Utah Basketball Receives Infractions From Self-Reported Recruiting
Aug 6, 2019, 10:39 AM | Updated: Aug 7, 2019, 9:58 am
(Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah – The NCAA issued its infractions report on self-reported violations by the Utah men’s basketball program related to the recruitment of a student-athlete in April 2018.
The University has accepted all penalties set forth in the report—most of which were self-imposed by the University.
“The University of Utah is committed to integrity in all of its endeavors,” said Utah Director of Athletics Mark Harlan. “While we take any violation of NCAA rules seriously, we are confident these actions were isolated and inadvertent and have been fully addressed by the University and the NCAA. Through this process, we took the opportunity to conduct a comprehensive evaluation of our compliance education and monitoring practices and put additional checks and balances in place as a result.”
Utah said that the recruiting violations stemmed from a misreading of the NCAA calendar and a misinterpretation of the official visit limitations. The calendar oversight resulted in Utah coaches visiting a prospect at his high school during a period when in-person, off-campus recruiting is not allowed, but the staff did follow all institutional policies and procedures in coordinating the visit.
The coaches also inadvertently triggered an official visit when the same prospect made an unofficial visit to Utah in connection with his official visit to Salt Lake Community College, which also was interested in the prospect.
Although Utah carefully adhered to its understanding of the rules relating to unofficial visits when the prospect came to Salt Lake City, the NCAA classified the visit to Utah’s campus as official, thus exceeding the number of permitted official visits for the recruiting period.
Utah head coach Larry Krystkowiak takes full responsibility.
“While they were inadvertent and unintentional mistakes on our part, and there was never an intent to circumvent any rules, we accept that they were violations and, as the head coach, I am accountable for them,” Krystkowiak said. “I have always been a strong proponent of protecting the integrity of college basketball and that will not change.”
As part of its commitment to compliance, the University self-imposed several sanctions including the following:
- Two-year probationary period
- $5,000 fine payable to the NCAA, which will come directly from the men’s basketball budget
- One-week suspension for the associate head coach (Tommy Connor, who served the suspension in November 2018)
- Reprimands for the coaches
- Recruiting limitations on off-campus recruiting and official visits.
- The University has prohibited its coaches from having any on-campus interactions with SLCC’s coaches, or from recruiting any SLCC basketball student-athletes for a one-year period.