Tag Archives: president mark emmert

NCAA poised to make sweeping changes

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — The NCAA is putting reform on the fast track.

Money to address complaints that scholarships don’t cover the full cost of attendance? Check. Multi-year scholarships? Check. Changes in summer basketball recruiting and postseason bans for poor classroom performance? Check.

All four issues are on the agenda of the NCAA’s Division I board of directors, which is meeting Thursday and is expected to act quickly.

“I fully expect that when you’re making as big of changes as we are, that you’ll need some fine-tuning and adjustments,” NCAA President Mark Emmert told The Associated Press. “But in the past, not getting the fine-tuning right has slowed down the process, and I and the board are committed to moving things along aggressively.”

Why not?

Since taking office a little more than a year ago, Emmert has presided over one of the most tumultuous years in NCAA history.

Scandals have rocked programs from Boise State to Miami. The reigning national champions in football (Auburn) and men’s basketball (Connecticut) were both investigated by the NCAA, and there have been questions about agents, parents, academic misconduct, improper benefits and even prostitution. The revolving door of conference realignment is still spinning wildly, and the Justice Department is even asking about scholarship rules.

School presidents have had enough, and there is momentum to take drastic action now.

“I think the presidents have reached a point where they’re saying too many things are not working well, and the board needs to take stronger actions from the top down rather than from the bottom up,” Penn State’s Graham Spanier said at an August retreat. “We’ve reached a point where we must pay more attention to these academic issues, these integrity issues. Some of these things our coaches and our boosters might not like, but I think we need to do what you’re going to see us do in the next year.”

Within 24 hours of those comments, the train started rolling.

The board toughened the Academic Progress Rate by raising the cutline from 900 to 930, and passed a measure to ban teams from postseason tournaments every time they miss the cutline. Emmert also wants to put that measuring stick in bowl licensing agreements, thereby making it effective for football, too.

The second part of that equation, how and when to impose the new rule, will be determined Thursday.

“What we are proposing would not go into effect until the following year (2012-13),” said Walt Harrison, the University of Hartford president and chairman of the committee on academic performance. “We are trying to change behavior, so we have to give people time to adjust.”

That is only a part of this week’s busy agenda.

Changes to the long-held scholarship rules have generated the biggest buzz.

Emmert said he supports adding $2,000 per year in scholarship money to cover the full cost of attendance — money that covers more than tuition, room and board, books and fees. Many outsiders consider that a major change to the governing body’s long-held policy on amateurism, a policy Emmert has repeatedly said he will uphold. Until 1972, athletes were receiving $15 per month in “laundry” money.

If the proposal is approved, each conference would decide whether to offer the additional $2,000 to players on full scholarship. The money would have to come out of school budgets, with an equal amount of additional money going to female athletes because of Title IX rules. It’s believed the six BCS conferences will adopt the new rules.

What’s not clear is whether higher costs would push more schools toward the long-feared megaconferences.

“I don’t think so at all,” Emmert said. “It (realignment) is much, much larger in its magnitude and implications than this. So there’s no reason to believe it will start another round of conference realignment at all.”

In addition, the board will consider giving schools the option to award multi-year scholarships. Currently, scholarships are provided on a year-by-year basis, which prompted last spring’s Justice Department inquiry. If the proposal passes, schools could grant scholarships for the maximum time of eligibility — four years for incoming freshmen, less for transfer students.

Tougher academic standards are also up for a vote.

Two days after seeing record numbers on the NCAA’s annual Graduation Success Rate, the board will consider a measure that requires high school seniors to maintain a 2.3 GPA and junior college transfers a 2.5 GPA to become eligible immediately. Currently, both groups need to maintain a 2.0 GPA.

Prep players also would have to take 10 of their 16 mandated core courses before their senior year, and juco transfers would be limited in how many physical education credits could count toward eligibility.

Those who qualify under the current standards, but fail to meet the new ones, would be granted an “academic redshirt” year in which they could keep the scholarship and practice with their teammates. But they could not participate in games.

Emmert expects the entire package to pass.

Not enough?

Summer basketball is back on the agenda.

The new proposal would give coaches a limited recruiting period in April, still allow some contact with recruits in July, provide coaches with some access to their own players during the summer and lift the text messaging ban. Emmert expects that to pass, too.

The board also will hear from two key working groups — one that is looking at a new penalty structure, the other trying to edit the NCAA’s massive rulebook.

“They want to focus on the big, broad integrity questions rather than those that are unenforceable or those things that don’t work,” Emmert said of the rulebook committee. “They basically are looking at three things: Is it enforceable, is it consistent with our values and is it material to the overall impact of college sports. What the working group is going to do is ask the board to support that approach, and then we’ll come back and talk about that over the next couple of meetings.”

No changes are expected before the board’s next meeting in January and more likely until April.

But clearly, this is a path Emmert and school presidents want to take, and they’re not about to let a few details slow them down.

“The presidents have been unequivocal in trying to do this as quickly as we can,” Emmert said at the retreat. “The board has full authority to take such actions. They are all issues that various commissions and committees have been working on for months and in some cases years. I wouldn’t describe it as emergency, but there is clearly a strong sense of urgency.”

© 2011 The Associated Press

Congressman urges hearings on college sports

WASHINGTON (AP) — The top Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee is urging the panel to hold hearings on antitrust and other issues in college sports, including the recent series of conference realignments.

“It has become increasingly clear to me that the combination of issues and challenges facing intercollegiate sports have reached a tipping point calling for congressional attention,” Michigan Rep. John Conyers wrote to the committee chairman, Texas Republican Lamar Smith, in a letter released Thursday. The committee said in a statement that it is reviewing Conyers’ request.

Several major colleges have recently announced plans to switch conferences, including Syracuse and Pittsburgh from the Big East to the ACC, and Texas A&M from the Big 12 to the Southeastern Conference. The Big East now wants to expand to 12 football teams. Critics have voiced concerns that the shuffling could lead to a handful of 16-team “superconferences” that could break away from the NCAA or dictate looser rules to stay competitive. The moves have raised new questions about the role of money in college sports.

Conyers said in his letter that he was concerned about the impact that conference realignment would have on lower-profile sports teams and smaller and independent universities – especially historically black colleges and universities.

The NCAA did not immediately return email and telephone messages Thursday, but President Mark Emmert recently told The Associated Press he was concerned about the perception that money is driving the decisions, saying, “this is not the NFL, the NBA, it’s not a business.” He urged school presidents to consider factors besides revenue when choosing conference affiliation.

Conyers also wants to look into due process for athletes, the NCAA’s use of athletes’ images in video games without compensation, limitations of athletic scholarships, and the costs to players from injuries sustained during games among other issues.

He said he understood that some committee members might have reservations about delving into these issues.

“I would note, however, that modern-day college athletics is a massive business, with widespread economic impact on athletes, their families, broadcasters, and fans as well as universities and colleges all over the country,” Conyers wrote.

© 2011 The Associated Press

Oklahoma, Texas clear path to leave Big 12

Oklahoma cleared the way Monday for its possible departure from the Big 12, with university president David Boren demanding the league move toward an equal revenue-sharing model and create stability or else lose the Sooners to the Pac-12.

Rival Texas also moved closer to the door, raising the prospect that one of the nation’s biggest conferences could lose its two richest, most powerful programs.

After being granted the power to choose a new conference home for the Sooners, Boren said he is focused on only two options: a fractured Big 12 that isn’t currently suitable or the expanding Pac-12, which already claimed Oklahoma’s conference rival, Colorado, last summer.

“The status quo is certainly not stable,” Boren said. “That’s one of the things we’re weighing: Can it be made stable?”

Texas counterpart Bill Powers, granted similar decision-making power by his regents less than an hour later, said he would consider options “including continued participation in the Big 12″ but made no mention of the Pac-12, the ACC or any other potential destinations.

The Big 12 has moved to the brink of extinction just one summer after the remaining 10 members pledged to stick together, then hammered out a $1.2 billion television contract. They decided not to create a conference network similar to the ones in place by the Big Ten and Pac-12, not to split revenue equally and not to create any barriers to Texas’ creation of the Longhorn Network through a 20-year, $300 million agreement with ESPN that proved to be divisive.

“I would simply say it is not a strong vote of confidence in the conference office that this has happened in such a short period of time,” Boren said.

Texas A&M has already said it plans to leave the Big 12 for the Southeastern Conference by July if legal issues can be addressed. If Oklahoma leaves, so will Oklahoma State.

“Whatever we do, we’re going to do it together and I think that’s very good news for the state of Oklahoma,” Boren said, adding that he speaks daily with Oklahoma State president Burns Hargis.

Oklahoma State’s regents have called a special meeting on the topic Wednesday.

“Oklahoma State has attractive options and we are working with our colleagues at the University of Oklahoma to make sure the best interests of both institutions and our state are achieved,” Hargis added.

Big 12 commissioner Dan Beebe said in a statement that the conference is “assuring our members that maintaining the Big 12 is in the best interest for their institutions.”

“It is my opinion that the case for the Big 12 Conference continues to be as strong today for all of our current members as it was last year, especially considering the welfare of those to whom we owe the greatest responsibility – the student-athletes,” Beebe said.

Boren has previously said he would consider the league a better option if it expanded back to 12 teams, and he said Monday that better revenue sharing must also be in place for the Sooners to stick around.

“Our goal is to be an equal partner in any network, and we think it ought to be the goal of every other member of any conference that we’re a part of to be an equal member of that conference,” Boren said.

“We all ought to value each other – every single member of that conference – and none of us should seek to play a stronger leadership role than anyone else.”

Texas’ regents met privately by telephone before approving a motion that still would require any move executed by Powers to be submitted to the regents for final approval. After the vote, Powers said only that the process is “ongoing” and left without further comment.

Boren said the schools are “always stronger when Texas and Oklahoma move together” but it’s possible the two could part ways.

“We have different perspectives,” Boren said. “I would put it this way: We’re listening with respect to each other at this point in time, but it’s too early to tell whether we’ll make a common decision or not.”

Texas officials have said they want the Big 12 to hold together but would keep “all options” open for the university, including reported discussions with the Pac-12 and ACC. But Texas has little appetite for a Big 12 without rival Oklahoma or Texas A&M.

“Last time everybody talked about where everybody was going, we ended up staying in the same place,” Longhorns coach Mack Brown said. “So my thoughts have always been the same: I think the University of Texas wants to stay in the Big 12.”

Texas Tech president Guy Bailey said it’s a sensitive time and “any comments regarding Tech’s plans are premature at this time.” Tech’s regents are not scheduled to meet until next month.

Pac-12 Commissioner Larry Scott has said his league is not necessarily looking to expand, and some university leaders have expressed concerns about expanding again after adding Utah and Colorado this year.

There is no guarantee the Pac-12 presidents will welcome new members, especially if Texas is not one of them.

But ultimately, the Big 12′s future likely comes down to whether the schools raking in the most money want to share enough of it with those earning the least, or if they’d rather leave their current rivals behind and chase a bigger paycheck.

Any move by Texas could be complicated by the Longhorn Network as school officials explore whether other leagues would let them keep their recently launched venture or force them to make changes to fit established media rights guidelines. For example, Pac-12 bylaws created six regional networks that are shared by conference schools.

School and conference officials from the Big East and Big 12 have been discussing ways to merge what’s left of the two leagues if Texas and Oklahoma leave the Big 12, a person involved in the discussions told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk publicly about the talks.

The Big East is left with only six football members after Pittsburgh and Syracuse announced plans to join the ACC this weekend, and the Big 12 could be in a similar situation if Texas, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State and Texas Tech all join Texas A&M in departing.

Texas lawmakers will be keeping their eyes on any move but are unlikely to interfere, said state Rep. Dan Branch, the Republican chairman of House Higher Education Committee.

Branch said he has told Texas regents and administrators he would like the state’s major universities to be rooted in the conference in the middle of the country, not one that is “Los Angeles or Atlantic-centric.”

“I hope they will also take into consideration the greater good for Texans,” Branch said. “(But) I understand in this new world, we’ve got to allow those regents and presidents to make those decisions.”

The NCAA has no authority over conference affiliations, though NCAA President Mark Emmert said Monday that he has been contacting university presidents and conference commissioners. He said he is urging them to consider the well-being of the student-athletes.

Emmert also said talk of having four or five superconferences is nothing more than conjecture.

© 2011 The Associated Press.

NCAA’s ‘death penalty’ could be option for Miami

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — NCAA President Mark Emmert believes the “death penalty” should be an option for college sports’ most egregious rule-breakers.

He just wants it to be used judiciously.

Nearly a quarter-century after the NCAA’s harshest sanction destroyed SMU’s football program, the allegations swirling at Miami have rekindled the debate.

Critics contend the SMU case proves the punishment was too severe, pointing to the damage it caused not only to the school’s football program but to the now defunct Southwest Conference. Supporters say it would send a message that the NCAA is backing up its tough talk.

Miami is the focus of the death penalty talk amid accusations that 72 former and current Hurricanes athletes – most of them football players – received improper benefits and that some coaches knew about it.

© 2011 The Associated Press

Will Miami case lead to fundamental change?

CORAL GABLES, Fla. (AP) — The latest scandalous allegations in college football – this time at the University of Miami – have renewed talk by the NCAA of the need for “fundamental change” in athletics.

And Hurricanes officials say they’re eager to resolve the case.

Former booster Nevin Shapiro, now serving 20 years in federal prison for his role in a Ponzi scheme, claims he provided Miami players with prostitutes, cars and other gifts over the past decade.

“If the assertions are true, the alleged conduct at the University of Miami is an illustration of the need for serious and fundamental change in many critical aspects of college sports,” NCAA president Mark Emmert said in a statement.

In the past 18 months, football teams at Southern California, Ohio State, Auburn, Oregon, Michigan, North Carolina, Georgia Tech and LSU have been investigated or sanctioned by the NCAA.

Last week, Emmert led a group of university presidents – including Miami’s Donna Shalala – in drafting an outline for change in college sports.

Shalala said she was upset, disheartened and saddened by Shapiro’s allegations.

“We will vigorously pursue the truth, wherever that path may lead, and I have insisted upon complete, honest and transparent cooperation with the NCAA from our staff and students,” Shalala said in a statement.

Most cases are resolved in six to seven months, but more complex investigations take longer, an NCAA official said.

Shapiro began making his allegations about a year ago. He told Yahoo Sports that 72 football players and other athletes at Miami received improper benefits from him in the past decade.

Shapiro was sentenced to prison in June for masterminding a $930 million Ponzi scheme, plus ordered to pay more than $82 million in restitution to investors. NCAA investigators were on the Miami campus this week and have interviewed Shalala and athletic director Shawn Eichorst.

Eichorst was hired as athletic director in April to replace Kirby Hocutt, who became AD at Texas Tech. Al Golden became the Hurricanes’ coach in December after Randy Shannon was fired.

Golden’s entire team practiced Wednesday, even though the claims by Shapiro involve several current players. Golden said it was too soon to take disciplinary action. His team opens the season Sept. 5 against Maryland.

Yahoo Sports published its story Tuesday, saying it spent 100 hours interviewing Shapiro over the span of 11 months and audited thousands of pages of financial and business records to examine his claims, some involving events nearly a decade ago. The NCAA’s four-year statute of limitations doesn’t apply when there is a pattern of willful violations that continues into the past four years.

A person familiar with the situation said much of Shapiro’s access to Hurricane programs in recent years was approved by Hocutt. The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because of the ongoing investigation.

Hocutt, the person said, allowed Shapiro on the sideline before football games at times during the 2008 season, plus invited him to select gatherings reserved for the athletic department’s biggest donors.

“That’s what Kirby did,” the person said. “His No. 1 job was to raise money and this Nevin Shapiro guy was one of the few people Kirby could get to write checks.”

In a statement, Hocutt said Shapiro was treated like other members of the Hurricane Club.

“While I was athletics director, the benefits and experiences Mr. Shapiro received were consistent with those provided to others at his membership level,” Hocutt said. “I never personally approved any special access for Mr. Shapiro to university athletics events or programs.”

Larry Coker, who coached the Hurricanes in 2001-06, said he had not been contacted by the NCAA or Miami about the investigation. Any coach or athletic direction involved in the case who now works at another school could be subject to NCAA punishment if found guilty of a violation.

The AP interviewed more than a dozen former Miami players, and their reactions ranged from denials of involvement to declining comment.

© 2011 The Associated Press

NCAA: We’ve been investigating Miami for 5 months

CORAL GABLES, Fla. (AP) — The NCAA said Wednesday it has been investigating the relationship between a convicted Ponzi scheme artist and the University of Miami for five months, and the allegations – if true – show the need for “serious and fundamental change” in college sports.

Former booster Nevin Shapiro, now serving 20 years in federal prison, claims he treated players with sex parties, nightclub outings, cars and other gifts. Shapiro told Yahoo Sports he provided improper benefits to 72 football players and other athletes at Miami from 2002 to 2010.

“If the assertions are true, the alleged conduct at the University of Miami is an illustration of the need for serious and fundamental change in many critical aspects of college sports,” NCAA president Mark Emmert said in a statement.

The Hurricanes’ entire football team took the practice field Wednesday, even though Shapiro’s claims involve several current players. Coach Al Golden said it was too soon to take disciplinary action.

The Hurricanes open their season Sept. 5 against Maryland.

“Everybody is practicing,” said Golden, who is in his first season as Miami’s coach. “If it is determined somebody broke rules, then certainly they’ll be first dealt with. … As we get ready for Maryland, hopefully we’ll swiftly learn if errors were made. If there are guys that are going to have to sit out games, we’ll adjust our practice accordingly.”

Players weren’t permitted to speak with the media.

Last week, Emmert led a group of university presidents in drafting an outline for change in college sports, including higher academic standards, a streamlined rule book and new parameters for athletic scholarships. The group included Miami president Donna Shalala.

“The serious threats to the integrity of college sports are one of the key reasons why I called together more than 50 presidents and chancellors last week to drive substantive changes to Division I intercollegiate athletics,” Emmert said in his statement Wednesday.

The allegations against Miami – a program that once reveled in an outlaw image and dealt with a massive Pell Grant scandal in the 1990s – have sparked the latest in a string of NCAA investigations involving some of college football’s most high-profile and successful programs.

In the past 18 months, football teams at Southern California, Ohio State, Auburn, Oregon, Michigan, North Carolina, Georgia Tech and LSU all have been investigated or sanctioned by the NCAA.

NCAA investigators were on the Miami campus this week in the wake of the allegations by Shapiro, and have interviewed Shalala and athletic director Shawn Eichorst. He was sentenced to prison in June for masterminding a $930 million Ponzi scheme, plus ordered to pay more than $82 million in restitution to investors.

Shalala said she was “upset, disheartened, and saddened by the recent allegations.”

“We will vigorously pursue the truth, wherever that path may lead, and I have insisted upon complete, honest, and transparent cooperation with the NCAA from our staff and students,” Shalala said in a statement. “Our counsel is working jointly with the NCAA enforcement division in a thorough and meticulous investigation.”

Most cases are resolved in six to seven months, but more complex investigations take longer, an NCAA official said.

Golden said he’s eager to obtain answers quickly, in part so his players don’t repeat past mistakes.

“If they were exposed to Mr. Shapiro, clearly we have to make sure we prevent that going forward,” Golden said. “You do that by getting to the facts. How did this guy, if he did, get around our players like that? As a head coach, I want to know. I know our assistant coaches want to know. We want to make sure it never happens again. It shouldn’t happen.”

Current Miami players named by Shapiro as receiving benefits included quarterback Jacory Harris, Ray Ray Armstrong, Travis Benjamin, Sean Spence, Marcus Forston, Vaughn Telemaque, Dyron Dye, Aldarius Johnson and Olivier Vernon. Former Hurricanes quarterback Robert Marve, now at Purdue, also was named by Shapiro, Yahoo Sports said.

Yahoo Sports published its story Tuesday afternoon, saying it spent 100 hours interviewing Shapiro over the span of 11 months and audited thousands of pages of financial and business records to examine his claims, some involving events nearly a decade ago. The NCAA’s four-year statute of limitations doesn’t apply when there is a pattern of willful violations that continues into the past four years.

“I did it because I could,” Shapiro said of his spending. “And because nobody stepped in to stop me.”

A person familiar with the situation said much of Shapiro’s access to Hurricane programs in recent years was approved by former athletic director Kirby Hocutt, who has since left the school for Texas Tech. The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because of the ongoing joint investigation between the university and the NCAA.

Hocutt, the person said, allowed Shapiro on the sideline before football games at times during the 2008 season, plus invited him to select gatherings reserved for the athletic department’s biggest donors.

“That’s what Kirby did,” the person said. “His No. 1 job was to raise money and this Nevin Shapiro guy was one of the few people Kirby could get to write checks.”

Shapiro had been on the Miami sideline before games an unknown number of times before Hocutt’s arrival as athletic director in 2008. Hocutt has declined comment on the investigation.

Shapiro dubbed himself “Little Luke” in reference to Luther Campbell – aka Luke Skyywalker, the rapper who was a constant presence on the Hurricanes’ sideline during their 1980s glory days.

Campbell took exception to any comparisons.

“Nevin Shapiro wishes he could wear my shorts for one day,” Campbell wrote in a blog post. “That punk could never be me. First of all, I have never been a UM booster. I have never given a dime to the school. I have and always will support the players and the program out of civic pride, but I never violated any NCAA rules when I was the team’s biggest fan in the 1980s.”

Former Nebraska defensive end Benard Thomas told the AP he was on Shapiro’s yacht with two former Hurricanes players, Kellen Winslow Jr. and D.J. Williams, in 2005 when they had finished college.

“We all had money ourselves,” Thomas said. “We didn’t need anything from him.”

Thomas described Shapiro as “cool.”

“He was a nice guy,” Thomas said. “I’ve got nothing bad to say about him.”

Former Hurricanes in the NFL were reluctant to discuss the case. Said Devin Hester when approached at a Chicago Bears practice: “If this is about the Miami thing, I ain’t got nothing.”

Tennessee Titans rookie Colin McCarthy, who played at Miami, wore an orange Hurricanes’ T-shirt when reporters talked to him after practice Tuesday night. He responded “no comment” to four questions.

Shapiro began making his allegations about a year ago. Golden joined the Hurricanes in December after Randy Shannon was fired. Eichorst was hired as athletic director in April to replace Hocutt.

Golden said when he interviewed for the job, Miami officials did not tell him about Shapiro’s allegations.

“If they knew this was percolating, I believe they did have a responsibility to tell me,” Golden said. “I believe they have a responsibility to tell Shawn. But look, I’m happy here. My wife is happy here. We have great kids on this team.”

© 2011 The Associated Press

Big East commish reaches out to Beebe, Swofford

Big East Commissioner John Marinatto says he has been in constant contact with Dan Beebe of the Big 12 and John Swofford of the Atlantic Coast Conference in recent days and has suggested the three meet to discuss conference realignment.

Marinatto didn’t reveal details about his conversations with his fellow commissioners but said Tuesday: “I thought it would be important for us to meet face-to-face and take the lead in trying to do things the right way.”

Marinatto also has spoken with NCAA president Mark Emmert, but he said Emmert was not planning to hold any meetings with conference commissioners to discuss conference realignment.

In a statement to the AP, Swofford said he is open to Emmert’s “involvement in helping us find a process that better serves the greater good of college athletics.”

“As it relates to conference realignment, if we can find a more structured way to do business with each other, we need to try to find it,” Swofford said. “In my opinion, further exploration would be healthy and beneficial for our profession.”

The NCAA president doesn’t have the power to stop schools from changing conferences and Marinatto pointed out that Emmert’s involvement would likely be limited by potential legal issues such as restriction of trade and antitrust laws.

Beebe’s conference, which nearly was wiped out last year when the Pac-10 expanded, is in danger of losing Texas A&M to the Southeastern Conference.

If the Aggies end up in the SEC, the league likely would need to add at least one more member.

There has been rampant speculation the SEC, which has 12 members, could target another school from the Big 12, or from the ACC and Big East for further expansion.

“We can and must be mindful everyone’s best interests and be constructive and not destructive,” Marinatto said. “But we all realize we are competitive and we have different constituencies to serve.”

© 2011 The Associated Press

North Dakota officials to change school nickname

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — State legislators and University of North Dakota officials are preparing to change the school’s Fighting Sioux nickname following a meeting at NCAA headquarters.

After spending more than an hour with NCAA President Mark Emmert on Friday in Indianapolis, Gov. Jack Dalrymple said the NCAA would not change the settlement agreement that goes into effect Monday. If the school doesn’t change its nickname, or get permission to use the name Fighting Sioux from a second tribe, it will be banned from hosting postseason tournaments and using the nickname or logo at NCAA tournaments.

Dalrymple says he will introduce a bill Nov. 7 transferring authority of the nickname and logo back to the school. Earlier this year, the state legislature passed a law requiring the school to use its current nickname and logo.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) – University of North Dakota president Robert Kelley and four state leaders have arrived at the NCAA headquarters to make their case for keeping the Fighting Sioux nickname.

The group will meet with NCAA President Mark Emmert on Friday afternoon in Indianapolis.

In 2006, the NCAA placed North Dakota on a list of 18 schools with American Indian nicknames, logos and mascots considered “hostile and abusive.” In October 2007, a court-imposed settlement of the school’s lawsuit required school officials to retire the nickname on Aug. 15, 2011, unless the state’s two namesake tribes approved of its use.

One has, the other has not.

Earlier this year, the state legislature passed a law requiring the school to use its current nickname and logo.

© 2011 The Associated Press

NCAA set to hear Ohio State violations case

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Jim Tressel had hoped to travel to Indianapolis to be a central figure at the inaugural Big Ten championship game in December.

Instead, he’s in the city to testify about his role in NCAA violations, which have shaken the foundation of Ohio State’s powerhouse football program and cost him his job.

Ohio State President Gordon Gee, athletic director Gene Smith, Tressel and interim coach Luke Fickell, among others, were on hand early Friday to appear before the NCAA’s committee on infractions.

The Ohio State contingent entered the large ballroom at a downtown hotel shortly before 8 a.m. Tressel, flanked by lawyers, arrived shortly thereafter. The hearing began promptly at 8:30 a.m. EDT

They’ll state their case that Tressel alone among school officials broke NCAA bylaws when he learned some of his players had accepted improper benefits from a Columbus tattoo-parlor owner and then declined to tell Ohio State or NCAA officials for more than nine months.

Tressel’s judgments led to his forced resignation in May after 10 seasons, a 106-22 record, seven Big Ten titles and the 2002 national championship. They also led to a lengthy NCAA investigation which resulted in Ohio State vacating a 12-1 season in 2010 (dropping Tressel’s actual Ohio State record to 94-21) and imposing a two-year NCAA probation on itself.

Six Ohio State players also were suspended for the first five games this fall for trading memorabilia for cash and discounted tattoos. Star quarterback Terrelle Pryor, one of the six suspended players, gave up his final year of eligibility for a shot at playing in the NFL.

Smith said this week that the investigations into the players’ actions and those of Tressel have cost Ohio State’s athletic department about $800,000 so far.

The committee will decide if the university has gone far enough. It could tack on a bowl ban or limit the Buckeyes’ number of recruits. The NCAA has informed Ohio State that the two most serious charges it can levy on a school — lack of institutional control and failure to monitor players and coaches — do not apply based on information it has received so far.

The hearing is expected to take several hours in a large, private meeting room on the first floor of the hotel. The room has 38 microphones placed on tables set up in a square. There are guards preventing the public or media from entering any of the 14 doors along two sides that open to a hallway.

The 10-member committee on infractions, chaired by Mideastern Athletic Conference Commissioner Dennis Thomas, will hear testimony and ask questions.

After the hearing, the committee’s recommended penalties are expected to be announced in the typical time frame – 6 to 8 weeks – barring any additional investigations or fresh allegations. Ohio State can appeal the verdict.

Ohio State officials have worked closely with the NCAA in all aspects of the case. But in a climate where several big-time football (Southern California, North Carolina) and men’s basketball (Tennessee, Connecticut) programs have been or are in trouble, there is an undercurrent that the NCAA may choose to take a hard line on the Buckeyes’ violations.

Naturally, Smith believes the Buckeyes’ proposed penalties are sufficient.

“We feel strongly about where we are with our sanctions,” he said recently.

Should the NCAA decide to add to Ohio State’s penalties, Smith, who has served on the NCAA’s committee on infractions, said he would be extremely upset.

“I’ll be shocked and disappointed and on the offensive,” he said. “It’ll be behavior you haven’t witnessed.”

Big Ten Commissioner Jim Delany was on the NCAA’s enforcement staff from 1975-79. Speaking at the conference’s annual football media day last month, he called the violations by Tressel and his players, “embarrassing.”

He offered insight into how the infractions committee will handle Ohio State’s case.

“I would tell you that generally speaking the outcomes that the committee gives are rational on that day,” he said. “They hear the evidence. They look at prior cases. They typically don’t go back 10 or 20 years. … Sometimes I think they’re too tough. Sometimes I think they’re too easy.”

He added, “I don’t fear that the infractions committee is going to be any more (hard on rules violations) this summer than they were last summer or the summer before.”

The most recent spate of violations at Ohio State overlapped with probation remaining from when the men’s basketball program committed major violations under then-coach Jim O’Brien in 2004. That makes Ohio State a so-called repeat violator and could affect the school’s treatment by the NCAA.

“That does open it up to any penalties – (loss of) scholarships or things of that nature,” Smith said. “They still have to be justifiable. But, yes, it opens it up to any penalty that they want to levy.”

NCAA President Mark Emmert provided some tough talk about the future of college athletics earlier this week, leading many to believe that the association’s judicial arm might come down hard on the Buckeyes.

Emmert was the vice chancellor of academic affairs at the University of Colorado from 1985-92 while Gee was UC’s president from 1985-90. The two were good friends, leading some to conclude that Emmert will make certain Ohio State and his mentor do not have to pay too steep a penalty.

Other former NCAA officials have said the infractions committee is a separate entity that is not swayed by outside interests.

© 2011 The Associated Press

NCAA looks at smaller rulebook, tougher penalties

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — NCAA presidents spent Wednesday morning discussing simplifying the expansive rulebook and handing out tougher penalties to schools and coaches who violate rules.

Fifty-six university presidents attended the morning session, which lasted more than 3 1/2 hours.

Kansas State president Kirk Schultz, tweeting from inside the meeting room, questioned how many rules are necessary to police college sports. He also noted there was lots of discussion about making penalties strong enough to be a deterrent and requiring coaches to take responsibility for all aspects of their programs including assistant coaches.

NCAA President Mark Emmert is expected to take questions following the final session of the two-day presidential retreat.

He has repeatedly said he favors deregulation, stronger penalties and even a separate penalty structure for less serious violations.

On Tuesday, the presidents discussed financial concerns.

© 2011 The Associated Press