Click Here

 
You are Here: Home > Georgia men's basketball team placed on four years' probation
Georgia men's basketball team placed on four years' probation
By LORI JOHNSTON, Associated Press Writer
Aug 5, 2004 - 7:09:00 PM

Email this article
Printer friendly page

ATHENS, Ga. (AP) -- Georgia's men's basketball team was placed on four years' probation Thursday for rules violations under former coach Jim Harrick involving academic fraud, unethical conduct and improper benefits.

The NCAA decided not to impose a one-year postseason ban on the basketball team, citing the school's self-imposed penalties that banned the team from the 2003 SEC and NCAA tournaments.

The school's athletic department is on notice for the next five years. A violation by any Georgia athletic program before April 2009 could result in stiffer penalties.

Georgia athletic director Damon Evans said the school plans to appeal.

Noting the school's self-imposed sanctions, Evans said he found the punishment too strict.

``Because of this, and the cooperation the university has exhibited throughout the investigation process, it is our opinion that four years probation and the scholarship reductions are excessive,'' Evans said.

The basketball team will lose one scholarship for each of the next three seasons, forfeit its 30 victories from the 2001-02 and 2002-03 seasons and lose official credit for participating in the 2002 NCAA tournament.

The violations centered on former assistant coach Jim Harrick Jr., the son of the Bulldogs' former head coach.

The NCAA found that Harrick Jr. violated the organization's principles of ethical conduct by providing $300 in a wire transfer to Eva Davis, a friend of former Georgia player Tony Cole, for Cole's personal expenses.

The NCAA also found that Harrick Jr. violated the ethical conduct code during the fall semester of 2001 when he gave an 'A' to three players -- Cole, Rashad Wright and Chris Daniels -- who did not attend the class in basketball strategy he was teaching. Harrick Jr. also encouraged Daniels and Wright to lie to university and NCAA investigators, the committee found.

The NCAA Committee on Infractions said it was troubled by ``the number and range of instances of unethical conduct in which the assistant coach engaged. In this regard, the committee could recall few, if any, instances in which three separate and substantively different findings of unethical conduct were made against one individual.''

Harrick Jr. now must get permission from the NCAA before accepting any sports-related position at any school governed by the organization. His father was not named in any of the allegations and ``was not at risk in this case,'' said Thomas Yeager, chairman and commissioner of the NCAA committee.

The committee noted that it ``found each of the several explanations of the assistant coach not credible and also found that these explanations were inconsistent.''

The NCAA also found that the university staff was responsible for permitting six basketball players in November and December 2001 to receive extra benefits by not requiring them to pay for long-distance telephone calls made while the team was on the road. The costs of the calls totaled $1,572.66.

The Bulldogs will now have to vacate all the wins involving the players, and the team's records will be revised in all official publications, including the media guide and recruiting materials.

The university already was considered a repeat violator of NCAA rules because of sanctions imposed on the football team in 1997.


Copyright 2007 - MOP Squad Sports

Top of Page