B
BillSU
Guest
A reminder….lest we forget
August 16-17 begins the North Carolina administration, its football coach Fedora, its basketball coach Roy Williams and others including the chancellor appearing in front in front of the NCAA’s committee on infractions. I am taking the optimistic point of view expecting they will get their asses handed to them. Hopefully we will find out sooner than later after this week.
By Andrew Carter
acarter@newsobserver.com
August 09, 2017 12:09 PM
CHAPEL HILL
One week from Wednesday, North Carolina football coach Larry Fedora will be in Nashville, Tenn., to appear at UNC’s long-awaited hearing with the NCAA Committee on Infractions. It is not a trip, necessarily, that Fedora wanted to make during the middle of his team’s preseason.
“I knew it was a possibility,” he said recently. “You can look at every case across the country, and whoever’s in charge of football, whoever’s in charge of basketball – you know, they’re always there. I had a feeling. I was hoping it wouldn’t, but that’s just the way it happened.”
The university’s appearance before the infractions committee is essentially its trial date after a three-year NCAA investigation into how suspect African Studies courses benefited athletes, notably men’s basketball and football players, between 2002 and 2011.
August 16-17 begins the North Carolina administration, its football coach Fedora, its basketball coach Roy Williams and others including the chancellor appearing in front in front of the NCAA’s committee on infractions. I am taking the optimistic point of view expecting they will get their asses handed to them. Hopefully we will find out sooner than later after this week.
By Andrew Carter
acarter@newsobserver.com
August 09, 2017 12:09 PM
CHAPEL HILL
One week from Wednesday, North Carolina football coach Larry Fedora will be in Nashville, Tenn., to appear at UNC’s long-awaited hearing with the NCAA Committee on Infractions. It is not a trip, necessarily, that Fedora wanted to make during the middle of his team’s preseason.
“I knew it was a possibility,” he said recently. “You can look at every case across the country, and whoever’s in charge of football, whoever’s in charge of basketball – you know, they’re always there. I had a feeling. I was hoping it wouldn’t, but that’s just the way it happened.”
The university’s appearance before the infractions committee is essentially its trial date after a three-year NCAA investigation into how suspect African Studies courses benefited athletes, notably men’s basketball and football players, between 2002 and 2011.