The NCAA has reportedly considered imposing the sanction at least five times on other Division I schools—against
Kansas basketball in 1988, Kentucky basketball in 1989,
Alabama football in 2002,
Penn State football in 2012, and the entire
Texas Southern athletic program in 2012.
Kansas basketball, 1988 Shortly after Kansas won
a national title in 1988, the Jayhawks were found guilty of numerous NCAA violations. The NCAA had opened an investigation in 1986 after receiving a confidential tip. The most serious violations occurred in the summer of 1986, when potential
Memphis State transfer
Vincent Askew (who ultimately never transferred) was given cash by then-Kansas head coach
Larry Brown (and three other individuals whom the NCAA considered to be boosters) for plane tickets, clothes, his grandmother's electric bill, and a no-show job. One of the three boosters, former Kansas player Mike Marshall, admitted to
Sports Illustrated, but not to NCAA investigators, that he had provided small loans to several Kansas players, including
Danny Manning, the centerpiece of the 1988 championship team. When issuing its findings, the NCAA indicated that it had nearly given Kansas a death penalty; the Jayhawks basketball program was eligible for the penalty because
Kansas football had been found guilty of major violations in 1983. Brown left Kansas immediately after the championship season to become head coach of the
NBA's San Antonio Spurs.
Kentucky basketball, 1989 In 1989, Kentucky basketball was found guilty of rampant violations of recruiting and eligibility rules. The Wildcats were facing the possibility of a death penalty after being sanctioned in 1988 for failing to cooperate with an earlier investigation. In its final report, the NCAA said that Kentucky's violations were egregious enough to warrant a death penalty. However, the NCAA said it decided against imposing a death penalty after school president
David Roselle took swift action to bring the basketball program under control once the violations came to light—including forcing the resignations of head coach
Eddie Sutton and athletic director
Cliff Hagan, who had been a basketball star under
Adolph Rupp. In its final report, the infractions committee stated:
Alabama football, 2002 Prior to 2002, Alabama football had been investigated by the NCAA three times. In 1995, the program was placed on probation for three years (later reduced to 2), required to give up 26 scholarships over a 3-year period (later reduced to 17 scholarships), and forced to forfeit 8 victories from the 1993 season after the NCAA discovered that defensive back
Antonio Langham had signed with an agent after the 1992 season but remained at Alabama. Another player was charged with receiving impermissible benefits from boosters, and the school was also charged with lack of institutional control. The 1995 penalties represented the first time Alabama had ever been placed on probation. In February 1999, the NCAA investigated claims of a slush fund created by former assistant basketball coach Tyrone Beaman; ultimately the allegation was not proven, but the NCAA warned the university that severe sanctions would result if further violations occurred. May 1999 brought allegations against then-head coach
Mike DuBose of improper conduct with a former secretary; DuBose initially denied the claim, only to later admit that it was true. The university paid $360,000 to settle. In January 2001, an article in
The Commercial Appeal newspaper in Memphis, Tennessee, reported that a high school head coach was paid $200,000 to direct highly prized recruit
Albert Means to Alabama. The article followed online chat room comments alleging similar activities. The NCAA issued a notice to Alabama in February that it was investigating the program for violations. By August, a federal grand jury in Memphis was investigating and issued indictments against a high school coach and assistant coach for trying to "sell" a prized recruit to the highest bidder. In September, the NCAA issued a notice to Alabama confirming 11 major violations including multiple instances of recruits and assistant coaches receiving cash, vehicles and loans from boosters already known to have provided impermissible benefits, and lack of institutional control (among other charges). The university attempted to avoid NCAA sanctions by self-imposing penalties of 15 scholarships over 3 years and temporary disassociation with three boosters referenced in the allegations; however, it did not self-impose a postseason bowl ban. The NCAA ruled that the self-imposed sanctions were not harsh enough and that "these violations are some of the worst, most serious that have ever occurred", and, in February 2002, issued the following penalties: • A ban from postseason bowl games for 2 years • A loss of 21 scholarships over 3 years • The requirement of the program and university to permanently disassociate from the boosters in question (or face more penalties) • 5 years of probation In referencing the possibility of receiving the death penalty, then-chairman of the NCAA Infractions Committee, Thomas Yeager, stated:
Penn State football, 2012 In 2012, Penn State was disciplined with some of the harshest sanctions that have been imposed on an NCAA member school since the SMU case—including a four-year bowl ban for the football team—for school officials' failure to report former defensive coordinator
Jerry Sandusky's
numerous instances of molesting children. Hours after the sanctions were announced, school president
Rodney Erickson said that had Penn State not agreed to a sweeping
consent decree implementing the sanctions, it would have faced a multi-year suspension of the football program without any preliminaries. Erickson subsequently told
ESPN's John Barr that Penn State was facing as long as a four-year ban from play. Erickson also told ESPN's Don Van Natta that he had been prompted to start negotiations after NCAA president
Mark Emmert personally told him that a majority of the NCAA leadership wanted to shut the football program down for four years. However, NCAA Executive Committee chairman and
Oregon State president
Ed Ray, whose committee was charged by Emmert with designing the sanctions, told ESPN's Adam Rittenberg that while there had been considerable discussion over whether to include a death penalty as one of the sanctions, "the overwhelming position of members of both the executive committee and the Division I board was against a suspension of play." Ray "categorically" denied that Penn State had been threatened with a death penalty had it not agreed to the sanctions, saying that including it as a backup in the event of such a denial was "never even a point of discussion within either the executive committee or the Division I board." Emmert himself told ESPN's
Bob Ley that the death penalty was "unequivocally on the table" as a possible sanction. However, he said that the NCAA ultimately decided against imposing one due to Penn State's swift corrective action after the scandal broke in full—including the firing of head coach
Joe Paterno and the forced resignation of president
Graham Spanier—as well as its full cooperation with the NCAA. "Had Penn State not been as decisive as they were," Emmert said, "I don't know what the outcome would have been, but I suspect it would have been significantly worse." He also denied that the NCAA had threatened Penn State with a death penalty had it not signed the consent decree, saying that there had been "significant confusion" about those circumstances. He did, however, say that had Penn State not accepted the consent decree, the NCAA would have launched a full-blown infractions investigation that would have had "an unknown outcome." Earlier, Emmert told
Yahoo! Sports'
Pat Forde that if Penn State had not agreed to the sanctions, the board would have taken action on its own, "probably with harsher penalties." The consent decree stated that the death penalty was primarily reserved for repeat violators that had neither cooperated with the NCAA nor taken any corrective measures. It not only noted Penn State's swift corrective action, but also pointed out that the school had never been the subject of a major infractions case before. Ultimately, Penn State's bowl ban and scholarship reductions were lifted when the school won an appeal. The NCAA announced it would restore the Nittany Lions' vacated wins, making Joe Paterno once again the FBS all-time wins leader with 409 victories.
Texas Southern athletics, 2012 In October 2012, the NCAA found
Texas Southern University guilty of massive violations in 13 sports over a seven-year period from 2005 to 2012. The most serious violations—including academic fraud, illicit benefits given to student athletes, lying on the part of coaches, and lying to the NCAA about self-imposed sanctions—occurred in the football and men's basketball programs. The NCAA deemed TSU a "double repeat violator"; the Tigers had either been on probation or had violations occurring for all but six years since 1992. The NCAA seriously considered a death penalty due to the egregiousness of the violations, as well as TSU's failure to reform itself over the previous two decades. However, according to Greg Sankey, chief operating officer of the SEC and a member of the infractions committee, it decided against doing so due to cooperation from President John Rudley and Athletic Director Charles McClelland, as well as the school's corrective measures—which included firing football coach
Johnnie Cole and forcing the resignation of men's basketball coach
Tony Harvey. Instead, the NCAA banned TSU's men's basketball team from the 2013 postseason and banned TSU's football team from the 2013 and 2014 postseason. Earlier, TSU had vacated every game that Tiger teams had won from 2006 to 2010, and vacated all victories in football and women's soccer for the 2010–11 season. == NCAA schools outside of Division I ==