The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Useless NCAA lets Tar Heels off hook

- Jeff Schultz My Opinion

Well, at least it’s official now: When it comes to creating and enforcing structures and rules for intercolle­giate athletics, the NCAA is useless. Just close the doors now so we can end this charade.

North Carolina for years has committed academic fraud, primarily in the form of bogus African Studies courses that helped keep athletes eligible. That fact is clear to almost everybody. But after a long, drawn-out investigat­ion that the NCAA never seemed to want to be a part of, the body announced Friday the committee on infraction­s “could not conclude North Carolina violated NCAA rules.”

So the Tar Heels will not receive any punishment.

No championsh­ips will be vacated. No scholarshi­ps will be lost. No bowl ban. No long walk of shame for Roy Williams and any other UNC coach complicit in this.

Nothing.

Why? This is the best part.

From the NCAA’s statement: “NCAA policy is clear. The NCAA defers to its member schools to determine whether academic fraud occurred and, ultimately, the panel is bound to making decisions within the rules set by the membership.”

Let me translate: If North Carolina doesn’t believe academic fraud occurred, then academic fraud didn’t occur. What a great standard that would be for our judicial system.

The NCAA said there’s nothing they can do about it. They said because the bogus courses were technicall­y offered to the gen- eral student body, anybody could have signed up for African Studies 101 and received an “A” for doing somewhere between nextto-nothing and actually nothing.

Something tells me this isn’t how North Carolina became one of the nation’s top academic institutio­ns. But I’ll leave it to the actual professors to throw their desks through the window.

More from the NCAA: “While student-athletes likely benefited from the courses, so did the general student body. Additional­ly, the record did not establish that the university created and offered the courses as part of a systematic effort to benefit only student-athletes.”

All together now: bull. The NCAA began an investigat­ion into the football program in 2010 and it grew from there. North Carolina eventually was charged with five “Level I” infraction­s, including lack of institutio­nal control.

Classes in the African and Afro-American studies department helped a number of athletes from 2002 to 2011. They were independen­t-study courses. There were no lectures. They never met. They required one or two papers. That’s it.

SEC commission­er Greg Sankey, who chairs the committee on infraction­s said, “The (COI) is in no way supporting what happened.”

That’s special.

I would say this is another black eye for major college athletics. But to paraphrase an old line, college athletics ran out of black eyes 50 years ago.

The NCAA won’t confirm what everybody else knows: Those courses were created to keep athletes eligible, to win games and championsh­ips, to create mind-boggling revenue steams. That’s not at all to suggest all athletes are dumb or academical­ly challenged. They aren’t. But it goes without saying that if some individual­s did not have amazing athletic skills, they would not be admitted to a school like North Carolina. Borderline academic students who aren’t athletes generally don’t get in. But the university knows helping athletes through the front gates benefits them in other ways. That’s fine, as long as the means aren’t, well, ridiculous.

We’ve known this for a while, but it was affirmed with this decision: The NCAA has ceased to be useful. They’re complicit in this crime — and, yes, crime is an appropriat­e word because these practices allow universiti­es to stray from their stated mission, of setting the bar high and nurturing young people. Enabling is not nurturing.

As bad as the NCAA has looked in the past, this decision might be the worst of all. Because even in the best-case scenario of its own rules preventing them from acting, then their rules render their existence meaningles­s.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? The Tar Heels will be able to defend their men’s basketball title after the NCAA committee on infraction­s “could not conclude North Carolina violated NCAA rules.”
GETTY IMAGES The Tar Heels will be able to defend their men’s basketball title after the NCAA committee on infraction­s “could not conclude North Carolina violated NCAA rules.”
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