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Saturday, Nov. 23
The Indiana Daily Student

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NCAA adds extra year to South Carolina's probation

Spurrier says university 'satisfied' with decision

COLUMBIA, S.C. - The NCAA added an extra year to South Carolina's self-imposed two years' probation, but did not impose sanctions on TV or postseason appearances for 10 violations that occurred during the tenure of retired football coach Lou Holtz.\nThe NCAA Committee on Infractions reviewed South Carolina's case earlier this month. Committee vice chairman Josephine Potuto wrote university president Andrew Sorensen on Aug. 16 that the group "concurred that the university's investigation into the violations set forth in the report was thorough and complete."\nSouth Carolina had already placed itself on probation, taken away four scholarships from the football program over the next two years and reduced by 12 the number of paid on-campus visits by recruits.\nThe NCAA panel adopted those penalties and extended the probation.\nNCAA will also require the school to forward infractions report to its regional accrediting agency, and imposed a four-year show cause order should former South Carolina administrator Tom Perry try for employment at another athletic department.\nSorensen wrote to the NCAA committee accepting the additional penalties.\n"We are satisfied with the results," South Carolina coach Steve Spurrier said. "We appreciate the NCAA basically agreeing with our proposal. For the next couple of years, we will only have 83 players on scholarship."\nIn July, the university released a summary disposition report, prepared jointly with the NCAA, that outlined 10 violations -- five which South Carolina admitted were major. The NCAA said one violation that the school deemed secondary was a major infraction. The disagreement will be settled in the NCAA's final report to the school, university spokesman Russ McKinney said.\nNew South Carolina athletic director Eric Hyman said the NCAA's decision "brings closure to this situation."\nPerry, an ex-senior associate athletic director for academic support services, was at the center of the most serious violations. The report found Perry arranged for impermissible tutoring help during the summer of 2001 for two prospective players who were coming from two-year colleges. After the incident was self-reported, Perry declared the athletes ineligible and made the players make restitution for the tutoring.\nThe NCAA panel's letter appears to close a case that it first looked into more than three years ago.\nHoltz told The Associated Press by phone Wednesday night that no money or job offers were given to athletes and no recruiting inducements made.\n"The three year probation without restrictions says volumes," he said. "USC will still appear on TV. It will still go to bowl games."\nHoltz said he hadn't commented much before on the matter because he hadn't seen the NCAA report before Wednesday.\n"I am sorry that any rules were violated and I apologize for any embarrassment in my six years at USC," Holtz said. "We tried to operate not only according to the letter of the law but the spirit of the law as well."\nSorensen was gratified the committee found the majority of South Carolina's penalties appropriate.\n"Carolina takes seriously its obligation as an NCAA member institution, and we shall continue to pursue with vigilance and honesty our goal of full compliance with all NCAA policies and procedures," Sorensen said in a written statement.

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