Arizona State hit with sanctions for dead-period recruiting violations
TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) — Arizona State and four former members of its football coaching staff have reached an agreement with the NCAA on penalties for impermissible in-person contact with recruits during the COVID-19 dead period.
Two others are contesting portions of their respective cases via a written record hearing, according to a release by the NCAA on Friday.
Under the penalties, Arizona State was hit with four years probation, a fine, an already-served self-imposed ban for the 2023 postseason and vacation of records for games in which ineligible student-athletes competed. The Sun Devils also will have a reduction in scholarships and recruiting restrictions in alignment for the Level I-mitigated classification for the school.
The agreed-upon violations also include recruiting inducements, impermissible tryouts and tampering by the staff under former head coach Herm Edwards.
The resolution includes an agreement that the violations demonstrated unethical conduct by involved individuals and a head coach responsibility violation. The school also agreed that it failed to monitor the program.
“Arizona State’s cooperation throughout the investigation and processing of this case was exemplary, and the cooperation began with the leadership shown by the university president,” said Jason Leonard, executive director of athletics compliance at Oklahoma and chief hearing officer for the Committee on Infractions panel. “The school’s acceptance of responsibility and decision to self-impose meaningful core penalties is a model for all schools to follow and is consistent with the expectations of the NCAA’s infractions program.”
Splitting the decisions allows the school and other parties to immediately begin serving their penalties while awaiting the committee's final decision on remaining portions of the case.
___
AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/college-football and https://twitter.com/ap_top25
HEADLINES
- Report: Saban expected to co-chair Trump's commission on college sports
- Ex-Utah QB Cameron Rising retires due to lingering hand injury
- Florida's Dijon Johnson charged with 2 felonies after arrest
- Akron ruled ineligible for postseason due to low academic score
- Notre Dame, Clemson reach 12-year scheduling agreement from 2027-38