The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

NCAA suspends Louisville’s Pitino

- By Gary B. Graves

LOUISVILLE, KY. » The NCAA has suspended Louisville basketball coach Rick Pitino for five Atlantic Coast Conference games following its sex scandal investigat­ion.

The governing body also handed down other penalties Thursday, including placing the basketball program on four years’ probation, vacating wins in which ineligible players participat­ed and issuing a 10-year show-cause order for former basketball operations director Andre McGee.

Former escort Katina Powell alleged that McGee had hired her and other escorts to strip and have sex with Louisville recruits and players.

The NCAA, which described the activities as “repugnant,” has not vacated the Cardinals’ 2013 national championsh­ip. The NCAA says the school must determine which games ineligible players participat­ed in. Players deemed ineligible would be those involved in the sex parties, which are considered impermissi­ble benefits.

Louisville interim President Greg Postel issued a statement saying the school believes the additional “severe” penalties are excessive and plans to appeal. The university, which has self-imposed several sanctions, has 45 days to respond.

“The entire UofL community is saddened by what took place. It never should have happened, and that is why the school acted to severely penalize itself in 2016,” Postel said. “Today, however, the NCAA Division I Committee on Infraction­s went beyond what we consider to be fair and reasonable.

“We intend to appeal all aspects of the penalties.”

Pitino, who has repeatedly denied any knowledge of McGee’s actions, also fired back at the NCAA after reviewing the report.

“Not only was this unjust and over the top in its severity,” the coach said at a news conference, “but I’ve lost a lot of faith in the NCAA.

“We are devastated by the news, all of us are,” Pitino added. “But moving forward we believe we will win the appeal because it’s right and it’s just, and what went on was unjust and inconceiva­ble.”

The long-awaited NCAA announceme­nt reiterated its original view that Pitino should have known about McGee’s activities with Powell, who alleged in a 2015 book that staff McGee paid her $10,000 for 22 shows at the Cardinals’ dormitory from 2010-14, a period that includes their NCAA title run.

The NCAA’s release included statements by the panel on its decision, saying: “The types of activities that occurred in this case were repugnant and threaten the integrity of the NCAA Collegiate Model, regardless.”

The NCAA also said, “Without dispute, NCAA rules do not allow institutio­nal staff members to arrange for striptease­s and sex acts for prospects, enrolled student-athletes and/or those who accompany them to campus.”

Other penalties prescribed by the panel also include men’s basketball scholarshi­p reductions and recruiting restrictio­ns; a fine of $5,000, plus the university must return money received through conference revenue sharing for its appearance­s in the 2012 to 2015 NCAA men’s basketball championsh­ips.

The NCAA accepted the university’s self-imposed 2015-16 postseason ban.

The panel had harsh comments about McGee’s actions in its decision.

“The former operations director, the individual entrusted to keep order at Minardi Hall, created an environmen­t that has no place on a college campus and was directly at odds with college athletics and higher education,” the panel said.

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