I know we've all seen this, but a refresher on the NCAA and how big a load of crap they put on Pearl and the Tennessee program as a result. Pearl served 8 games to start the SEC season for something the NCAA later concluded wasn't even a violation. His penalties should have been over at that point. Since then Syracuse and Jim Boeheim skated for major violations. North Carolina got nothing for a multi-decade academic fraud scheme that Williams knew about. Does the NCAA hang around these coaches? Nope. And they don't Pearl either.
From Gary Parrish during year 2 of the Pearl show cause.
"If Pearl got a three-year show-cause penalty for lying to the NCAA that's so severe that the mere anticipation of it cost him and his staff their jobs, why did former Miami coach Frank Haith -- now the head coach at Missouri -- only get a five-game suspension for allegedly lying to the NCAA about something far worse than a cookout? You haven't read the 102-page report yet? That's fine. Because I have (at least the parts related to the basketball program). And the most important thing you need to know is that the NCAA made a "factual conclusion" that Haith changed his story multiple times about why he issued unusual "advanced checks" to three assistants. According to the report, Haith initially said the checks were issued because the assistants "had personal obligations and were financially struggling" before ultimately acknowledging that he wrote the checks to create cash designed to repay former booster Nevin Shapiro in hopes of ensuring he wouldn't talk about a number of things, including an allegation that Shaprio had used money to help secure a commitment from a basketball recruit named Dequan Jones.
Now I'm not interested in debating whether Shapiro really bought Jones' commitment nor do I care to discuss whether Haith knew about it. The evidence, it should be noted, is overwhelming. But to focus on that is to miss the point entirely because the point is that, regardless of what actually happened, Haith interviewed with the NCAA three different times and changed his story drastically, meaning he lied to the NCAA just like Pearl lied to the NCAA. And yet Haith will not get a show-cause penalty, and there's no reason to think he'll lose his job at Missouri. His only real punishment for lying to the NCAA is a five-game suspension that'll be served at the beginning of this season, which means Haith's only real punishment for lying to the NCAA will consist of him missing games against Southeast Louisiana, Southern Illinois, Hawaii, Gardner Webb and IUPUI. (Devastating, right?)
So, to summarize, Bruce Pearl got a three-year show-cause penalty for lying to the NCAA about a cookout while Frank Haith got nothing more than a mostly meaningless five-game suspension for lying to the NCAA about money the NCAA "factually concluded" was designed to keep a booster quiet about an alleged major recruiting violation. I'll let somebody else decide whether Pearl's penalty was too harsh or Haith's penalty is too light. All I know is that the penalties aren't even close to consistent with each other, and that's why most fans of college athletics -- and all fans of Tennessee athletics -- are baffled this afternoon."