Hello There, Guest! (LoginRegister)

      
Post Reply 
NCAA slaps UConn, Southern on APR
Author Message
Bookmark and Share
ctipton Offline
Jersey Retired
Jersey Retired

Posts: 32,482
Joined: Mar 2004
Reputation: 140
I Root For: UC and the Reds
Location: Cincinnati West Side

DonatorsDonators
Post: #1
NCAA slaps UConn, Southern on APR
NCAA slaps UConn, Southern on APR

Associated Press

INDIANAPOLIS -- The NCAA has put Connecticut on notice -- improve in the classroom or face tougher penalties.

The Huskies men's basketball team was one of six BCS teams sanctioned Tuesday for sub-par marks in the NCAA's annual Academic Progress Rates report. The Associated Press reported last week that UConn will lose two scholarships for the upcoming season because of the APR report.

And if the grades don't get better, the Huskies' punishment could get worse.

"We are all disappointed in our academic performance and going forward we are going to attack this in the only way I know how, and that is to work as hard as possible to get better every day," coach Jim Calhoun said in a statement. "I do know that over the past year, we have made improvements and are moving in the right direction."

To avoid losing more scholarships or practice time, UConn will have to prove it. And the Huskies weren't the only school getting hit Tuesday.

Southern University in Baton Rouge, La., became the first school to face postseason bans in two programs -- men's basketball and football -- because of academics.

The APR measures classroom performance of student-athletes on every Division I team. Teams scoring below the 925 cutline in one year can face immediate penalties. Those scoring below 900 or with low scores for several years face tougher historical sanctions.

This year's data covers 2006-07 through 2009-10. A perfect score is 1,000.

The average APR number for all athletes jumped three points to 970 in the latest report. Baseball (959) and men's basketball players (945) each had a five-point increase while the football score (946) improved by two points.

But the improvement was tempered by two things -- a record eight teams receiving postseason bans and the punishment of a prominent national champion that went before the NCAA infractions committee last year and now has seen a one-year drop from 930 to 893 in the classroom.

"It is disappointing to see that drop at UConn," said Emmert, who once served as Connecticut's chancellor. "We certainly hope it's a one-year drop."

Since postseason bans became part of the penalty structure in 2008, only four teams have received the punishment.

This year's group consists of men's basketball teams at Cal State-Northridge, Chicago State, Grambling, Louisiana-Monroe and Southern, and football teams at Idaho State, Southern and Jackson State, Walter Payton's alma mater.

Quote:APR Postseason Penalties

[Image: 2582.gif]
Southern

Southern became the first school handed a postseason ban in two sports for failing to meet the NCAA's academic progress rate requirements. Eight programs were penalized.

Men's Basketball
Cal State-Northridge
Chicago State
Grambling
Louisiana-Monroe
Southern

Football
Idaho State
Southern
Jackson State

No team has ever been given the harshest penalty, a one-year membership restriction.

The NCAA handed out 58 penalties this year to schools that have had consistently poor showings over more than one year. These harshest penalties -- postseason bans, practice reductions or guaranteed scholarship cuts -- affected only one BCS conference team: Arkansas, which will lose one scholarship in men's basketball.

Five other BCS teams will lose scholarships only if an equal number of academically ineligible players leave school. Football teams at Maryland and Louisville could lose up to three scholarships. Men's basketball teams at Georgia Tech and LSU could each lose one.

A seventh BCS team, Southern Cal men's basketball, fell below the cutline at 912, but was not penalized.

UConn has already said it will lose both its scholarships because two players have left the school in poor academic standing. The school posted the second-lowest score of any BCS team in the three major sports: football, men's basketball and women's basketball. Arkansas' men's basketball team had an 892. Butler, the two-time national runner-up, had a perfect 1,000.

UConn's score also prompted the NCAA to notify the school it was in danger of facing the harsher historical penalties if the APR number doesn't go up next year.

Walter Harrison, president at the University of Hartford and chairman of the NCAA's committee on academic performance, said he plans to meet with UConn's new president, Susan Herbst, soon and plans to discuss the classwork.

Emmert is willing to go a step further.

"In our office, we have routinely and would be willing again to send people to campuses to do things like best practices," he said. "We want to help them understand their relationship with the NCAA and what we can do to be helpful, and I'm sure they've got the culture there (at UConn) to respond appropriately."

Other details from the NCAA report:

• Historically black colleges and universities, including Southern, accounted for 29 of the 58 harshest penalties. Teams at more than 300 schools were measured in this year's APR, and only 24 of those were HBCUs.

• Four teams missed the cutline in the big three sports. They were Jackson State, Prairie View A&M, Southern and Texas Southern, all members of the Southwestern Athletic Conference. Nineteen schools had football and men's basketball teams fall below the cutline and 10 had both their men's and women's basketball teams miss the mark.

• Colorado, the only BCS school to face scholarship losses in football and men's basketball because of last year's APR scores, made the cut this time. The Buffaloes had a 929 in football and a 926 in men's basketball. Syracuse was the only other BCS school penalized in 2010. Its score improved from 912 to 928 in men's basketball.

• When combining the two penalty structures, 103 teams were penalized, down from 137 last year. Two years ago, the number was 177.

http://sports.espn.go.com/ncaa/news/story?id=6584182
 
05-26-2011 02:05 PM
Find all posts by this user Quote this message in a reply
Advertisement


ctipton Offline
Jersey Retired
Jersey Retired

Posts: 32,482
Joined: Mar 2004
Reputation: 140
I Root For: UC and the Reds
Location: Cincinnati West Side

DonatorsDonators
Post: #2
RE: NCAA slaps UConn, Southern on APR
Selected: Men's Basketball
Big East Conference
University of Cincinnati

Sport School

2005 - 2006 838 Immediate Penalty - Scholarship Reduction = 1
2006 - 2007 872
2007 - 2008 902
2008 - 2009 945
2009 - 2010 992

Selected: Football
Big East Conference
University of Cincinnati

Sport School
2005 - 2006 941
2006 - 2007 939
2007 - 2008 947
2008 - 2009 950
2009 - 2010 936

http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/newmedia/public/...ndex5.html
 
05-26-2011 02:13 PM
Find all posts by this user Quote this message in a reply
Kenyon#4 Away
Retired
*

Posts: 5,067
Joined: Feb 2006
Reputation: 33
I Root For: Bearcats
Location:
Post: #3
RE: NCAA slaps UConn, Southern on APR
Wow, 992 is a really nice score for the basketball program. Thumbs up!

And it's higher than Ughs-avier, Sister Rose is slipping in her old age.
 
(This post was last modified: 05-26-2011 07:15 PM by Kenyon#4.)
05-26-2011 07:11 PM
Find all posts by this user Quote this message in a reply
Post Reply 




User(s) browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)


Copyright © 2002-2024 Collegiate Sports Nation Bulletin Board System (CSNbbs), All Rights Reserved.
CSNbbs is an independent fan site and is in no way affiliated to the NCAA or any of the schools and conferences it represents.
This site monetizes links. FTC Disclosure.
We allow third-party companies to serve ads and/or collect certain anonymous information when you visit our web site. These companies may use non-personally identifiable information (e.g., click stream information, browser type, time and date, subject of advertisements clicked or scrolled over) during your visits to this and other Web sites in order to provide advertisements about goods and services likely to be of greater interest to you. These companies typically use a cookie or third party web beacon to collect this information. To learn more about this behavioral advertising practice or to opt-out of this type of advertising, you can visit http://www.networkadvertising.org.
Powered By MyBB, © 2002-2024 MyBB Group.