Friday, May 27, 2011

NCAA rejects the appeal of the USC Football Sanctions

Southern California recognizes that its committed violations of NCAA football program while building a dynasty from the West Coast for a decade. Trojan horses simply believe punishment almost unprecedented last year did not match the crime.


Sports Director Pat Haden was not surprised to learn Thursday the NCAA disagreed.


The NCAA has categorically rejected appeal USC to reduce the sanctions imposed on his program staged football, keeping in place tougher sentences brought against a school in a quarter century.


USC should serve as the second year of its postseason ban two years this fall, making the Trojans ineligible for a bowl game or the first Cap-12 title game. USC will also lose 30 scholarships over the next three years, giving them only 15 scholarships available by season - 10 below the normal annual limit - 2015.


Haden led a chorus of resignation exasperated at Heritage Hall after the final decision of the NCAA on its punitive sanctions for a variety of misdeeds surrounding Heisman Trophy-winning Halfback Reggie Bush.


"We ourselves is look in the mirror here," said Charlie Haden, who took over the athletic Department last July. "We could have and should have better things." We had a player who made knowingly wrong things. We are not innocent here. We deserve some sanctions, but it is the severity of the penalties that we believe to be unfair. ?

Sports Director of the University of Southern California, Pat Haden speaks to the media, on Thursday 26 May 2011, in Los Angeles, on appeal by the USC to the NCAA. NCAA Thursday dismissed appeal USC to reduce the sanctions imposed on its program of staged football, keeping in place some of harsher sanctions made against a school in a quarter century.

While disappointment spread everywhere on campus and in the offices of Cap - 10 upstate, Trojans also expressed relief that their half decade of the drama of the NCAA has finally. Haden confirmed that USC continue NCAA in another competition that the broader sanctions Remies since SMU football has been closed for two years by the so-called "death penalty" in 1987.


"Obviously, I am very disappointed, but I'm not surprised," Haden said. "I think that the Appeal Board is a group of people of good faith." We disagree just vehemently with the result, with the way they saw our argument, and how the last previous did not play a role in their decision. ?


After a brief meeting in which coach Lane Kiffin is warning his players do step to spout decision on social media, Trojans took the new expected in the wake. Haden had predicted the bad news for the players, who have been the years from participate USC where Bush has apparently accepted lavish illegal advantages of two aspiring sports marketers.


"Like Pat and the rest of the University, we agree, but we will deal with what we have treated," quarterback Matt Barkley said.


The NCAA refused to comment beyond his public report, which said that it cannot find "no basis on which set aside the relevant findings."


NCAA conducted a four year investigation, primarily in transactions murky about Bush what amounts to his Heisman last year after the decision of the NCAA. USC has been prohibited to playoffs last season after having 8-5 in the first field of the Kiffin, but the boundaries of the stock market, have been postponed in appeal.


"I feel so bad for our elderly people in particular, who two years ago and really had nothing to do with what was going on," said Haden.


Executive Director of BCS Bill Hancock said in an e-mail Thursday that Commissioners Conference and the presidential Oversight Committee will consider whether to strip USC title BCS 2004 she won by beating Oklahoma 55 - 19 at the Orange Bowl. He said there was no timetable set for that decision to come down.

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