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  • CalTech Banned!

    Caltech Gives New Meaning to ‘Academically Ineligible’
    By ADAM HIMMELSBACH
    Published: July 13, 2012


    Athletics are not the hallmark of the California Institute of Technology. Its baseball team has lost 227 games in a row and its women’s volleyball team has lost all 168 of its conference games. In 2011, the men’s water polo team snapped a seven-year winless drought, and the men’s basketball team ended a 310-game conference losing streak.

    Its academic reputation, however, is sterling. Caltech alumni and faculty have won a combined 32 Nobel Prizes. So when the N.C.A.A. on Thursday cited Caltech for a lack of institutional control of its Division III athletic program, specifically related to academics, there was a mostly quizzical reaction, as if it must be an error.

    “I was definitely pretty surprised,” said the senior basketball player Christophe Kunesh, a computer science major. “It all seemed a little harsh.”

    The N.C.A.A. determined that a total of 30 Caltech athletes on 12 teams practiced or played in games while academically ineligible from the 2007-08 to 2010-11 academic years. But most of the infractions, which were discovered and reported by Athletic Director Betsy Mitchell in 2011, were the result of Caltech’s unusual class registration system.

    During the first three weeks of each trimester, students at Caltech, the academically rigorous college in Pasadena, take part in a process known as shopping, in which they are allowed to essentially sample classes before being required to register for them. Rod Kiewiet, Caltech’s dean of undergraduate students, said many students stayed in these classes for the entire term, but they, like so many college students, sometimes procrastinated.

    “A very large number of them have already picked out their classes, and they’re going to the classes,” Kiewiet said. “They just don’t get registered until the deadline.”

    If students are not officially registered for enough classes during this three-week period, they can be considered part-time students, and part-time students are ineligible to compete in N.C.A.A. events.

    “Nobody was trying to get around the system,” Kunesh said. “It wasn’t like it was a loophole they lucked into. When you look at what happens at some Division I schools relative to what happens at Caltech, it’s all kind of silly.”

    Ellen Staurowsky, a professor of sport management at Drexel University, said the focus of the N.C.A.A.’s action seems misplaced. “A situation in which they have very specific reasons as to why they run their academic programs the way they do is a very different issue than an institution manipulating their academic program in order to allow athletes who should not be eligible to become eligible,” she said.

    Caltech’s penalties include a one-year postseason ban for sports in which ineligible players competed, a one-year ban on off-campus recruiting, three years of probation and a $5,000 penalty.

    Also, Caltech’s sports information department will soon meet with the N.C.A.A. to determine which wins and records the university must vacate. There was brief concern that the men’s basketball team’s 46-45 win over Occidental in 2011, which ended the 310-game conference losing streak, would be overturned. But no ineligible players were used in that game.

    “That was huge, because it definitely would have been very upsetting if they reversed that,” Kunesh said. “It was such a big deal to break that streak.”

    Mitchell said some athletes were found to be academically ineligible for failing to maintain individual requirements. But most of the missteps were related to the class shopping system. Mitchell said there was not enough communication between academic and athletic departments to certify whether an athlete was enrolled in enough classes to be eligible.

    “It became clear we had gaps and holes,” Mitchell said, “and we weren’t doing things at least the way I was accustomed to.”

    Many of those problems were rectified during the past academic year, Mitchell said. All 17 teams had a team grade-point average of 3.0 or higher, and the averages of the men’s swimming, women’s water polo and men’s cross-country teams were in the top three in Division III in their sports.

    Mike Paluchniak, a junior guard on the basketball team, said there was a noticeably different tenor regarding class registration in the past year.

    “There was a lot more focus put on making sure everything was being met with some compliance things,” Paluchniak said.

    Considering Caltech’s record of athletic futility, the one-year postseason bans are not akin to a major college football team’s being banned from a bowl. But Paluchniak said the basketball team, for one, was deflated by the news.

    “It sounds a little skewed to somebody not familiar with our program, but the postseason ban really has us bummed,” he said. “It’d be easy for somebody to laugh at that because of how things have gone, but this takes away from us. We’ve had our goal set on the postseason, and now we’ll just have to go out and win as many games as we can.”

    Post Extras: * * *
    Grammar... The difference between feeling your nuts and feeling you're nuts.

    Comment


    • Syracuse is officially leaving the Big East next year and the ACC will be switching to a 9-game conf schedule. That'll leave us and the SEC as the only major conferences with only 8 and we may rethink that matter with the Pac12 plan falling through

      Comment


      • There is nothing (rational) keeping the B10 from a nine game conference schedule. I think it improves the value of watching this league play football.

        Forget the "beating up on each other" mentality that questions a nine game conference schedule. Would you rather see M play Illinois or UCONN .... or Massachusetts?

        Besides, bowl eligibility should be a 7-5 record. 6-6 produces situations that produced a PAC10 Championship game with a terrible UCLA at 6-6 in 2011. That could conceivably happen in the 2012 B1G CCG with osu's post season ban. I don't want to see that.

        What I'd really like to see is a 9 game conference schedule that counts and a 3 game OOC schedule that doesn't. If you did that, you'd see plenty of real good "pre-season" games with a lot of players getting playing time. That in particular will benefit a football teams depth in the heart of the regular season schedule.
        Mission to CFB's National Championship accomplished. But the shine on the NC Trophy is embarrassingly wearing off. It's M B-Ball ..... or hockey or volley ball or name your college sport favorite time ...... until next year.

        Comment


        • I think one of the biggest arguments against the 9 conference game schedule is the odd number. In opposite years, you'd have five conference road games, and only four home conference games.

          Those five road games, combined with anything decent in the OOC, could cost some teams a shot at the BCS.
          "in order to lead America you must love America"

          Comment


          • A 9 game conference schedule will force many schools into scheduling all 3 non-conference games at home for financial reasons. That spells cupcake city. I think you would see fewer of the great non-conference matchups...and we are seeing fewer now as it is.
            Shut the fuck up Donny!

            Comment


            • You might have a point there, Wiz. A 9-game conference schedule means that each team will have alternating seasons of 4 and 5 home conference games. I can see Brandon trying to set things up to make sure that Michigan has all 3 OOC games at home during those seasons when U of M has only 4 home B1G games.

              Unless, of course, he has an offer that allows him to pimp out games to "neutral" sites for a fistful of dollars, that is.
              Last edited by Rob F; July 17, 2012, 09:46 AM.

              Comment


              • This 9 conference game scheduling crap is going to start making decent OOC games even harder to come by.

                Clemson announced today that they are cancelling all their home-and-home series except with South Carolina and one upcoming series with Georgia. They'll play 9 ACC games, South Carolina, and two cupcakes every single year.

                Comment


                • I like 9 conference games, play as much of your league as possible, it isn't like the vast majority of the early OOC games teams have been playing were against quality opponents anyway.

                  Bowls and the playoff are where teams will play out of conference.
                  Atlanta, GA

                  Comment


                  • It certainly hurts the amount of potential home dates. Those are huge paydays for most every athletic department, especially those with 75k plus stadiums and luxury suites. More than likely the 9th conference game merely replaces a MAC/C-USA type school than a quality opponent...

                    Very few top programs will play more than 1 tough OOC opponent if they have a 9th conference game.

                    Comment


                    • I'm pro 9th conference game btw, I like the schedules to match up better among both divisions. I don't want seasons where Nebraska plays Wisky, OSU & PSU and MSU plays Illinois, Indiana & Purdue...

                      Nebraska can beat MSU head-to-head, have a better overall W/L record (MSU loses a couple games OOC) but the Cornhuskers lose the division because Nebraska lost two close games to top 10 teams while MSU barely beats Indiana & Purdue...

                      SEC has the same issue yet even worse, they have out-of-division rivals and 14 teams (only 8 conference games), instead of the B10's 12...

                      Home dates ($$$) for the top programs are likely more important than having equal schedules.

                      Comment


                      • The SEC is having scheduling issues while trying to 1) Eventually move Missouri to the Western division and 2) Maintain an 8 game schedule. Problem is that one current West team would have to go East. That would almost certainly be Auburn and would screw up a large number of rivalries were it to happen.

                        Comment


                        • Don't they have some weird 6-1-1 scheduling plan, whereas they schedule 6 games vs. the other teams in their own 7-team division, have one protected interdivisional rivalry, and then play each of the other teams in the other division once every 6 years? Not sure of who-plays-who in the protected rivalries, but that means that in such a plan, those "non-protected" teams in the East Division travel to LSU only once every 12 years.

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by Rob F View Post
                            Don't they have some weird 6-1-1 scheduling plan, whereas they schedule 6 games vs. the other teams in their own 7-team division, have one protected interdivisional rivalry, and then play each of the other teams in the other division once every 6 years? Not sure of who-plays-who in the protected rivalries, but that means that in such a plan, those "non-protected" teams in the East Division travel to LSU only once every 12 years.
                            Yeah, Florida was raising hell about that, pointing out that they were forced to go there every other year while the rest of the division was only going once every 12 years as you point out.

                            Comment


                            • The 9-game plan probably increases the value of the TV contracts tremendously. More than the profit from the extra 1/2 home game. Ultimately, the revenue sharing from TV contracts is what is driving 9-game conference schedules. The only way to make the pot sweeter is to force everyone to play one extra non-tomato can. If they spread out some of the conference games so that they are played in early September, it would work out really nicely. No more games vs mid-majors on regional ABC. September football has gradually gone south in the past decade.

                              Comment


                              • Less than one week after the University of Miami hired Al Golden as coach, members of Golden's coaching staff began using Sean "Pee Wee" Allen – a then-equipment manager and onetime right-hand man of convicted Ponzi schemer Nevin Shapiro – to circumvent NCAA rules in the recruiting of multiple Miami-area players, Yahoo! Sports has learned.

                                Golden, hired by Miami in mid-December 2010, had direct knowledge of Allen's improper involvement with Miami recruits, according to a former Hurricanes athletic department staffer and federal testimony given by Allen in Shapiro's bankruptcy case. Additionally, multiple sources interviewed by NCAA investigators have told Yahoo! Sports that Allen has become a focal point in the association's probe into Miami athletics. The sources said investigators focused on Allen's role in providing impermissible benefits to Hurricanes players, as well as his contact with Miami recruits.



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