The Columbus Dispatch

Scandal bringing scrutiny to athletics

- By Bill Pennington

A dozen years ago, the University of Washington barred athletic coaches from having contact with anyone in the admissions department.

With a move that now seems prescient, two new administra­tors supervisin­g athletics sought to allay any concerns that coaches could put undue pressure on admissions personnel. The change also brought more oversight to athletics, in this case through a committee of senior faculty members, deans and other university representa­tives.

The previous arrangemen­t, said Philip Ballinger, an associate vice provost now overseeing admissions, “didn’t have sufficient transparen­cy; it didn’t have enough eyes on it.”

The leeway coaches get in recruiting has long been a point of discussion in higher-education circles. But after federal investigat­ors this month revealed a broad admissions cheating scandal, a number of schools began asking hard questions about how they evaluate athletic applicants and oversee the chosen few whom coaches recommend for admission.

In what prosecutor­s described as the biggest case of admissions fraud they had investigat­ed, 50 people were accused in a scheme that involved paying bribes to coaches and to people who monitor admissions tests in order to fraudulent­ly get the children of wealthy patrons into some of the nation’s elite colleges.

Some students were accepted as recruited athletes even though they did not play the sports described in their applicatio­ns. They gained an advantage through the widespread practice of allocating a certain number of admissions spots to athletes who might not get in otherwise.

This process has been followed for decades in the pursuit of competitiv­e teams, which burnish a university’s reputation, inspire alumni loyalty and often help with fundraisin­g.

Now, the fraud case has sent a thunderbol­t through the higher-education community.

“Every college president in America called his athletic director the morning after that admissions-fraud story broke and asked: How do we make sure this doesn’t happen at our school?” said Bill Martin, the athletic director at the University of

Michigan from 2000 until his retirement in 2010. “And certain athletic directors were smart enough to call their presidents first to insist that they were going to start verifying the status of every admitted recruited athlete.”

Indeed, at Yale University, where FBI investigat­ors say the longtime women’s soccer coach accepted hundreds of thousands of dollars to facilitate the admission of a recruit who did not actually play soccer, the university president, Peter Salovey, announced that new oversight policies had already been put in place. The Yale athletic director will begin reviewing every proposed recruit’s credential­s before admission, and recruited athletes who fail to make a team after they arrive will receive “close scrutiny,” a university statement said.

A broad overhaul of athletic admissions systems in Division I, the highest level of NCAA competitio­n and the level the colleges in the scheme compete in, has been overdue, according to several athletic administra­tors.

Battles over blue-chip

recruits in football and basketball already tend to be heavily scrutinize­d. In those upper-echelon sports, if there is money changing hands, it is from coaches to recruits, not the other way around.

But in the lower-profile sports like crew, volleyball, tennis and soccer — often called the Olympic sports — there has been more room for bribes and exploitati­on. And the most-common route in such a fraud is to designate a phony athletic prospect as a “recruited walk-on.” In nearly every case of counterfei­t athletic credential­s cited in the recent indictment­s, from Stanford to Texas to Yale, the prospectiv­e athlete appeared to be filling the nebulous role of recruited walk-on.

Such applicants are not even assured a spot on the team. But they are often on a list of five to 20 athletes — it varies from sport to sport — whom a coach is permitted to submit to the admissions department.

The two daughters of actress Lori Loughlin, who

has been charged in connection with the fraud case, were passed off as crew recruits despite never having competed in the sport, according to federal prosecutor­s.

That choice of sport may not have been an accident. In a sport like women’s crew, where rosters can balloon to 125 athletes, many teams have scores of recruited walk-ons. (Such large rosters can help a school comply with federal equality laws, balancing out the number of male athletes in football.)

“When the rosters are that big, like they are in women’s crew, I could see where it would be possible for a coach to slip in an unqualifie­d person as a recruited walkon,” said Martin, who added that Michigan annually audited team rosters.

The recruitmen­t of athletes in such sports may be an even bigger factor in the admissions process at colleges in the NCAA’S lowest tier, Division III, where athletic scholarshi­ps are forbidden.

Division III is also the largest tier, with nearly 450

institutio­ns, including many of the country’s mostselect­ive small liberal-arts colleges, where acceptance rates can be as low as 15 percent. These colleges might field as many as 30 teams from enrollment­s as small as 2,000, with varsity athletes — many of them afforded an advantage in admissions — making up 30 to 45 percent of the student body.

These small colleges, like the largest ones, also give preferenti­al treatment to applicants who excel in music, the arts and a host of other skills. There are also allowances for students from the least-populated states.

“Admissions is filling all the different buckets,” said Wendy Smith, the athletic director at Haverford College, a highly rated institutio­n near Philadelph­ia. “And our athletes are right in there. We are not in any way gaming the system. They are absolutely on par academical­ly.”

But at many elite institutio­ns, the notion that recruited athletes have been granted an unfair advantage is palpable.

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