Los Angeles Times

CSUN self-imposes postseason ban

After investigat­ion, school announces postseason ban for men’s basketball team.

- By Zach Helfand zach.helfand@latimes.com

Cal State Northridge admits to violations in basketball program, announces penalty.

Cal State Northridge acknowledg­ed “serious violations” in its men’s basketball program, announcing a selfimpose­d penalty Wednesday ahead of what the NCAA might ultimately decide.

The penalty, a postseason ban this season on a team that has a 5-10 record, follows the completion of an independen­t investigat­ion into allegation­s of academic fraud involving several players and a member of Coach Reggie Theus’ staff. The investigat­ion was announced in November 2014 and completed last August, according to an announceme­nt on the athletic program’s website.

CSUN did not detail what the allegation­s were or what the investigat­ion found, citing the federal Family Educationa­l Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) and other federal and state privacy rights. However, a player involved in the situation said that he and several teammates were summoned last fall to the office of Athletic Director Brandon Martin, where they were told that the school was investigat­ing suspicious exam results pertaining to a particular online course.

The player spoke to The Times on the condition that he would not be identified because of the sensitivit­y of the allegation­s.

“They were all the same grades,” said the player, who denied wrongdoing. “They somehow thought we were cheating.”

The player said that the team’s director of basketball operations had suggested the class. That director suddenly left the team when the allegation­s arose and has not responded to interview requests. The school said he had no disciplina­ry record.

CSUN hired attorney Carl Botterud to lead an investigat­ion into the situation and said it “elected to withhold” players allegedly involved from participat­ing in games.

Six players practiced with the team but did not play last season: Michael Warren, Tavrion Dawson, Jerron Wilbut, Jibreel Faulkner, Miles Nolen-Webb and Kevin Johnson. Zacarry Douglas played in only the team’s first two games. Faulkner and Nolen-Webb transferre­d; Johnson is no longer listed on the roster.

In October, the Times filed a public records request seeking documentat­ion pertaining to the investigat­ion. The school has not responded to the request.

Athletic Director Martin said in Wednesday’s announceme­nt that CSUN’s actions — implementi­ng a postseason ban this season — “demonstrat­e the values on which our athletic programs are built.” He declined an interview request.

The Matadors dropped their Big West Conference opener to Long Beach State by 15 points on Tuesday, their third loss in four games.

“I understand the impact that a self-imposed postseason ban will have on our student-athletes and share their disappoint­ment,” CSUN President Dianne F. Harrison said in Wednesday’s announceme­nt. “While our decision was not taken lightly, as a university of higher learning, it is imperative that we demonstrat­e CSUN takes violations of team rules and university policies seriously.”

CSUN has had other incidents involving basketball and academics in the recent past.

In 2004, the NCAA penalized CSUN after the school self-reported that an assistant basketball coach had arranged to have two other assistant coaches alter the transcript­s of a player to keep him eligible.

In 2011-2012, CSUN earned a subpar score on the annual Academic Progress Rate report, which measures the number of student-athletes who remain in school and are academical­ly eligible over a four-year period.

In that instance, it was banned from postseason play.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States