
Study: 83% of NCAA violations involve football, basketball
Big-money sports football and men’s basketball were involved in 83 per cent of NCAA Division I major infractions cases from 1953 to 2014, according to the first study of its kind released Tuesday. Probation and public reprimand and censure were the most common penalties.
Temple University’s Sport Industry Research Center prepared the study for the NCAA Division I Committee on Infractions.
“The NCAA has never compiled all this data into one place and to run these types of analysis, so to look at all 554 cases under the former penalty matrix, we found it very informative to understand how often a certain infraction was occurring or how often a certain penalty was prescribed,” said Jeremy Jordan, the research centre director and a study co-author.
The release of the study comes three years after the NCAA moved to a system that metes out specific penalties dependent on an infraction’s magnitude on a four-tier scale. Previously, infractions were considered either major or secondary.