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Syracuse Drug Scandal: School Reports Possible Drug Policy Violations By Basketball Program

Syracuse Basketball Drug Violations Report

03/ 5/12 11:07 PM ET  AP

SYRACUSE, N.Y. -- Syracuse University self-reported possible violations of its internal drug policy more than a year ago and the NCAA is investigating, according to school officials.

Kevin Quinn, senior vice president for public affairs for the university, says the inquiry does not involve any current student-athletes.

In a report Monday, Yahoo Sports said a three-month investigation it conducted showed that the Syracuse men's basketball program failed to adhere to the drug policy while playing ineligible players over the past decade.

The report, which citied anonymous sources, said at least 10 players since 2001 had tested positive for a banned recreational substance or substances. The sources said all 10 players were allowed to practice and play at times when they should have been suspended by the athletic department, including instances when some may not have known of their own ineligibility.

The report did not identify who tested positive. Syracuse won its lone national championship in 2003.

Jim Boeheim, coach of the second-ranked Orange, was not available for comment.

Yahoo said it reviewed Syracuse's student-athlete drug policies dating to the 2000-01 school year. They detailed the athletic department's protocol for handling positive tests, including a penalty structure for a player's first, second and third offense.

The Yahoo report said Syracuse violated its drug policy by failing to properly count positive tests and playing ineligible players after they should have been subject to suspension. Two sources said that of the 10 players, at least one continued to play after failing four tests and another played after failing three.

If Syracuse is found to have knowingly violated its own drug policy, it could trigger the NCAA's so-called "willful violators" clause, used when there's a pattern of violations. That would allow the investigation to date back to when the infractions began.

The NCAA, when contacted Monday, issued a statement:

"Syracuse University appropriately self-reported possible violations to the NCAA several months ago and we currently have an ongoing investigation."

Spokeswoman Stacy Osburn clarified that the self-report was more than a year ago.

Several Syracuse players have had legal or disciplinary issues since 2001, including Billy Edelin, Eric Devendorf, Jonny Flynn, Josh Wright, and DeShaun Williams.

Beyond statute-of-limitations issues, the Yahoo report says Syracuse could be charged with lack of institutional control for failing to adhere to its own drug policy, similar to sanctions recently levied against Baylor University.

Although the NCAA will be conducting random testing of every team at every game in the NCAA tournament that begins next week, schools are otherwise left to police themselves for drugs on their own terms.

The Yahoo report comes in the aftermath of the firing of former Syracuse assistant coach Bernie Fine. He was accused of sexual molestation by a former Orange ball boy and his stepbrother. While charges have yet to be filed against Fine, he was fired in late November.

Syracuse is the No. 1 seed in the Big East tournament, which begins Tuesday in Madison Square Garden. The Orange won't play until Thursday at noon.

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SYRACUSE, N.Y. -- Syracuse University self-reported possible violations of its internal drug policy more than a year ago and the NCAA is investigating, according to school officials. Kevin Quinn, sen...
SYRACUSE, N.Y. -- Syracuse University self-reported possible violations of its internal drug policy more than a year ago and the NCAA is investigating, according to school officials. Kevin Quinn, sen...
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07:57 AM on 03/07/2012
Yet another scandal at Syracuse. When their sex scandal broke, Boeheim said there was no coverup and he was"no Joe Paterno". He's absolutely right, he'll never be JoePa. Paterno was able to run a highly successful AND clean program for many years. Maybe Syracuse should change their nickname from ' the Cuse" to " the A-cuse."
07:48 AM on 03/07/2012
Yet another scandal at Syracuse !! When their sex scandal came out last year, Boeheim said there was no coverup and " he was no Joe Paterno". What clever quote will he manage for this one ? Jim is absolutely right, he could never be Joe Pa, who managed to have a highly successful AND clean program. Maybe the team nickname should be changed from "the Cuse" to "a-Cuse".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RickCoMatic
End WAR Spending! Rebuild AMERICA!
06:24 AM on 03/07/2012
Reported, ... "Possible" ... "Alleged" ... "Sources say" ... "According to an unnamed insider".

Try avoiding taking the low-road without spreading unsubstantiated rumors and using more adjectives than nouns and pronouns.

Or add a slogan to the Masthead like the New York Times "All the News that fits; we print".
It could be: "All the shidte we print ain't exactly news".
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Tmboy
Reading comments messes with my ZEN, but I'm addic
01:41 AM on 03/07/2012
Why is NCAA interested in the test results recreational drugs? I get steroids or performance enhancing drugs but recreational drugs should be left to the school and team to handle how ever they want.

NCAA does not need to know if a student got drunk or smoked pot unless these things were laced with testosterone.
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phoebequeen
I blame the dog
09:32 PM on 03/06/2012
This is not good. Was shocked to see this on the front page this morning in the Post Standard. We are 30-1 right now. First Bernie Fine, now this. I do hope as a SU fan, that they get to the bottom of it and it doesn't happen again. Puts a shadow on the guys playing now.
JDOK
Listen, Read, Think and then Post
08:17 PM on 03/06/2012
Winning equals millions for the program and the school experiences massive nation publicity. The coach gets exceedingly large bonuses and becomes a local, regional and national personality. The players receive national attention and an opportunity to get a shot at major money playing in the NBA and overseas. The NCAA continues to receive outlandish compensation from the work of college students and broadcast TV makes tons of money broadcasting college games. Reporting violations and taking action on the same has the potential to stop all of the above. SU apparently reported the violations voluntarily, which is good, but I want to see where the admission came from....school administration or the sports program. My guess is the school administration.
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07:29 PM on 03/06/2012
And, nothing will done until after the tournament....Does anyone see the need for the NCAA anymore?
05:13 PM on 03/06/2012
Hmmm..UConn coach Jim Calhoun was sanctioned for failure to effectively oversee the UConn men's basketball program and as a result UConn will be banned from next years NCAA Championship tourney. Boeheim claims he did not know of an assistant coach's sexual abuse of team assistants and according to one report I saw elsewhere claims he doesn't know about these allegations. Enjoy this year, Orange fans. It might be the last good one for a while.
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phoebequeen
I blame the dog
09:34 PM on 03/06/2012
I fear you might be right. At least we always win the Golden Snowball every year, although, this year with a fraction of the normal snowfall, that good be in question. Sigh. Need something to look forward to.
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jazzman71
04:36 PM on 03/06/2012
There's an old axiom in sports that says: "If you are winning all the time you are probably doing something you shouldn't". Problem is the NCAA seems to continually look the other way.
01:32 PM on 03/06/2012
WOW, Pitt and Syracuse to the ACC! Neither has a respectable football program, Pitt's basketball has also went south (in another manner) and now Jim Boeheim's program has been uncovered for drug violations in addition to child molestation charges by it's 35-year assistant Bernie Fine. But Jim says he "doesn't know anything about it!" Is this guy a stand-up or what! Yes sir, welcome to the ACC, the Almighty Confederate Conglomerate!
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DickTater
American Livestock
10:01 AM on 03/06/2012
I can't get a job cleaning toilets at an indian casino with a positive THC test....how do NCAA athletes rack up multiple violations and keep playing? Sounds like it never even hit the papers or anything.
Deirdre89
still searching for the Common Sense Party
06:40 PM on 03/06/2012
Because they bring many more millions in business to the university than you would bring in to the casino. It's all about the money. "Student-athlete" is such a misnomer.
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09:25 AM on 03/06/2012
Well, sourpuss Jimmy Boeheim has some 'splainin' to do here. Sequestered in his remote feifdom in Upstate NY and covered in the teflon that winning seasons afford, I wonder what else he has swept under the rug over the years, given the Bernie Fine fiasco....
02:21 PM on 03/06/2012
whether or not he swept it under the run, the university self reported this and is at least being proactive in an environment that has yet to show this refreshing approach.
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03:09 PM on 03/06/2012
Darn noble....NOT!......years after the fact...