrong. 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.” but 122 other victories and return about $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.”

Louisville may have presented 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. In the eightpage decision, the NCAA also refuted Louisville’s position that the governing body exceeded its boundaries and didn’t follow its own precedent establishe­d in other cases.

Louisville now must forfeit its third NCAA title, victories and income from 2011-15, 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.

Former coach Rick Pitino 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.

Besides taking down the redand-white banner that hung beside the American flag and two other title flags in the Cardinals’ downtown arena, Louisville must erase wins before and after that championsh­ip along with other records.

That process started almost immediatel­y. Basketball spokesman Kenny Klein confirmed by Tuesday evening that both the 2013 title and 2012 Final Four banners were removed from the rafters at the KFC Yum! Center.

Postel doesn’t feel the punishment fits the violations.

“From Day One, the university has admitted that the actions of the former operations director and any others involved under previous leadership were offensive and inexcusabl­e,” Postel said in his statement. “That is why we apologized immediatel­y, cooperated fully with the NCAA, self-imposed penalties that were appropriat­e to the offenses and made significan­t changes to ensure incidents like this never happen again.

“Under the NCAA’s own rules, this cooperatio­n should have been a factor in the severity of the punishment. Instead, it was ignored.”

Interim athletic director Vince Tyra said the NCAA process was “unusual” compared to a federal organizati­on such as OSHA (Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion), where he said guidelines are more black-andwhite.

“With the NCAA, there are bylaws which seem to be guidelines and then there’s great discretion on the guidelines,” Tyra said. “It’s very difficult to follow and set precedent. That was certainly an unusual experience.”

The school’s own investigat­ion into the allegation revealed that violations occurred and resulted in a self-imposed postseason ban nearly two years ago. Louisville later imposed scholarshi­p and recruiting restrictio­ns in an effort to mitigate further NCAA discipline.

 ?? Timothy D. Easley / AP ??
Timothy D. Easley / AP

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