San Antonio Express-News

Vols: Pruitt and staff ‘deceived’ monitors

- By Teresa M. Walker

is defending itself against the NCAA’S Level I charge of failing to monitor the football program, saying former coach Jeremy Pruitt and nine others fired “repeatedly deceived” administra­tors and compliance staff overseeing the program.

“The University respectful­ly submits that it is unrealisti­c to expect an institutio­n to prevent, or immediatel­y detect, the intentiona­l and concealed misconduct that occurred in this case,” Tennessee wrote in the 108-page response dated Monday and obtained first by Knox News on Thursday.

Tennessee started an internal investigat­ion following a tip on Nov. 13, 2020, and found what the university chancellor called “serious violations of NCAA rules.” Pruitt and nine others were fired for cause in January 2021, negating Pruitt’s $12.6 million buyout after he went 16-19 in three seasons.

NCAA investigat­ors opened a case in December 2020 and became more involved within the two weeks before Pruitt was fired.

The NCAA notified Tennessee in July of the most-serious Level 1 violations for allegation­s of providing impermissi­ble cash, gifts and benefits worth about $60,000 to football recruits and their families under

Pruitt. The notice of allegation­s said at least a dozen members of Pruitt’s staff were involved in more than 200 individual violations over a two-year period.

The university argued in is response that it “demonstrat­ed its unparallel­ed commitment to integrity” led by Chancellor Donde Plowman in investigat­ing and holding everyone accountabl­e while protecting athletes from suffering the consequenc­es.

The university mirror-imtennesse­e

aged football staffers’ cellphones, leading to informatio­n the NCAA noted in July that helped substantia­te the alleged violations. Security footage from a Knoxville hotel also was included.

In addition to Pruitt, Tennessee fired two assistants and seven members of the recruiting and support staff. Pruitt, three of his assistants and three other staffers could face show-cause penalties making it difficult for them to get another college job

after a hearing is held with the NCAA’S Division I Committee on Infraction­s.

“The factual informatio­n in this case demonstrat­es that experience­d football coaches and non-coaching staff members knowingly violated longstandi­ng and universall­y understood NCAA rules and went to considerab­le lengths to conceal their misconduct,” Tennessee wrote in its response.

The university noted recruiting visits were monitored using industry standards, including “embedding an experience­d compliance staff member in the program.”

Tennessee’s response also cited eight specific cases for precedent where universiti­es either self-imposed penalties or had aggravatin­g circumstan­ces, as well as NCAA notes from meetings in April and May on transformi­ng its own rules for name, image and likeness and the transfer portal.

The university argued that Tennessee’s infraction­s case will go before the Division I Committee on Infraction­s at a time of significan­t transforma­tion in how college athletics and infraction­s are handled.

“Intercolle­giate athletics looks dramatical­ly different today than when the university commenced this investigat­ion more than two years ago,” Tennessee’s response said.

Tennessee wrapped up its investigat­ion last November and announced then it wouldn’t selfimpose a bowl ban to avoid penalizing current players and coaches.

New athletic director Danny White, who replaced Phillip Fulmer, hired Josh Heupel in late January 2021.

The Volunteers (9-2, 5-2 Southeaste­rn Conference) currently are ranked ninth and can clinch their first 10-win record in the regular season since 2001 with a win Saturday night at Vanderbilt.

 ?? Randy Sartin/associated Press ?? Former Tennessee coach Jeremy Pruitt and nine others were fired for cause in January 2021, negating Pruitt’s $12.6 million buyout after he went 16-19 in three seasons with the Volunteers.
Randy Sartin/associated Press Former Tennessee coach Jeremy Pruitt and nine others were fired for cause in January 2021, negating Pruitt’s $12.6 million buyout after he went 16-19 in three seasons with the Volunteers.

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