I think my fav look at the UNC scandal is from Dan Wetzel.
https://sports.yahoo.com/north-caro...rassing-academic-fraud-defense-010926838.html
I think the most damming part is this:
In perhaps
the most outlandish defense in NCAA infractions history, the school acknowledged that the classes that were taken were essentially bankrupt of any kind of teaching, learning or supervision … but that was perfectly OK with them
To defend the basketball team, the university had to claim it wasn’t really a university.
UNC was playing chess against the NCAA’s checkers. That was damn impressive, true Tark-level trolling.
Carolina even changed its argument for the NCAA. When the school was in front of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, which accredits it as an actual university, it declared that no-show, no-professor, no-work classes were wrong.
“
UNC reported to its accreditor that what occurred for nearly 18 years on its campus was academic fraud,” the NCAA report stated. ” … Specifically, UNC admitted [it] demonstrated that, ‘the academic fraud was long-standing.'”
Now, though, the classes weren’t fraud. They were fine. The NCAA was astounded. The Committee on Infractions asked how this was possible.
“UNC [told] the panel that it was merely a ‘typo’ or oversight,” the NCAA wrote.
A typo? At this point the case had become a “My Cousin Vinny” punchline … “I’m not Jerry Gallo … I’m Jerry Callo.”
What exactly was the typo that caused the school to write the term “academic fraud.” If you replace one letter do you get some other phrase? Maybe whomever does the typing in Chapel Hill is so inept it typo’d an entire phrase which, coincidentally, spelled out “academic fraud” in a case that wasn’t at all “academic fraud.”
Heck of a coincidence, dadgummit.
Also, this article by Dennis Dodd is also very interesting. It is about how close UNC came to losing their accreditation.
https://www.cbssports.com/college-b...on-agency-considered-dropping-north-carolina/
The head of an influential national accreditation agency that investigated
North Carolina told CBS Sports she was surprised the NCAA didn't do more in the academic fraud case that concluded Friday.
"Our board debated," said Belle Whelan, president of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission, one of the two largest accreditation agencies in the country.
"There were some that wanted to drop them."