By Larry Lage
AP Sports Writer
The University of Michigan on Tuesday admitted to a series of violations in its storied football program, but insisted the problems related to practice time and the activities of graduate assistants were not enough to warrant major punishment from the NCAA.
Michigan released details of self-imposed sanctions it hopes will satisfy the NCAA, whose staff will hold a hearing on the case in August. A final decision on NCAA penalties could take months.
Michigan said it will cut back practice and training time by 130 hours over the next two years, starting this summer. It also trimmed the number of assistants — the so-called quality control staff — from five to three and banned them from practices, games or coaching meetings for the rest of 2010.
“I’m glad to get that over with,” coach Rich Rodriguez said Monday night in Midland at the Michigan AP Sports Editors Meeting. “But that is just part of the process.”
The self-imposed sanctions included a recommendation for two years of probation for the NCAA’s winningest football program, which is 8-16 in two seasons under Rodriguez. The school said it should not be tagged as a repeat offender despite a 2003 scandal in the basketball program.
“We’re imposing on ourselves what we believe is corrective actions,” athletic director David Brandon said in an interview with The Associated Press. “Ultimately, the NCAA will decide what the appropriate sanctions and penalties are.”
The violations came to light last fall during a second straight losing season for Rodriguez, who will return for his third season at Michigan this fall. Anonymous players told the Detroit Free Press that they were exceeding NCAA limits on practice and training time, prompting school and NCAA investigations.
The NCAA has outlined five potentially major rules violations, all related to practices and workouts. It accused Rodriguez of failing to promote an atmosphere of compliance in his program — a charge Michigan vehemently denied even as it acknowledged an overall failure by the athletic department.
“We think that is overly harsh,” Brandon said. “We do believe that there were things he could’ve done better and Rich would be the first to agree that details he delegated shouldn’t have been in retrospect.”
Brandon said the school decided not to take away scholarships or eliminate coaching positions.
“That’s usually a result of something deemed to be an offense that created a competitive advantage,” Brandon said. “Those kind of sanctions are also typically related to academic fraud, gambling, recruiting violations and extra benefits.”
Michigan told the NCAA that letters of reprimand were issued to seven people — including Rodriguez — who shared responsibility for the violations. One staffer who worked under Rodriguez at West Virginia before joining him at Michigan, Alex Herron, was fired after his claim of not being present during some activities was discredited by players.
The school said two main problems — too many people acting as coaches and too many hours being put into football by the players — occurred in part because of “inattention by the football staff.”
“The university agrees that it failed as a whole to adequately monitor its football program to assure compliance regarding the limitations upon the number, duties and activities of countabale football coaches and the time limits” for practice,” it said. “The university also agrees that Rodriguez failed to satisfy the monitoring responsibilities required of head coaches.”
After his hire from West Virginia, Rodriguez filled all five quality control positions in the program — essentially assistants to assistants who were paid $17 per hour to “run errands for the coaches, check on student-athlete class attendance and academic issues, and chart plays.”
The school said the staff “crossed the line in specific situations and engaged in ‘coaching activities’” as defined by the NCAA.
Rodriguez also told school investigators he didn’t know about forms used at Michigan to track athletes’ activities until last summer, 18 months after he was hired, and he said no one ever told him those forms were not being filed with compliance officials by his program.
Rodriguez’s response was submitted by his attorney, Scott Tompsett. He said the coach was “very disappointed that his administrators failed to provide the job descriptions on multiple occasions and he is disappointed that the compliance staff never brought their failure to his attention. Rodriguez has always had an open-door policy for anyone to bring matters to his attention.”
The school said it had discovered the paperwork problem and was working on it when the story broke. The bigger issue was the lack of communication. The school said the football program didn’t provide requested information to the compliance office, which failed to alert Rodriguez — who “should have paid closer attention to his subordinates.”
Rodriguez regretted that he didn’t adequately monitor certain aspects of his program, but added in his response that following NCAA bylaws was not a “one-man job.”
“We’re not happy to be in this process, but we’re handling it in a professional and transparent manner before we move on,” Brandon said. “The NCAA will hear our case in August, then will deliberate as long as is needed — and that could be weeks — before making a decision that we can agree with or choose to appeal.”