College football notebook: TCU put
on 1-year probation
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[December 21, 2019]
The TCU athletic program was
placed on probation for one year by the NCAA after a self-reported
violation revealed work-compensation irregularities among athletes
from multiple sports, ESPN reported. The NCAA's probation period
will extend to Dec. 19, 2020.
The report said a total of 33 football and women's basketball
players received excessive pay for an on-campus job with the
maintenance department.
The error occurred when student-athletes failed to clock out of
work, triggering overpayments that were estimated to be a collective
$20,000 over a four-year period from 2015 to 2018.
"I'm proud of TCU's culture of compliance that led to these issues
being identified, promptly disclosed, and corrected," TCU chancellor
Victor J. Boschini Jr. said in a statement. "I also am thankful for
our team who successfully collaborated to ensure that we not only
resolved this issue but continue to send a message of strong ethical
leadership at TCU."
--LSU's Ed Orgeron was named the recipient of the Eddie Robinson
Coach of the Year Award, the Football Writers Association of America
announced.
Orgeron has guided the top-ranked Tigers to a 13-0 record entering
their College Football Playoff semifinal matchup with No. 4 Oklahoma
on Dec. 28. LSU is led by Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Joe
Burrow.
Orgeron is the third LSU coach to win the Eddie Robinson award. The
others are Paul Dietzel (1958) and Nick Saban (2003) and both those
coaches went on to win the national championship in those seasons.
--The school board in Athens, Ohio, decided the stadium at Athens
High School will be renamed to honor Burrow, the LSU quarterback who
is a 2015 alumnus.
In his Heisman Trophy acceptance speech last Saturday night in New
York, Burrow didn't forget his hometown, which is located about 150
miles east of Cincinnati.
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"It's a very, very impoverished area," Burrow said on Saturday with
tears in his eyes. "The poverty rate is almost two times the
national average. There are so many people there that don't have a
lot, and I'm up here for all those kids in Athens and Athens County
that go home to not a lot of food on the table, hungry after school.
You guys can be up here, too."
--Stanford tight end Colby Parkinson announced that he is bypassing
his senior season to enter the NFL draft.
Parkinson, who caught 48 passes for 589 yards and one touchdown this
season, said he feels he is ready to take the next step.
The 6-foot-7, 251-pound Parkinson is considered one of the top five
prospects at his position. He finishes his college career with 87
receptions for 1,171 yards and 12 touchdowns in 31 games.
--Arizona hired former Iowa State head coach and UCLA assistant Paul
Rhoads as its defensive coordinator.
Rhoads is replacing Marcel Yates, who was fired by head coach Kevin
Sumlin in October after the Wildcats allowed 41 or more points in
three consecutive games.
Rhoads, 52, was Iowa State's coach from 2009-15, and compiled a
32-55 record, leading the Cyclones to three bowl games, including a
win in the 2009 Insight Bowl. He was the defensive backs coach at
UCLA the past two seasons, with the team allowing 34.4 points over
that time, and over a two-year period (2016-17) was defensive backs
coach, defensive coordinator, then interim head coach at Arkansas.
--Field Level Media
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