Campbell To Vacate Wins In 10 Sports For NCAA Eligibility Violations

Campbell University will serve a year of probation and vacate wins after self-reporting NCAA violations involving the eligibility of transfer students in 10 different sports. It’s not yet known whether swimming & diving is among them.

The issue was with how the school applied the NCAA’s “progress toward degree” legislation. Between 2010 and 2015, Campbell incorrectly allowed 34 student-athletes in 10 sports to compete while they should have been ineligible under NCAA rules. The school discovered the mistake during a 2014 audit by the NCAA and self-reported its violations. The NCAA’s final decision says the violations “were unintentional, limited in scope and represent a deviation from otherwise compliant practices by the institution.”

Still, the school will face a number of penalties. Campbell will be on probation with the NCAA from August 11, 2016 to August 10, 2017 and will pay a $5,000 fine. The baseball team was banned from 2016 postseason play, and certain sports will have wins vacated from periods when an athlete was in violation of the NCAA’s eligibility rules.

That mostly affects historic team records and coaching wins. Individual athletes who were eligible will not lose their individual honors (all-conference, All-America, etc.).

The 10 programs involved weren’t named by the NCAA, and Campbell hasn’t responded to our request for a list of wins vacated (though the NCAA said that they were responsible for publishing that list), but women’s swimming has been named by media as one of the affected programs. Campbell competes in the CCSA and finished 5th in that conference last year. The school does not sponsor a men’s swimming & diving team.

Other programs believed to be involved:

  • Volleyball
  • Football
  • Men’s Basketball
  • Baseball
  • Men’s Soccer
  • Women’s  Swimming
  • Wrestling

You can find the full NCAA infractions decision here.

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Patrick
7 years ago

45 days has come and gone. Has anything new been published yet?

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

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