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Football: Here’s what games UL has vacated following NCAA probe

Tim Buckley, The Advertiser, March 3, 2016

 

Kiss another New Orleans Bowl victory goodbye.

UL on Thursday morning revealed the number of football victories it will vacate as the result of an NCAA investigation into its football program: 22 in all.

The Ragin’ Cajuns originally self-vacated their entire 9-4 season from 2011, including a New Orleans Bowl win over San Diego State.

RELATED:Can UL erase an entire football season?

Now — as ordered by the NCAA, and after taking their allotted time to determine which games five ineligible players took part — they said they have vacated eight of their nine victories from 2011, four from 2012, eight from 2013 and two from 2014, including their 2011 and 2013 New Orleans Bowl wins.

The Cajuns beat San Diego State in the 2011 New Orleans Bowl and Tulane in the 2013 New Orleans Bowl.

UL went 9-4 in each of those four seasons, and won four straight New Orleans Bowls during that span.

The Cajuns also must forfeit their 2013 Sun Belt Conference co-championship, which they had shared with Arkansas State, and vacate the statistics of their unidentified ineligible student-athletes.

“While it is disappointing to vacate these victories and championships, we finally put this chapter behind us and will continue to grow our championship football program,” UL athletic director Scott Farmer said in a statement. “We stand behind the integrity and accomplishments of (head coach) Mark Hudspeth, members of his coaching staff and each of our student-athletes who played football during the Hudspeth era.”

The NCAA ruled in January that Hudspeth is not at fault, and that has not changed.

The 22 forfeited wins must be deleted from Hudspeth’s record, however, and trophies from the two New Orleans Bowl victories must be removed from public display at the school.

According to UL’s statement, the Committee on Infractions "noted that while the University likely could not have stopped the concealed activities of the former assistant coach, ultimately, the University is responsible for its employees’ actions."

UL avoided a future bowl ban but was saddled with added sanctions when in January the NCAA issued a final ruling on its lengthy investigation into alleged recruiting violations and payment to a player by former assistant coach David Saunders.

The NCAA’s Committee on Infractions ruled then that Saunders, now the head coach at Pearl River Community College in Mississippi, “violated NCAA rules by arranging fraudulent college entrance exam scores for five prospects,” and that he also denied his involvement and failed to cooperate in the investigation.

Neither Hudspeth nor Saunders immediately responded Thursday to requests for comment.

The committee imposed on UL the lowest level of penalties for Level I violations within the NCAA’s penalty structure.

The university agreed with the findings that resulted in invalid ACT scores and chose not to appeal the ruling, Farmer said in January.

UL countered, though, by filing a lawsuit seeking damages from ACT Inc. for allegedly failing to detect improper test administration or results.

The NCAA also found after a year-and-a-half-long probe that Saunders paid one unidentified student-athlete “$6,500 over two semesters,” something UL has denied throughout the process.

Beyond accepting the penalties initially self-imposed by the Cajuns, which also included recruiting restrictions and a reduction in football scholarships by 11 over a three-year period, the NCAA in January levied additional sanctions including “two years of probation, a $5,000 fine, additional recruiting restrictions and an eight-year show-cause order” for Saunders.

It did not take away any added football scholarships, however.

UL athletic director Scott Farmer addresses media at

UL athletic director Scott Farmer addresses media at January 2016 press conference to respond to a report issued by the NCAA Committee on Infractions. (Photo: SCOTT CLAUSE/THE ADVERTISER)

Show-cause means that if Saunders is hired by an NCAA member school during that period, he and the school must appear before the Committee on Infractions.

The NCAA also ruled in January that UL must vacate all football games from 2012 through 2014 in which ineligible student-athletes participated.

That is what led to Thursday’s announcement.

According to what the NCAA called “facts of the case,” Saunders “developed a relationship with an administrator for a college entrance exam test site, which ultimately led to five prospects obtaining fraudulent exam scores.”

The NCAA identified that administrator as Ginny Crager, a now-retired Wayne County (Mississippi) High teacher.

Officials from UL appeared before an NCAA Committee on Infractions last November at Indianapolis, Indiana.

The NCAA issued a four-count notice of allegations earlier in 2015, and UL subsequently responded.

Saunders was fired by UL during the 2014 season, after he allegedly failed to cooperate with investigators.

“Since Coach Hudspeth’s arrival in 2011, the football staff and student-athletes have shown their dedication to winning through their hard work and indomitable spirit," Farmer said. "Although games were vacated due to the actions of one person, our fans, student-athletes and coaches will remember the excitement and pride they felt. We appreciate all of our fans’ support and together we will fight on."

22 WINS GONE

A look at specifically which football wins are being vacated by UL as the result of an NCAA investigation, as obtained Thursday by the Daily Avertiser:

2011

Kent State
Nicholls State
Florida International
Florida Atlantic
Troy
North Texas
UL Monroe
San Diego State (New Orleans Bowl)

2012

Lamar
Troy
Florida International
Tulane

2013

Nicholls State
Texas State
Western Kentucky
Arkansas State
New Mexico State
Troy
Georgia State
Tulane (New Orleans Bowl)

2014

New Mexico State
Troy