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NCAA poised to approve new enforcement policies

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Head coaches also will be held more accountable for their staffs. Unless a head coach can prove he or she was unaware of what took place, the most egregious violations could lead to suspensions from 10 percent of the season to a full season.

And what if the new policies don’t the stem the tide of rule-breaking? The NCAA could take additional steps.

“We’ll continue to evaluate it and if we recognize something is not working in the right area, that’s a step we will rectify,” Strobel said.

The measure also calls for more standard penalty guidelines. Schools and college fans have long been baffled by NCAA punishments and have called for more consistent standards.

And the sanctions could come sooner than the typical one-year time line.

Under the new proposal, the infractions committee would expand from 10 to up to 24 members who will serve in rotation. The hope is that more panels would break the backlog of cases that has traditionally bogged down the process.

The new guidelines would take effect immediately, though the hearing structure would not change until Aug. 1, 2013.

But schools currently under investigation, such as Miami, could still face the new sanctions — if the case is not resolved before next August.

“The committee on infractions could proceed under the new standards or could apply the penalties under the old standards, based on whatever is more beneficial to the institution,” Strobel said.

Emmert has backed every legislative piece of the reform movement.

Last fall, the governing body passed a measure calling for tougher eligibility requirements on incoming freshmen and junior college transfers; another that tied academic performance to postseason eligibility; a third that give schools flexibility to offer multiyear scholarships or stick with the standard one-year scholarships and it stood up to an override motion; and a fourth that allowed student-athletes to collect stipends of up to $2,000, which was stopped by an override movement.

Emmert wants to bring back the miscellaneous expense allowance, or stipend, though it’s unlikely to happen before the board’s January meeting.

“The differences being explored right now are whether or not to include a need-based component in it so that students have to have demonstrated financial need before they might get the miscellaneous expense allowance,” he said. “There’s not a final proposal at this time. I’m sure it’ll be hotly debated. It’s an issue that provokes a lot of passion on either side of it.”

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