Thomas, Burnett at heart of NCAA investigation at Tech

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:

  • Public reprimand and censure.
  • Four years of probation from July 14, 2011 through July 13, 2015. The public report further details the conditions of this probation.
  • A reduction of two men’s basketball recruiting days during the 2011 summer evaluation period (self-imposed by the university).
  • A limit of 10 official visits for men’s basketball for the 2011-12 and 2012-13 academic years.
  • A vacation of all contests won by the football team during the 2009 season after November 24. The ACC said Tech must return the trophy. No champion for the season will be named.

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

RopeDawg

July 14th, 2011
3:22 pm

GT Jake

July 14th, 2011
3:22 pm

Absolutely amazing to me stuff like this happens to solid academic schools like UNC and GT and the Thug programs like Va. Tech are allowed to keep their players “eligible” with majors in underwater basket weaving.

The NCAA is bogus!

bulldogmaniac

July 14th, 2011
3:23 pm

How appropriate! After all of the Tech fans coming on here and making comments and “poking fun” at UGA for all of the SECONDARY VIOLATIONS at UGA and these guys are up to MUCH WORSE!
HAHAHAHA!!!
This makes my day!
I’m sure there is more to come. Basketball will be next.

Lenny Snow

July 14th, 2011
3:23 pm

I guess we are a member of the All Cheaters Conference, so we had to cheat to compete.

NCAA is a Joke

July 14th, 2011
3:23 pm

As I expected, nothing to see here……just the idiots at the NCAA needing to justify why they deserve a paycheck. Go Jackets!!

non compliant

July 14th, 2011
3:23 pm

Tech staff turned a small allegation into something major, why not just sit the players?

Are You Serious

July 14th, 2011
3:23 pm

Sleepy, please refrain from posting such garbage.

RK

July 14th, 2011
3:23 pm

For $312? Are they kidding?

GT BBall

July 14th, 2011
3:23 pm

NCAA allows felons to run the Fiesta Bowl and control millions of dollars each year after investigating it. Colonial bank failure is tied to Auburn alum who pays players, Victory land casino fraud/politaical payoffs tied to Bama booster, South Carolina players living in Columbia’s version of the Ritz and riding limos to class.

Ohio State, Southern California, Tennessee and most recently North Carolina all have massive cheating scandals.

All this and Tech gets the hammer, sounds like thUGA grads running the NCAA just like Atlanta Public Schools.

The OSU Buckeyes

July 14th, 2011
3:24 pm

On the floor laughing. The Dawgs are next.

Duluth Rick

July 14th, 2011
3:24 pm

UGA doesn’t have any championships to forfeit :)

Steve

July 14th, 2011
3:24 pm

Tech still has a football team???

PMC

July 14th, 2011
3:24 pm

The money is again, not the issue at hand. The $312 dollars is the evidence.

The problem again, is not the action, it’s the cover up and lack of cooperation that got them in big trouble.

Andrew Morgan

July 14th, 2011
3:24 pm

Enter your comments here

BarryLee

July 14th, 2011
3:25 pm

Wow, this is real cheating! I guess the Techies will say they can even cheat better than UGA.

Patrick

July 14th, 2011
3:25 pm

Gee Dunwoody Mom… Maybe the NCAA hasn’t hammer the Barn yet because they aren’t done with their investigation.

Jay

July 14th, 2011
3:25 pm

What happend to your team??????????????????

Andrew Morgan

July 14th, 2011
3:25 pm

Jay

July 14th, 2011
3:25 pm

Enter your comments here

NWGa Dawg

July 14th, 2011
3:25 pm

Where was the Atlanta media on this story before now? This investigation happened in complete secret. Pathetic!

Jacket fan

July 14th, 2011
3:25 pm

I still got my tshirt for the 2009 ACC title! They can’t take that away!

ryan

July 14th, 2011
3:26 pm

I am UGA fan but i think this stinks NCAA went after AJ Green for selling a jersey man it has been couple bad years for both UGA and Tech i am being more humble here i know we UGA fans don’t always see eye to eye but NCAA goes to far .

Reality Stinks

July 14th, 2011
3:26 pm

blah hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha
ahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha
ahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaahahahah

Radakovich

July 14th, 2011
3:26 pm

radakovich must go! He covered up an investigation and permitted ineligible players to play, costing tech big money! the president needs to send him packing ASAP!

whoa

July 14th, 2011
3:26 pm

Someone’s learned how to italicize ! Get your crayons out you redneck mutt!

what a joke

July 14th, 2011
3:26 pm

Spanish inquisition…Salem witch trials…NCAA investigations

T3

July 14th, 2011
3:27 pm

Ditto GT BBall

Milledgeville Dawg

July 14th, 2011
3:27 pm

Ya gotta like it. Stay tuned, more to come.

Bryan G.

July 14th, 2011
3:27 pm

Duluth Rick – and now Tech doesn’t either…

Drago

July 14th, 2011
3:27 pm

Great opportunity here. Georgia State can step up and bring Atlanta a relavent college football program.
But, if the infraction occurred in football, why is the tek basketball program being gigged?

Ogre

July 14th, 2011
3:27 pm

NERDS………NERDS……….NERDS!!!!

Watching.from.WV

July 14th, 2011
3:27 pm

anyone going to take the fall for this? Highly paid AD Radakovich?

BillS

July 14th, 2011
3:27 pm

So, can we get over the fact that most nCAA schools run into problems? GT, UGA, OSU, ORE, and on and on. No one team has a monopoly, nor do fans of one have any reason to gloat over the other. The NCAA rules are problematic at best, nonsensical at worst. Yes, this is a field day for those who hate GT, but just remember everyone is guilty at some point. So — can we move on to on-the-field activities please????

doc

July 14th, 2011
3:28 pm

AH HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

Double-D

July 14th, 2011
3:28 pm

So, is Clemson now ACC champ for 2009?

Chan Gailey

July 14th, 2011
3:29 pm

Miss me yet?

D

July 14th, 2011
3:29 pm

*sarcasm* Additionally, GT will be back on double secret probation until November 2017 or until they win a MNC, whichever comes first… *end sarcasm*

NCAA, you are a joke and a bully. I will not take you seriously until you treat all cases consistently.

Techman

July 14th, 2011
3:29 pm

I don’t care about this I’m still a supported of Georgia Tech I’m a Tech fan for life. Go Jackets!

AntoineFord

July 14th, 2011
3:29 pm

Tech won’t be worth a darn this year but it won’t be because of any violations. It will be because CPJ can’t recruit. As for the Bulldogs, their talent level is near the bottom of the SEC now. This will be Mark Rict’s last year on the sidelines, I’m sure. Make no mistake. It’s dry days ahead for football in the Peach State.

Buckeye

July 14th, 2011
3:29 pm

@ truth – And we could afford to pay that fine with no problem……

Techman

July 14th, 2011
3:30 pm

supporter I meant.

Time for change

July 14th, 2011
3:30 pm

How about the entire Div. I withdrawing from the NCAA and forming its own organization with rules that make sense?

Ted Sheckler

July 14th, 2011
3:30 pm

If Tech got this penalty, then Ohio State and UNC should definitely receive the death penalty then.

BehindEnemyLines

July 14th, 2011
3:30 pm

Either DRad needs to go for not having enough sense to tell CPJ not to discuss with the player OR CPJ needs to go for being too dumb not to discuss with the player. At this point the removal of both might be the best thing all the way around frankly, neither seems to be getting the job done.

2009

July 14th, 2011
3:31 pm

not he tallest midget after all

Oledawg

July 14th, 2011
3:31 pm

If you think P.J looked constipated before all of this——there won’t be enough X-Lax to ever make him smile.BWHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA

GT Alum

July 14th, 2011
3:31 pm

I’ll be interested to hear what Peterson and Radakovic have to say about this. Bradley says no one’s getting fired, but, if the persons involved in covering this up are still at Tech, they should be shown the door immediately. Maybe we wouldn’t have won the ACC title, but that’s better than winning it and having it vacated and getting 4 years of probation.

Refunds

July 14th, 2011
3:31 pm

If the ACC title game didn’t happen… then Ga. Tech should give me a refund for the ticket I bought. I don’t see cheating as a clause on the back for failure to provide a refund.

Upset GT Alum

July 14th, 2011
3:31 pm

Look at the timeline. This was O’Leary, some Gailey and a lot of Dave Braine!

Ted Sheckler

July 14th, 2011
3:31 pm

Speaking of Ohio State, did you know that Casey Anthony is a proud fan of the Buckeyes. That alone should force Ohio State to shut down their football program.