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No Madness for Gophers

Minnesota bans hoops team from postseason for 1 year

Click here for more on this story

Posted: Wednesday October 27, 1999 09:03 AM

  Clem Haskins Clem Haskins resigned as Minnesota coach under pressure and accepted a $1.5 million buyout of his contract. Otto Greule/Allsport

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- The University of Minnesota will hold its men's basketball team out of postseason play for one year because of alleged academic cheating in the program, school president Mark Yudof said Tuesday.

The university also is placing the progam on probation, Yudof said.

The postseason ban includes The National Invitation Tournament and the NCAA tournament, he said.

Yudof said he believes the NCAA will impose more sanctions after it receives the university's final report on the investigation of the basketball program.
Minnesota Timeline
A chronology of events since allegations of academic misconduct were first reported in the University of Minnesota's men's basketball program:

  • March 3, 1999: The Saint Paul Pioneer Press reports that former tutor Jan Gangelhoff claims she wrote or helped write more than 400 papers or pieces of coursework for more than 20 basketball players between 1993 and 1998.

  • March 3: Four players mentioned by Gangelhoff -- Antoine Broxsie, Kevin Clark, Jason Stanford and Miles Tarver -- are suspended for a first-round NCAA tournament game against Gonzaga University. Gonzaga wins 75-63.
  • March 11: Former academic counselor Rick Marsden claims coach Clem Haskins asked him to do course work for players in 1986.
  • March 19: Gangelhoff claims she once received $3,000 from Alonzo Newby, the academic counselor for men's basketball, for doing work for players. Gangelhoff says she believes the money came from Haskins.
  • March 19: The university announces an internal investigation.
  • March 21: The Star Tribune of Minneapolis reports that former player Russ Archambault claims Haskins gave him money on several occasions.
  • April 13: Melissa Burns, a former academic counselor, claims she was once intimidated by Haskins and quit after her suspicions that players cheated were ignored.
  • April 14: Elayne Donahue, the former director of the academic counseling unit, tells the Pioneer Press that faculty members felt pressured to keep players eligible.
  • May 21: The Star Tribune reports that between 1993 and 1997, university officials intervened in assault and criminal sexual conduct investigations involving athletes.
  • June 18: Newby is fired after refusing to cooperate with investigators.
  • June 25: The university pays Haskins $1.5 million to buy out his contract.
  • July 9: A separate university investigation into sexual misconduct allegations finds favoritism toward athletes and insensitivity toward female victims by administrators. But no evidence is found to support claims that administrators routinely interfered with police investigations to protect athletes.
  • July 24: Gonzaga University coach Dan Monson is hired to replace Haskins.
  •  

    An investigation into the men's basketball program began in March after former tutor Jan Gangelhoff claimed she did more than 400 pieces of course work for at least 20 basketball players from 1993 to 1998.

    The investigation has since widened to include accusations of improper payments and alleged sexual and other misconduct in the men's athletics department.

    "We must demonstrate good faith and take meaningful action to repair the damage that has been done by others," Yudof said.

    He said it was a judgment call to impose sanctions that might be harsher than the NCAA's.

    "I think we do need to impose sanctions," he said. "I don't hate to do it. It's the right thing to do. The NCAA has to worry about deterrents. I have to worry about deterrents in the future."

    NCAA spokeswoman Jane Jankowski said the organization would not comment specifically on whatever sanctions Yudof announces. But she said it is appropriate and common for embattled schools to come up with their own sanctions.

    "Universities do frequently hand down their own penalties, and our [investigating] committee considers that and can adopt those sanctions, as well as add other penalties," she said.

    Coach Clem Haskins resigned under pressure in June and accepted a $1.5 million buyout of his contract. He has said he had no knowledge of any academic cheating in the basketball program.

    Dan Monson of Gonzaga University was hired to replace Haskins.

    Yudof said he was trying to help Monson by imposing the sanctions now and trying to move forward.

    "I'm trying to make his life a little easier, his interactions with the team, boost morale a little bit," he said.

    Monson said the situation has "made some difficult obstacles, but none that I didn't know when I took the job. ... For the staff and our team, it's the beginning of the end."

    Yudof said the university report will likely be completed Nov. 10.

    He said he realized some current basketball team members may feel the sanctions are unfair.

    Yudof said the self-imposed probation was for an unspecified length of time. He said he believed the Big Ten tournament is part of the regular season.

    The NCAA holds a 64-team tournament at the end of every regular season to determine a national champion. The NIT is held for 32 teams that don't qualify for the NCAA tournament.

    Minnesota has won the NIT twice and qualified for the NCAA Final Four in 1997.

     
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