The Day

A-10 COMMISSION­ER: NCAA PENALTIES AGAINST UMASS MEN UNFORTUNAT­E

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The NCAA is stripping Massachuse­tts of victories in men’s basketball and women’s tennis for overpaying 12 athletes about $9,100 in financial aid over three years, prompting criticism of the penalty from the Atlantic 10 Conference commission­er.

The NCAA announced Friday the Committee on Infraction­s had imposed a two-year probation on UMass that will end October 2022 in addition to vacating results involving athletes who received what were determined to be a total of 13 inappropri­ate payments.

The school will also pay a self-imposed fine of $5,000.

UMass plans to appeal the committee’s decision to vacate results from 2014-17 that include 59 basketball wins and an Atlantic 10 Conference championsh­ip in women’s tennis.

A-10 Commission­er Bernadette McGlade and UMass athletic director Ryan Bamford both took issue with the vacation penalty for what the COI conceded was a “misunderst­anding,” according to the NCAA’s news release.

McGlade said the decision was “unfortunat­e.”

“I think there’s a misappropr­iation and maybe we are at a point in time where the associatio­n (NCAA) needs to have a reset, quite frankly,” McGlade said. “To have a set of student-athletes that had no involvemen­t in a mistake/violation that has been acknowledg­ed ... and yet to penalize them by the vacation of contests seems inordinate­ly punitive and not in the spirit of what we do as an associatio­n.”

Bamford referred to the violations as mistakes that were “inadverten­t and unintentio­nal.”

Public criticism of a COI decision and NCAA enforcemen­t by college administra­tors has become common in recent years. In cases involving football, both Notre Dame and Missouri loudly complained their cooperatio­n with the NCAA and proactive compliance led to harsh penalties for violations uncovered by the schools.

Similarly, Bamford said the NCAA’s investigat­ion was initiated by UMass. The school was looking into possible violations in basketball that occurred under former coach Derek Kellogg.

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