Idaho men's basketball program violated NCAA rules

Posted on 6/18/20 12:00 PM

Download the June 2020 University of Idaho Public Negotiated Resolution Agreement

The University of Idaho men's basketball head coach instructed two noncoaching staff members to engage in impermissible coaching activities, according to an agreement released by the Division I Committee on Infractions.

The agreement said the coaching activities performed by the noncoaching staff caused the program to exceed the permissible number of countable coaches. The noncoaching staff included two former directors of basketball operations and a former men's basketball manager.

The university and NCAA enforcement staff agreed that the men's basketball program supervised student-athletes' participation in countable athletically related activity beyond what is allowed by NCAA rules and did not ensure weekly countable activity reports were accurately recorded.

Additional violations occurred when prospects played in scrimmages observed by coaches. One recruit played on-court with student-athletes during his official visit, but the prospect had not completed a required medical examination.

The program also conducted impermissible tryouts when two minimally recruited local prospects played in scrimmages observed by coaches when additional players were needed during the off-season, according to the agreement. The agreement detailed that the basketball staff reported they did not believe it was impermissible to watch the prospects play because they were not being seriously recruited by the university at the time.  

The former head coach and the enforcement staff agreed the former head coach did not promote an atmosphere of compliance because he instructed and allowed the noncoaching staff members to perform impermissible tasks in team practices and games.

Additionally, the agreement said the former head coach did not monitor his staff's recording and reporting of countable activity or their observations of prospects during scrimmages.  

The university, former coach and the enforcement staff used ranges identified by the Division I membership-approved infractions guidelines to agree upon Level II-standard penalties for the university and the former head coach. Those and other penalties, approved by the Committee on Infractions, are detailed below:

Members of the Committee on Infractions are drawn from the NCAA membership and the public. The members of the panel who reviewed this case were Joel Maturi, former Minnesota athletics director; Kay Norton, chief hearing officer for the case and president emeritus of Northern Colorado; and Larry Parkinson, director of enforcement for the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.