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NCAA gives Indiana probation over Sampson calls

INDIANAPOLIS -- The NCAA has placed Indiana University on three years of probation and imposed stiff penalties on former basketball coach Kelvin Sampson and an assistant for a telephone recruiting scandal that decimated the once-storied program.

The NCAA also gave Sampson five years of potential penalties for his role in more than 100 impermissible phone calls to recruits made while he was still on probation for a similar phone-call scandal at Oklahoma.

The penalties announced by the NCAA Tuesday cap a 20-month saga that began with Sampson's hiring in March 2006 while under the cloud of a telephone recruiting scandal at Oklahoma.

"Now we know we can move this program in the right direction and build it without more sanctions and for that I'm happy, very happy and am very thankful," said current Hoosiers coach Tom Crean, with the team in Hawaii. "We didn't want to lose postseason, scholarships or television and thank God we didn't lose any of those so we can continue to move the program without the what-ifs."

In finding Indiana guilty of failing to monitor its basketball program, the NCAA faulted the university for not having adequate "real time" monitoring systems in place when Sampson was hired but acknowledged that the former coach's conduct was "unprecedented."

"He ignored signed compliance agreements with the institution in which he agreed to comply with the penalties imposed on him and his program due to his commission of violations in the Oklahoma case. He ignored telephone penalties imposed on him in that case and committed the same type violations for which he had already been penalized during the same time that those penalties were in effect," the report said.

Sampson, now an assistant with the Milwaukee Bucks, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Sampson has repeatedly denied the violations.

The NCAA imposed restrictions on Sampson through November 2013 should he return to college coaching. Former assistant Rob Senderoff, now an assistant at Kent State, also faces three years of NCAA sanctions.

No sports program at the school had been found guilty of a major NCAA violation since 1960.

The NCAA acknowledged IU's track record in its report.

"The institution had an almost 50-year record free of major infractions of which the institution was justly proud and for which it deserves commendation," it said.

But even though it intended to closely monitor Sampson and his assistants, the university fell short, the report said. It did not have a good system in place when Sampson was hired and had to develop one "on the fly," and compliance officials did not follow on phone record requests in a timely manner and focused too much on collaboration with the men's basketball program and not enough on adhering to requirements, the governing body said.

The probation comes in addition to sanctions IU has already imposed. In addition, the program has undergone a complete overhaul.

Only two players from last season's team remain. The others were kicked off, transferred, graduated or left early for the NBA. The team has just nine scholarship players on the team instead of the 13 allowed by NCAA rules after giving up scholarships because of the NCAA investigation and poor academic scores.

Indiana officials discovered the violations during an investigation that began in July 2007. It reported the calls to the NCAA but characterized them as secondary violations.

The NCAA disagreed and in February charged the university with committing major infractions and accused Sampson of providing false and misleading information to investigators -- an allegation Sampson continues to deny. It added the failure to monitor charge in June after Indiana officials testified at a hearing on the initial charges.

Indiana contended it did everything possible to prevent the violations and argued that its self-imposed penalties should be sufficient. Those include stripping scholarships and strict limits on recruiting for Tom Crean, who came from Marquette to take over the Hoosiers program after the university bought out Sampson's contract for $750,000 in February.

None of Sampson's assistants was retained, and athletic director Rick Greenspan announced his resignation the same day the failure to monitor charge was filed. He will leave at the end of December and be replaced by Indianapolis attorney Fred Glass.

When Glass was hired last month, he said that removing the stain of basketball scandal was a priority.

"Our place is one that has always followed the rules," Glass said. "I think we can have that again."

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