Rashad McCants (above left), the second-leading scorer on the
North Carolina basketball team that won the 2004-05 national title, told ESPN's
"Outside the Lines" that tutors wrote his term papers, he rarely went
to class for about half his time at UNC, and he remained able to play largely
because he took bogus classes designed to keep athletes academically eligible.
McCants told "Outside the Lines" that he
could have been academically ineligible to play during the championship season
had he not been provided the assistance. Further, he said head basketball coach
Roy Williams knew about the "paper class" system at UNC.
The so-called paper classes didn't require students
to go to class; rather, students were required to submit only one term paper to
receive a grade.
NOTE: Are we
here to get an education or to play basketball so we can selected by the Pros.
McCants also told "Outside the Lines" that
he even made the dean's list in the spring of 2005 despite not attending any of
his four classes for which he received straight-A grades. He said advisers and
tutors who worked with the basketball program steered him to take the paper
classes within the African-American Studies program.
McCants' allegations mirror and amplify many of
those first made public in 2011, when the Raleigh (N.C.) News & Observer
began to report about widespread academic fraud at UNC.
The scandal has centered on the African-American
Studies classes that many athletes took in order to remain eligible. The newspaper
reported in December 2012 that basketball players on
the national championship team accounted for 15 enrollments in the classes.
A UNC internal investigation found that 54 classes
in the department of African and Afro-American Studies were either
"aberrant" or "irregularly" taught from summer 2007 to
summer 2011.
That investigation only went back to 2007, according
to the school's review, because the two senior associate deans who conducted
the probe were told by Karen Gil, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, to
focus on that time frame.
The NCAA sanctioned the football program for
improper benefits and academic misconduct involving a tutor, but the athletic
department's sports programs largely emerged from the academic scandal
penalty-free.
In a statement to "Outside the Lines" recently,
UNC athletics director Bubba Cunningham said:
"It
is disappointing any time a student is dissatisfied with his or her experience.
I welcome the opportunity to speak with Rashad McCants about returning to UNC
to continue his academic career -- just as we have welcomed many former student-athletes
interested in completing their degrees.”
Is this straddling the fence or what???
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