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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 ...
Additionally, in particularly egregious cases of rules violations, coaches, athletic directors, and athletic support staff can be barred from working for any NCAA member school without permission from the NCAA. This procedure is known as a "show-cause penalty" (not to be confused with an order to show cause in the legal sense). [130]
The following is a list of NCAA institutions on probation, organized by division. Probation decisions are made by the National Collegiate Athletic Association 's Committee on Infractions. Division I FBS institutions on probation
Colorado self-reported a minor NCAA rules violation because a prominent member of Colorado’s 2025 recruiting class was mentioned on Deion Sanders’ coaches show. Per records obtained by USA ...
The other NCAA reports obtained by USA TODAY Sports all involved minor violations of technical rules, including some that originated in 2023 but apparently didn’t get finally processed until 2024.
Other violations — all of which are considered Level II — include texting a recruit outside of a contact period, exceeding the NCAA’s limits for on-field coaches by having analysts instruct ...
Thomas More, women : 33 games—27 regular-season and 6 NCAA tournament wins, including the national championship, from the 2014–15 season. Louisiana-Lafayette: 33 games (31 wins and 2 tournament losses) vacated from the 2004 and 2005 seasons. See Major violations. FIU: 32 regular-season wins vacated covering four seasons from 2003 to 2006.
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.