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The death penalty is the popular term for the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA)'s power to ban a school from competing in a sport for at least one year. This colloquial term compares it with capital punishment since it is the harshest penalty that an NCAA member school can receive, but in fact its effect is only temporary.
This category is for articles about incidents that have caused National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) member schools to receive sanctions for rules violations as well as people that have ever had NCAA sanctions like the show-cause penalty.
Saginaw Valley State, women : 23 regular-season wins vacated, covering the 2013–14 and 2014–15 seasons. Florida State, men: Vacated 22 games (20 regular-season and 2 NIT wins) from the 2006–07 season. Florida State, women: Vacated 20 regular-season and 2 NCAA tournament wins from the 2006–07 and 2007–08 seasons.
In the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), a show-cause penalty is an administrative punishment ordering that any NCAA penalties imposed on a coach found to have committed major rules violations will stay in effect against that coach for a specified period of time—and could also be transferred to any other NCAA-member school that hires the coach while the sanctions are still in ...
Florida State University: Football: January 11, 2026 [11] Ohio State University: Women's basketball, fencing, women's golf: April 18, 2026 [12] University of Nevada, Las Vegas: Women's track & field: July 1, 2026 [13] University of Kentucky: Football, swimming & diving: August 1, 2026 [14] [b] Georgia Institute of Technology: Women's basketball ...
As part of the sanctions, Harbaugh’s suspension over alleged sign-stealing involving the program included Saturday’s game against Penn State. ... No. 3-ranked Michigan still beat No. 10 Penn ...
The policy describes the differences between the two sanctions, and how records of affected schools should be revised when such sanctions are imposed. In addition, the NCAA policy explicitly states that the NCAA will not change official records until a penalty has been ruled on by the NCAA Committee on Infractions. [1]
The popularity of each of these sports programs has changed over time. Between 1988–89 and 2010–11, NCAA schools had net additions of 510 men's teams and 2,703 women's teams. [90] The following tables show the changes over time in the number of NCAA schools across all three divisions combined sponsoring each of the men's and women's team ...