Morehead State improperly certified 49 student-athletes

Posted on 2/10/17 12:00 PM

Download the 2017 Morehead State University Public Infractions Decision

Forty-nine Morehead State University student-athletes in nine sports competed while ineligible due to improper eligibility certifications, according to a Division I Committee on Infractions panel.

The violations were discovered by the university through an NCAA Academic Performance Program audit. A new software system used the total number of credit hours earned to determine a student-athlete’s progress toward degree, instead of just the hours that applied to a student-athlete’s designated degree program. Additionally, the university did not manually calculate the number of hours earned toward a degree to ensure the computerized calculations were correct.

The university’s use of the flawed software system to assist in certifying student-athletes led to the improper certification of 48 of the 49 student-athletes over the course of four academic years. The remaining student-athlete was improperly certified due to human error. 

Penalties prescribed by the panel include the following:

Members of the Committee on Infractions are drawn from NCAA membership and members of the public. The members of the panel who reviewed this case are Michael F. Adams, chancellor, Pepperdine University; Carol Cartwright, chief hearing officer for the panel and president emeritus at Kent State University; Bobby Cremins, former head men’s basketball coach at Georgia Tech; Thomas Hill, senior policy advisor to the president of Iowa State University; Jill Pilgrim, attorney in private practice; and David Roberts, special advisor to the president of the University of Southern California.