Antelope Valley Press

NCAA hits OK State with postseason ban

- By AARON BEARD

Oklahoma State has become the first school to be punished by the NCAA in the fallout from the federal corruption investigat­ion into college basketball. The school plans to fight — and likely won’t be the only one.

The Cowboys’ men’s basketball team was banned from the upcoming postseason among numerous penalties handed down Friday by an NCAA infraction­s committee panel, which found that former assistant coach Lamont Evans accepted up to $22,000 in bribes intended to help steer athletes to certain financial advisers.

That ruling made Oklahoma State the first to make its way fully through the infraction­s system, ahead of schools like Kansas, North Carolina State, Louisville, South Carolina and Southern California. Some of those cases have already had contentiou­s exchanges signaling the schools were ready to fight.

That list now includes Oklahoma State, which vowed to appeal after being “stunned by the severity of the penalties.”

“I can’t tell you what the percentage­s are for success on this,” athletic director Mike Holder said in a teleconfer­ence with reporters. “I just know that I feel as the athletic director that we’ve been wronged in this case. And we want to stand up and fight for what we believe is right.”

Oklahoma State said the NCAA had agreed with the school that Evans “acted alone and for his own personal gain” while not leading to “any real benefit” for the

school. Holder went as far as calling the school a victim in the case after being punished for a top-level violation.

The comments follow forceful responses from Kansas in September and March to charges against the storied Jayhawks’ men’s basketball program. And N.C. State ultimately argued it couldn’t get a fair hearing from an infraction­s committee as its case ended up being accepted into the the NCAA’s new independen­t resolution process for complex cases.

“It goes back to everybody would like reasonable rules enforcemen­t and appropriat­e process and reasonable penalties,” said Stu Brown, an Atlanta-based attorney who has worked with schools on compliance issues.

“And really what we’re arguing about or (what) these schools are thinking: the investigat­ion and charging process has now become overhyped and unaccounta­ble. And the penalty process now has insufficie­nt flexibilit­y to allow for schools that ... are cooperativ­e and want to take responsibi­lity, so they shouldn’t be punished quite as hard. That’s the problem.”

An appeal would put the penalties challenged by Oklahoma State on hold. While it’s unclear exactly how long that would take, the process would generally require 6-8 months based on typical NCAA filing and hearing deadlines.

That’s of particular interest for the Cowboys after putting together one of the nation’s top recruiting classes, headlined by No. 1 national recruit and one-and-done prospect Cade Cunningham. Coach Mike Boynton Jr., who is not accused of wrongdoing, said he plans to speak further with Cunningham and other players to see if they plan to stay,

“In terms of a postseason ban for a group of kids, who were probably 15 and 16 years old when this stuff was going on, it’s completely, completely out of bounds,” Boynton said.

The NCAA penalties against Oklahoma State included three years of probation, a $10,000 fine self-imposed by the school along with an additional 1% from the program budget, recruiting restrictio­ns and a reduction in basketball scholarshi­ps.

Evans received a 10-year show-cause order in the case tied to the federal investigat­ion into college basketball, which became public in 2017.

 ?? Associated Press ?? BANNED — In this June 7, 2019, file photo, former Oklahoma State assistant basketball coach Lamont Evans, left, leaves Federal Court in New York. An NCAA infraction­s committee panel announced Friday that Evans violated ethical-conduct rules by accepting up to $22,000 in bribes from financial advisors.
Associated Press BANNED — In this June 7, 2019, file photo, former Oklahoma State assistant basketball coach Lamont Evans, left, leaves Federal Court in New York. An NCAA infraction­s committee panel announced Friday that Evans violated ethical-conduct rules by accepting up to $22,000 in bribes from financial advisors.

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