7StraightIsGreat
Well-Known Member
With all of the allegations coming to light in regards to the Miami Hurricane football program, I honestly think we're going to see the NCAA hand down the Death Penalty for the first time since SMU in 1986. The brunt of SMU's violations was paying players. IMO Miami is in much deeper than that. I heard on the radio today that there's literally "thousands" of Hurricane violations the NCAA is currently looking at. Most revolve around players receiving cash, cars, sex and in one case paying for an abortion for a player and a girl he knocked up.
I'm totally in favor of Miami getting the death penalty. It seems like there's just too much of a mess there to try and attempt to clean it up on the go. Time to hit the reset button and build from the ground up. It's also a great time for the NCAA to show that they're actually going to use their authority. If not now, when? IMO the NCAA looks completely nutless if it takes some scholarships away and bans Miami from bowl games for 3 seasons.
I was too young to really remember the SMU situation . I was interested to read the ins and outs of what it looks like when the NCAA hands down the "Death Penalty":
I'm totally in favor of Miami getting the death penalty. It seems like there's just too much of a mess there to try and attempt to clean it up on the go. Time to hit the reset button and build from the ground up. It's also a great time for the NCAA to show that they're actually going to use their authority. If not now, when? IMO the NCAA looks completely nutless if it takes some scholarships away and bans Miami from bowl games for 3 seasons.
I was too young to really remember the SMU situation . I was interested to read the ins and outs of what it looks like when the NCAA hands down the "Death Penalty":
....SMU football had already been placed on three years' probation in 1985 for recruiting violations. At the time, it had been on probation seven times (including five times since 1974), more than any other school in Division I-A.[4]
However, in 1986, SMU faced allegations by whistleblowing player Sean Stopperich that players were still being paid. An investigation found that 21 players received approximately $61,000 in cash payments, with the assistance of athletic department staff members, from a slush fund provided by a booster. Payments ranged from $50 to $725 per month, and started only a month after SMU went on its original probation (though it later emerged that a slush fund had been maintained in one form or another since the mid-1970s). Also, SMU officials lied to NCAA officials about when the payments stopped.
While the school had assured the NCAA that players were no longer being paid, the school's board of governors, led by chairman Bill Clements, decided that the school had to honor previous commitments made to the players. However, under a secret plan adopted by the board, the school would phase out the slush once all players that were still being paid had graduated.[5]
As a result:
The 1987 season was canceled; only conditioning drills (without pads) would be permitted until the spring of 1988.
All home games in 1988 were canceled. SMU was allowed to play their seven regularly scheduled away games so that other institutions would not be financially affected. The university would ultimately choose not to do so.
The team's existing probation was extended to 1990. Its existing ban from bowl games and live television was extended to 1989.
SMU lost 55 new scholarship positions over 4 years.
The team was allowed to hire only five full-time assistant coaches, instead of the typical nine.
No off-campus recruiting would be permitted until August 1988, and no paid visits could be made to campus by would-be recruits until the start of the 1988–89 school year.