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Operation Varsity Blues [1] [2] was the code name for the investigation into the 2019 criminal conspiracy scandal to influence undergraduate admissions decisions at several top American universities.
The 2017–18 NCAA Division I men's basketball corruption scandal was a corruption scandal, initially involving sportswear manufacturer Adidas as well as several college basketball programs associated with the brand [1] [2] [3] but now involving many programs not affiliated with Adidas.
The Sports Factory: An Investigation into College Sports. The New York Times Sports Department. New York City: Quadrangle Books. ISBN 978-0-8129-0533-5. OCLC 1229529. Mashburn, Luke (2023). "Case 12: Southwestern Louisiana Basketball Grade Fraud". In Sanderson, Jimmy (ed.). Corruption and Scandal in American Sports: Causes and Consequences.
When the Varsity Blues scandal hit in 2019, it rocked American academia in unprecedented ways. Five years later, a Times investigation revisited the scandal with a trove of new documents that ...
Now, the events have been captured in a Lifetime Film, The College Admissions Scandal, and a new Netflix documentary, Operation Varsity Blues: The College Admissions Scandal. With the renewed ...
There has been a trial, guilty verdicts and prison sentences, but if the FBI investigation is to truly shake up college basketball, the worst of the corruption scandal must be on the horizon.
1961 NCAA University Division men's basketball gambling scandal; 1978–79 Boston College basketball point-shaving scandal; 2011 University of Miami athletics scandal; 2017–18 NCAA Division I men's basketball corruption scandal
In a 2021 article about the scandal, journalist and UNC alum Andy Thomason concluded that no nefarious individuals could be blamed for the scandal, but instead the substandard classes were the result of a series of decisions by multiple people, mostly well-intentioned, operating for years under the powerful forces of money-making college athletics.