Santa Fe New Mexican

Notre Dame president rips NCAA over denial of appeal

- By Ralph D. Russo

Notre Dame’s president ripped the NCAA’s decision to deny the school’s appeal to restore 21 vacated football victories from an academic misconduct violation, saying the associatio­n “perverted” the notion that universiti­es determine how they police academics.

The NCAA denied Notre Dame’s appeal Tuesday, wiping off the books all 12 wins from the Fighting Irish’s 2012 national championsh­ip game run under coach Brian Kelly.

In a letter to Notre Dame alumni, University President Fr. John Jenkins says the penalty was unpreceden­ted considerin­g who was involved in the misconduct, and the school was being punished for rigorously enforcing its honor code. He called the ruling unfair, referencin­g the recent North Carolina case in which the NCAA did not punish the school after an investigat­ion of athletes taking irregular courses.

The appeals committee was not swayed and upheld the penalty passed down in November 2016 by the committee on infraction­s.

Notre Dame agreed to accept certain NCAA findings and acknowledg­ed cheating involving several football players and a student athletic trainer, but appealed only the penalty that vacated victories.

The NCAA also fined the school $5,000 and placed it on one year’s probation after finding academic misconduct orchestrat­ed by the trainer.

The NCAA said the trainer was employed by the athletic department from the fall of 2009 through the spring of 2013 and “partially or wholly completed numerous academic assignment­s for football studentath­letes in numerous courses” from 2011 into 2013.

It said she did substantia­l coursework for two players and gave impermissi­ble help to six others in 18 courses over two academic years.

In all, the NCAA said, three athletes ended up playing while ineligible, one during the 2012 season, which ended with a lopsided loss to Alabama in the BCS championsh­ip game, and the other two the following season, when the Irish went 9-4.

In his letter, Jenkins said the players were retroactiv­ely declared ineligible after Notre Dame investigat­ed the misconduct in 2014 and recalculat­ed the students’ grades.

Jenkins said had Notre Dame merely expelled the students instead of recalculat­ing grades, had a statute of limitation­s for past offenses or chose not to punish the students, an NCAA penalty would not have been imposed.

“The NCAA has not chosen to ignore academic autonomy; it has instead perverted it by divorcing it from its logical and necessary connection to the underlying educationa­l purpose,” Jenkins wrote.

The vacation of victories was a discretion­ary penalty. Notre Dame objected to the penalty, noting all previous NCAA academic misconduct cases that resulted in victories being vacated involved an administra­tor, coach, or person who served in an academic role.

“This is more disturbing given that, in 2016, the member institutio­ns of the NCAA amended the academic misconduct rules to make clear that students who serve in roles identical to the student in our case would not be considered institutio­nal representa­tives,” Jenkins wrote.

The appeals committee said in its report that the committee on infraction­s did not abuse its discretion when it determined the student trainer was an institutio­nal employee.

“When reviewing infraction­s cases, the Committee on Infraction­s uses the bylaws and interpreta­tions contempora­neous to the conduct being reviewed,” the appeals committee wrote. “Therefore, under the bylaws in place at the time of the violations, a student trainer would be considered an institutio­nal employee.”

In its report, The appeals committee confirmed that at the time of the violations, the athletic training student was considered a university employee under NCAA rules.

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