Yuma Sun

Briles unpenalize­d but not unscathed in NCAA report

- BY STEPHEN HAWKINS

aSSOCIaTEd PrESS

Five years after he was dumped by Baylor, Art Briles was front and center in a withering NCAA infraction­s report Wednesday that ripped him for failing to look into horrific and potentiall­y criminal allegation­s involving his football players.

Yet the infraction­s panel didn’t find him guilty of any NCAA violations, and his attorney said he is clear to return to college coaching.

“My client Art Briles has been completely exonerated and cleared of all NCAA violations alleged against him,” the attorney, Scott Tompsett, told ESPN. “As the NCAA Committee on Infraction­s explained, the conduct at issue was pervasive and widespread throughout the Baylor campus, and it was condoned or ignored by the highest levels of Baylor’s leadership.”

Briles was fired by Baylor after an external investigat­ion revealed in May 2016 that the world’s largest Baptist university had for years mishandled and failed to properly respond to numerous sexual assault allegation­s by students, including some against football players. Briles has long disputed the allegation­s against him.

In its 51-page report, the infraction­s committee didn’t hold back on Briles.

“In each instance, when the head coach received informatio­n from a staff member regarding potential criminal conduct by a football student-athlete, he did not report the informatio­n and did not personally look any further into the matter,” the panel said. “His incurious attitude toward potential criminal conduct by his student-athletes was deeply troubling to the panel.

“As one panel member observed at the hearing when questionin­g the head coach’s lack of response to this informatio­n, ‘a lot of these things that we’re talking about, they’re not NCAA rules violations . . . (or) university policy violations. They’re felonies. (W) e’re talking about rapes and physical assaults,’” according to the report. “The head coach failed to meet even the most basic expectatio­ns of how a person should react to the kind of conduct at issue in this case. Furthermor­e, as a campus leader, the head coach is held to an even higher standard. He completely failed to meet this standard.”

Still, the panel didn’t find Briles guilty of any rules violations when putting Baylor on four years or probation and imposing recruiting restrictio­ns on the football program.

The one former Baylor employee directly sanctioned by the NCAA was former director of football operations Odell James, who was hit with a fiveyear show cause order. A representa­tive of James said James, who was on Baylor’s staff from 200415, was being improperly punished for declining an in-person interview and was exploring options to challenge the decision.

The NCAA did find rules violations occurred between 2011 and 2016, including impermissi­ble benefits and drug testing violations in the football program, and violations involving the institutio­n’s predominan­tly female student host program.

But the infraction­s panel reluctantl­y agreed with Baylor that the mishandlin­g of various allegation­s on the Waco campus “did not constitute violations of NCAA legislatio­n.”

The 65-year-old Briles hasn’t coached at the college level since leaving Baylor, where he led the Bears to their only two Big 12 Conference titles while going 65-37 from 2008-15. Baylor had four 10-win seasons in a five-year span from 2011-15, after only winning 10 games once before that.

Five wins from the 2011 season, when the Bears went 10-3 and quarterbac­k Robert Griffin III became the school’s only Heisman Trophy winner, could be vacated because of the use of an ineligible player who did receive impermissi­ble benefits.

Briles insisted many of the allegation­s against him were false; at one point, he even sued three school regents and a vice president for libel and slander, claiming they falsely stated he knew of reported assaults and alleged gang rapes by players and didn’t report them.

In February 2017, university regents revealed new details in the case, including texts and quotes from conversati­ons alleging Briles ignored sexual assaults by players and failed to alert university officials or discipline athletes. In one alleged gang rape incident in 2013, Briles was shown a list of players a victim had identified.

“These are some bad dudes. Why was she around those guys?,” Briles is quoted in the filing as saying.

Baylor paid Briles more than $15 million after firing him. He later acknowledg­ed making mistakes and apologized for “some bad things” that happened under his watch.

Briles coached briefly in Italy and then at a Texas high school in Mount Vernon.

 ?? JERRY LARSON/AP ?? IN THIS AUG. 31, 2015, FILE PHOTO, Baylor head football coach Art Briles addresses the media in Waco, Texas.
JERRY LARSON/AP IN THIS AUG. 31, 2015, FILE PHOTO, Baylor head football coach Art Briles addresses the media in Waco, Texas.
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