Mississippi’s administration believed that its self-imposed penalties, including a one-year postseason ban, were sufficient punishment in its long-running NCAA rules violations case that included a charge of lack of institutional control.
The NCAA disagreed, and doled out more punishment Friday.
The sanctions include slapping the Rebels with postseason bans not only for this year, but 2018 as well. That decision means there probably won’t be any closure to the more than five-year-old saga any time soon.
Ole Miss says it hasn’t stopped fighting.
“We wish that this were over,” Ole Miss athletics director Ross Bjork said. “But there is more work to be done and that work has already started.”
Bjork and the school’s Chancellor Jeffrey S. Vitter said Ole Miss plans to appeal the NCAA’s two-year postseason ban. The NCAA says a school has 15 days to notify the appeals committee of its intent to appeal. Once the appeals committee acknowledges the request, the university has 30 days to file.
So Friday’s news turns out to be just the latest development in the ongoing case.
The NCAA Committee on Infractions said the case was similar to other Ole Miss rules violations cases in 1986 and 1994 and that the school had an “unconstrained booster culture.” The NCAA says six football staff members and 12 boosters contributed to the current violations.
“This is now the third case over three decades that has involved the boosters and football program,” the panel said in its decision. “Even the head coach acknowledged that upon coming to Mississippi, he was surprised by the ’craziness’ of boosters trying to insert themselves into his program.”
Ole Miss had also self-imposed other punishments in anticipation of Friday’s sanctions, including scholarship reductions and recruiting restrictions. The NCAA largely accepted those penalties, but the big addition was the extra year of postseason ineligibility.
Vitter believes the 2018 postseason ban was excessive.
“It is simply not warranted and based on fundamental flaws in the NCAA case and how the investigation was conducted,” Vitter said. “We will vigorously appeal the additional postseason ban. It’s clearly an excessive punishment and we are outraged at the unfair characterization of our football program and university culture involving athletics.”
Bjork added that citing a rules violations case from more than 30 years ago “is not applicable to our current case.”
Former Ole Miss coach Hugh Freeze will be suspended for two conference games during the 2018 season if he’s employed as a head coach at another school. The ruling said that Freeze promoted an atmosphere of rules compliance, but that he failed to monitor his staff.
“While my hope is to be a head coach again as soon as possible, this restriction does not limit, in any way, my ability to serve as an assistant coach,” Freeze said in a statement released through his lawyer’s office. “I want to thank everyone who stood by me, including my family, my friends, and the University of Mississippi.”
Several former Ole Miss assistants and staff members received show-cause restrictions, which hinders their ability to work for schools in the NCAA.
The stiffest penalty was for former staff member David Saunders, who received an eight-year show cause for helping arrange fraudulent ACT scores.
The Rebels will also be on probation for three more years through November 30, 2020 and must pay a financial penalty of about $179,000. Ole Miss must also vacate wins that ineligible athletes participated in, which could take some time to sort out.
The complicated case consisted of 21 alleged violations, including 15 that were Level I, which the NCAA considers the most serious. The committee said it reviewed 53,000 pages of information related to the case.
Now that Ole Miss has a better idea of its punishment, it can begin the process of rebuilding the program. That won’t be easy considering the looming postseason ban for the 2018 season. Bjork said it could be several months before the NCAA appeals process plays out.
Matt Luke was recently named Ole Miss’ head coach after spending the past season as the interim. The 41-year-old led the Rebels to a respectable season, including an Egg Bowl win over rival Mississippi State last week.
Luke was named the interim coach in July after Freeze surprisingly resigned following a school investigation into his phone records that found what the school called personal misconduct. The school said the resignation was not in relation to the NCAA case.
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