Georgia Tech was fined $100,000 by the NCAA, stripped of its 2009 ACC championship in football and placed on four years of probation on Thursday for failure to cooperate with its investigation into the football and men’s basketball programs.
Those weren’t the only penalties, which stemmed from what the NCAA described as an isolated instance of former standout wide receiver Demaryius Thomas allegedly receiving $312 in impermissible gifts, and grew to Morgan Burnett allegedly taking gifts and misleading NCAA investigators. Both have denied taking improper benefits.
In addition, more penalties were self-imposed and accepted by the NCAA:
The committee stated in its report, “This case provides a cautionary tale of conduct that member institutions should avoid while under investigation for violations of NCAA rules.” It said Tech’s previous history of violations factored into its punishment decisions. After receiving penalties for the 2005 and ‘06 seasons for infractions that occurred in the 1990s, the NCAA said that if Tech committed another major infraction before Nov. 17, 2010, it would be subject to added penalties as a repeat violator.
Within the investigation, the NCAA noted the combative and confrontational attitude of general counsel, Randy Nordin. He retired in December. Paul Parker, formerly the assistant athletics director at compliance, left in April to take a job with Auburn.
The case started when Tech learned that Thomas, received clothing from a friend of someone who worked for an sports agent. Burnett and former player Calvin Booker attended the meeting when Thomas received the clothing. Burnett didn’t receive anything.
Athletics Director Dan Radakovich told coach Paul Johnson about the investigation into Thomas receiving improper benefits, but didn’t inform him that he shouldn’t talk to Burnett about the investigation. The NCAA said that conversation hindered its investigation.
The NCAA noted that Tech continued to allow one of the players to compete in the final three games of the 2009-10 football season, in which Tech won the ACC and played in the Orange Bowl, despite the NCAA notifying the school that it had questions about the eligibility of that player. Dennis Thomas, the head of the Infractions Committee, said Tech had enough information to warrant not using the player until it could investigate the players’ eligibility. Tech President Dr. G.P. “Bud” Peterson made the decision to allow both to play.
“It appeared to the committee that the institution attempted to manipulate the information surrounding potential violations involving (the student-athlete) so there would be enough doubt about its validity to justify the decision not to declare him ineligible,” the NCAA said in its report.
The committee also noted “the university took these actions despite information reported by the student-athlete, another football student-athlete and an assistant football coach regarding the potential agent involvement in preferential treatment benefits.” Tech barred Booker from the university’s training facilities and denied him access to complimentary tickets to athletic contests.
Thomas denied that he was one of the reasons for the investigation. In a text message, Thomas said he was offered things by people not affiliated with Tech, but never accepted. Burnett, a safety and third-round pick, also denied the report, texting that he “did not knowingly or unknowingly receive any gifts from any agents … These reports are baseless and false.”
Thomas and Burnett signed with Tech when Chan Gailey was the coach. Paul Johnson, who led Tech to the ACC title in 2009, was hired after Gailey was fired by Radakovich after the 2007 season after five years at the helm.
It is the second time in six years that Tech has been penalized by the NCAA. It learned in 2003 that it had been misapplying an NCAA eligibility rule and worked with the NCAA to investigate the nature and results of the error. They learned that 17 athletes, including 11 football players, who were academically ineligible were allowed to compete during the 1998 and ‘99 seasons.
As a result, Georgia Tech was on a two-year probation that resulted in self-imposed scholarship cuts (from 85 to 79) and a reduction in signing classes (from 25 to no more than 19) in 2005 and 2006. In addition to those penalties, the NCAA infractions committee added a limit of 79 total football scholarships for the 2006 and 2007 teams, six below the normal maximum.
The infractions committee also recommended that Tech vacate wins from seasons, 1998-2002, plus 2004, which were all winning seasons that ended in bowl trips. Tech appealed and the NCAA appeals committee agreed, allowing the results of those seasons to stand.
The NCAA has been in what appears to be a testy mood regarding alleged violations and lack of cooperation in wake of scandals at Ohio State, Southern California and North Carolina, among other places. The Trojans were forced by the NCAA to forfeit their 2004 national championship and the Buckeyes voluntarily forfeited 12 wins and their 2010 Sugar Bowl victory in an attempt to appease the infractions committee. Penalties against North Carolina’s program haven’t been announced. However, numerous players were suspended for all or parts of last season.
Please keep checking back for news.
– Doug Roberson, AJC. Follow on twitter @ajcgatech
531 comments Add your comment
John Q
July 14th, 2011
11:15 pm
“TO ALL YOU DOGS OUT THERE AT LEAST WE CAN KEEP ALL OUR PLAYERS OUT OF JAIL.”
Reuben Houston
Big Bumblee
July 15th, 2011
12:19 am
Missing Homer Rice days… Dan Radakovich needs to go.
pcb mike
July 15th, 2011
1:34 am
$312?, UGAG pays out salaries up there in the trailer parks.
Wes Durham's Gigantic Bottom
July 15th, 2011
1:56 am
Fire Radakovich and Johnson….necessary steps to maintain the integrity of the Institute……
The U
July 15th, 2011
4:06 am
Holy crap Ohio State is gonna get hammered.
Observer
July 15th, 2011
4:40 am
The penalties here for Tech is not for accepting free clothing, it is for leaking information to the coaches and players about the upcoming NCAA investigation. After being warned not to.
Question is, who made the decision to let Thomas play in those 3 games knowing the possible outcome? Coach or AD?
The worst penalty for Tech is having to dodge all those rocks you threw at UGA and A J Green last season. Now those rocks will be thrown back at you.
Yes this is the same NCAA that Tech fans patted on the back and said “way to go” when AJ Green was suspended in 2010.
superDawg
July 15th, 2011
5:26 am
hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahah…hahahahahahahahahahahahaha cindy!
Shewdawg
July 15th, 2011
5:39 am
Really? $312? The NCAA needs to be abolished. Does this mean that Auburn will ultimately get the death penalty? OSU? I am no GT fan, far from it, but this is soooooooo stupid!…………..But it IS funny that it’s happening to the self-righteous, holier-than-thou dorks.
4. Georgia Tech Fined $100K for $312 Clothes ‹ The Daily Dunk
July 15th, 2011
6:29 am
[...] the story at The Atlanta Journal-Constitution July 15, [...]
RedandBlackDAWG
July 15th, 2011
7:04 am
It’s not the $312.00 that got tech. in trouble, it is the fact that they hindered the investigation. You can also add in the fact that this is the second time in the last 10 years that tech. has been found guilty of violating NCAA by laws. Spin it all you want, but they did it and now have to pay for it. Learn from it, and insure it doesn’t happen again.
NERDS! NERDS! NERDS! CHEATERS! CHEATERS! CHEATERS!
July 15th, 2011
7:52 am
BWAAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAAAA
gtu is nothing but SCUM.
UGA OWNS gtu…
Always have, always will.
epicmage
July 15th, 2011
8:07 am
LOL … Tech manages to even lose the games they win!
How delicious! ;D
Reggie Ball can't see over the counter
July 15th, 2011
8:10 am
Pswole, gotcha, they were MORE wrong than GA Tech. Logic my friend, it will serve you well going forward.
NERDS! NERDS! NERDS! CHEATERS! CHEATERS! CHEATERS!
July 15th, 2011
8:15 am
gtu is full of LIARS and CHEATERS… what a CESSPOOL. LMAO
UGA OWNS gtu…
Always have, always will.
dp
July 15th, 2011
8:19 am
Oh no, not again!!!!!!!!!!!!!
NERDS! NERDS! NERDS! CHEATERS! CHEATERS! CHEATERS!
July 15th, 2011
8:49 am
I stood in line at Starbucks this morning next to a gtu fan. I smacked him in the back of the head and laughed in his face. LMAO
UGA OWNS gtu…
Always have, always will.
RedandBlackDAWG
July 15th, 2011
10:41 am
Nerds. Nerds. Nerds.
As a loyal UGA fan, I am ashamed if you are one. These comments you made, let me know you are just some young idiot that thinks stupid things said on a blog are meaningful. You are the defintion of a troll 100%.
It is what it is
July 15th, 2011
10:43 am
Cheaters AND losers!!! LOL!!!! Friggin’ nerds!!! SQUASHED AGAIN!!
NERDS! NERDS! NERDS! CHEATERS! CHEATERS! CHEATERS!
July 15th, 2011
10:51 am
Enjoy the vitriol gtu!!! LMAO gtu LIES and CHEATS!!!
UGA OWNS gtu…
Always have, always will.
Jeff Stockwell
July 15th, 2011
11:48 am
The paradox here is that insignificant violations cause so much attention. This guy has $312 dollars in clothing, but who pockets all billions being collected by college football?
billdawg
July 15th, 2011
9:20 pm
These make no difference – AJ Green, the OSU mess, the UNC case, the USC dethroning! What does count? – GT’s allegedly adult athletic and academic leadership tried to mislead the NCAA and deliberately violated an order to refrain from telling CPJ and the involved players about the investigation. All that said, the guilty parties go free while not guilty players are punished. It is obvious that $100,000 means nothing to Tech, check the Hewitt settlement. It seems to me that the NCAA would be better served to have a table of penalties since the case by case method now in use causes too many undefensable penalty decisions. Georgia Tech may have deserved censure and some punishment but this is off the wall!
NativeNole
July 15th, 2011
9:50 pm
This is a link to the report which I finally found..I suggest you start reading at pg 3, I thought GA would select people who could at least talk, Coach Mark ..what can I say, Under what rock did he or his staff find the people. Wow.
http://www.ncaa.org/wps/wcm/connect/da72c7804796564988b7dcc110a6426c/20110714+GA+Tech+Public+Infr+Report.pdf?MOD=AJPERES&ContentCache=NONE&CACHEID=da72c7804796564988b7dcc110a6426c
Jim
July 16th, 2011
12:41 am
The NCAA is a complete JOKE.
paige
July 16th, 2011
10:03 am
Screw the NCAA!! High school players are paid, transferred and given gifts all the time. Why stop it when they get to the college level. The real issue here is the Tech did not pay enough under the table to the NCAA and got hit hard. I think a school should be able to do whatever is necessary to get the best players available. The entire system is corrupt from the NCAA on down.
robynbarry
July 17th, 2011
2:16 am
Yeah, like hewitt really cares about the decision, he is getting millions for doing absolutely nothing for the GT program the last 8-10 years, now he is coaching elsewhere and left his negative trash for the new coach to clean up and is stuck with. http://bit.ly/rfJns6
Crimson Crush
July 17th, 2011
5:37 am
“Paul Parker, formerly the assistant athletics director at compliance, left in April to take a job with Auburn.”
LOL … out of a small frying pan … into what will be a hell hot roaring bonfire .
BYRDDAWG
July 17th, 2011
6:25 pm
Well DRad really blew this one!!!!! PHewitt could’ve been canned for $.00…….OUCH
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[...] To fully appreciate the LSU sanctions, you have to also look at the other case that the mainstream media recently missed and have since ignored- the NCAA’s response to issues at Georgia Tech. [...]
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Tech to appeal NCAA ruling | Georgia Tech
July 21st, 2011
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[...] Thomas and Morgan Burnett that eventually found that Thomas had received clothes worth $312, Georgia Tech was fined $100,000, placed on four years’ probation and had its 2009 ACC champion…. The NCAA said that Tech “failed to cooperate in an apparent effort to avoid potential [...]