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In 1996, UConn was stripped of its NCAA tournament run to the regional semifinals and ordered to return $90,970 in tournament revenue because two players accepted plane tickets from a sports agent.
But this is the first time the program has received a letter from the NCAA accusing the school of major violations. The case has no impact on the other athletic programs at UConn, such as its national champion women's basketball team.
In the May report, UConn was cited as an institution for not adequately monitoring "the conduct and administration of the men's basketball staff." The school acknowledged that violation, but said the NCAA has agreed to reduce the time period for that violation from four years to two, spanning 2007-09.
Among the allegations against UConn is that staff members Beau Archibald and Patrick Sellers provided false and misleading information to NCAA investigators. Sellers, an assistant coach, and Archibald, who served as director of basketball operations, have resigned. They also filed their own responses to the NCAA.
Archibald denies wrongdoing in his response, and said his contacts with recruits were permissible under NCAA rules. His lawyers wrote that the charges are based on "unfair supposition, untrue characterizations and the flimsiest of information."
Sellers acknowledges making some improper calls, but said they were inadvertent, and is requesting that they be considered secondary violations.
The documents include some new information, including that five current players received impermissible phone calls. The report says those players, whose names were redacted, were declared ineligible when the calls were discovered, then reinstated by the NCAA last November.
Guards Jerome Dyson, who has since graduated, Donnell Beverly and Jamal Coombs-McDaniel all missed UConn's opening preseason game last year because of what the university said were problems with their eligibility paperwork.
Under the self-imposed sanctions, the scholarships for the men's basketball program have been reduced from 13 to 12 for the 2010-11 and 2011-12 academic years. The school also has agreed to reduce the number of coaches to make calls to recruits and the number of "recruiting person days."
UConn was just 18-16 last season and lost in the second round of the NIT.
[Associated Press;
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