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DETROIT — Ford is recalling nearly 1.9 million Explorer SUVs in the U.S. because a trim piece can fly off and create a hazard for other drivers.

The recall covers Explorers from the 2011 through 2019 model years.

Documents posted Wednesday by the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration say that clips holding the trim that covers the roof supports close to the windshield can come loose.

If that happens, the trim piece can fly off and increase the risk of a crash.

The recall comes after U.S. regulators opened an investigation into the problem last January after receiving 164 consumer complaints. Canadian regulators also inquired about the problem.

Documents say that at first, Ford decided against a recall, citing the low mass of the part. But the company decided to do the recall after U.S. regulators determined the problem was a safety hazard.

Ford said in a statement Wednesday that it expects only 5% of the recalled Explorers to be affected by the problem. It encourages owners to contact dealers for an inspection when parts are available.

The company said in documents that it’s aware of 568 consumer complaints and more than 14,000 warranty reports alleging that the parts were missing or detached. Ford said it is not aware of any crashes or injuries from the problem.

Dealers will inspect the trim pieces to make sure the clips are engaged and add adhesive to hold them in place.

Owners will be notified starting March 13.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

A court-storming incident last weekend involving Iowa’s Caitlin Clark − where the star guard was accidentally knocked over by an Ohio State fan sprinting to join the celebration after the No. 15 Buckeyes upset the No. 2 Hawkeyes − has sparked an interesting discussion. 

Given the growing parity and interest in women’s college basketball and how common upsets are becoming, should extra security at games be considered? 

Clark’s collision with a fan comes less than 10 months after more than 10 million people tuned into the title match between LSU and Iowa last April. Places that already drew well, including South Carolina and Iowa, have seen a significant increase in attendance this season. LSU sold just south of 10,000 season tickets for 2023-24, almost doubling last season’s sales. Clark and her pursuit of the scoring record are responsible for selling out each of Iowa’s remaining road games. Attendance for the Ohio State-Iowa game was nearly three times what the Buckeyes typically draw and was their largest women’s basketball crowd ever.

Clark said she was OK after being taken out, but both she and Iowa coach Lisa Bluder expressed disappointment that Ohio State didn’t have a plan in place to help players safely exit the floor. (Buckeyes coach Kevin McGuff and athletic director Gene Smith apologized immediately after the collision.) The Big Ten told the Associated Press it would not fine Ohio State for the incident.

Thursday, No. 9 LSU hosts No. 1 South Carolina in a game expected to draw a sellout crown of more than 13,000 at the Pete Maravich Assembly Center. Secondary market tickets close to the court are listed for upwards of $1,000 and have been priced as high as $4,000. College GameDay will be on site for its pregame show. Kim Mulkey, coach of the defending national champion Tigers, said she expects “one heck of an atmosphere.” But she didn’t express concern about a potential postgame celebration getting out of hand. 

“It wouldn’t matter,” she said of having extra security. “How much security do you have at a football game? It wouldn’t matter. How much security do you have at a football game and you can’t hold them back, right? One guy is going to hold back how many students? You can line (security) up like a bunch of soldiers, and at the end of the day, you’re outnumbered.” 

LSU will have ‘heightened sense of awareness’ as it hosts No. 1 South Carolina

Still, LSU is preparing for all possible scenarios should the Tigers hand South Carolina its first loss of the season. 

‘We do have a court-storming protocol that allows us to deploy security as needed to prevent fan access to the competition area,’ said Cody Worsham, LSU’s chief brand officer. ‘For bigger games, we certainly have a heightened sense of awareness on these matters.’

In women’s basketball, court-storming is a relatively new and rare phenomenon. Even when the top-ranked team in the country has been upset − as No. 1 South Carolina was in March 2022 when it lost to unranked Kentucky in the SEC tournament championship game − no fans rushed the floor. Ditto for when Sabrina Ionescu’s No. 2 Oregon squad was surprised on the road at No. 12 Oregon State in 2019, even though a capacity crowd of 9,301 watched the game. 

Most women’s teams do not travel with security, either, though there are exceptions. That’s the case with defending champion LSU, which boasts superstar NIL athletes like Angel Reese and Flau’jae Johnson, who is also a rapper. But for the Tigers, it’s more about being able to get from the bus to the arena than protecting athletes during a rowdy on-court celebration. (Across the SEC, visiting women’s basketball teams are assigned a police officer who stays with the team or head coach the entire time they’re in the building.)

LSU could be hit in pocketbook if takes down No. 1

LSU stands to face monetary punishment should fans rush the court Thursday. The league mandates a $100,000 fine if spectators leave the stands, and that’s for the first infraction. The penalties increase to $250,00 and $500,000 for a second and third violation.

Should there be a court storming, the scene won’t be unfamiliar to South Carolina. The school was hit with a $100,000 fine Wednesday, one day after fans joined the on-court celebration following its men’s team posting an upset of No. 6 Kentucky with women’s coach Dawn Staley in attendance.

Staley didn’t take part in the festivities, choosing to enjoy the scene from afar.

‘It looked a little too dangerous for me,’ Staley said Wednesday. ‘That’s a young person’s thing. I was thinking ‘I want to’ but my body said ‘girl, please.’

‘I didn’t incite anything, but I didn’t mind seeing the students cheer for our men’s basketball team in the way that they did because it doesn’t happen often and we got to really, really celebrate it because we want more.’

Court-storming unlikely, nearly impossible, at NCAA events

Even the biggest upset of all time in women’s basketball − fourth-seeded Louisville’s 82-81 win over defending champion Baylor in the 2013 Sweet 16 − didn’t result in anyone rushing the court. But that’s probably because the NCAA was running it. 

According to Meghan Wright, a spokeswoman for the NCAA, schools hosting NCAA championship events are “expected to have security plans in place,” she told USA TODAY Sports via email. While the NCAA does not have a written court-storming best practices document, the governing body of college sports does provide experts if schools need assistance. 

At neutral sites − like the Final Four − the NCAA works with host venue security and local law enforcement to make a postgame plan. It helps, of course, that at neutral site events, there’s a mix of fan bases. Usually in court-storming, the arena is packed with just one passionate fan base. 

Mulkey said Wednesday she’d love for fans to be able to storm the court after a national championship win. And while she acknowledged that she’s doesn’t always know ‘how good or bad our fans are, I know they love us,’ she expects them, like everyone else, to follow the rules and stay off the floor, no matter the outcome. 

Follow Lindsay Schnell on social media: @Lindsay_Schnell

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Aryna Sabalenka left New York last September feeling like she gave away the US Open final as much as Coco Gauff won it. 

She didn’t make the same mistake in their rematch. 

Sabalenka, the No. 2 seed, advanced to the Australian Open final on Thursday morning with a 7-6, 6-4 victory over the No. 4 seeded Gauff and will have a chance Saturday to defend the breakthrough Grand Slam title she won last year. 

Unlike in their US Open matchup, when Gauff’s ability to track down balls and keep points alive caused Sabalenka’s high-risk power game to unravel, the Belarusian was steady under pressure this time. 

Making 76 percent of her first serves and hitting 33 winners, Sabalenka had enough to overcome both her demons from past Grand Slam meltdowns and an opponent in Gauff who played at a high level throughout the match. 

Sabalenka, who hasn’t dropped a set in the entire tournament, will be heavily favored in the final to beat either unseeded Dayana Yastremska or No. 12 Zheng Qinwen. 

Despite jumping on Gauff early and dominating the flow of play for much of the first set, Sabalenka actually found herself on the brink of losing it once Gauff’s defense and sideline-to-sideline speed started to kick in.

A mess of errors by Sabalenka handed Gauff the break and a chance to serve for the set at 6-5. But at 30-15, Gauff tried to play too carefully on a forehand short in the court and dumped it into the net. From there, Sabalenka won nine of the next 11 points and ran away with the tiebreaker to grab the set.

The second set was closely contested, with each player holding serve until 4-4. But that’s when Gauff’s struggle to make first serves finally caught up to her as Sabalenka crushed a pair of returns to break and earn a chance to serve for the match. 

Despite a nervy double fault and Gauff saving the first match point with a beautiful forehand down the line, Sabalenka stayed calm and finished off the match quickly from there. 

If there is any disappointment for the 19-year old Gauff in her first Australian Open semifinal, it will be in making just 57 percent of her first serves and hitting eight double faults. 

Sabalenka will try to become the first woman to win back-to-back Australian Opens since Victoria Azarenka in 2012-13.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

We may not yet know which two teams will travel to Las Vegas for Super Bowl 58, but one thing is certain: they won’t be visiting any casinos in their spare time.

Front Office Sports reported that a September email from the league prohibited players of this year’s Super Bowl teams from gambling of any kind – both casino games and sports betting. However, players of other teams in Las Vegas as spectators of the big game may gamble, though only on casino games and non-NFL sports.

The memo from the NFL further states that all players, participating or not, are not allowed to visit sportsbooks until after the Super Bowl is over. There is an exception in cases where a player must walk through a sportsbook to reach another location.

The NFL and gambling

In 2018, Supreme Court case Murphy v. National College Athletic Association opened the door to the re-legalization of sports betting on a state-by-state basis in the United States.

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Three years later, the NFL announced partnerships with three sportsbooks – Caesars, DraftKings and FanDuel. Months after that, the league reached agreements with four more – BetMGM, FOX Bet (defunct in July), PointsBet and WynnBET – to become ‘approved sportsbook operators.’

However, the NFL has significant restrictions on its players and personnel when it comes to gambling.

According to new rules that began in September, betting on NFL games can be grounds for indefinite suspension and permanent banishment if that person was found to fix games. In addition, anyone gambling on anything outside the NFL while at the workplace receives a two-game ban for a first offense, six-game ban for a second offense and a suspension of at least one year with no pay for a third.

Sports betting is now legal in 38 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico. Online sports betting is legal in 30 states, D.C. and Puerto Rico.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Football meets fútbol on Super Bowl Sunday.

World Cup champion Lionel Messi will appear in Michelob Ultra’s Super Bowl commercial, the company announced Thursday, the international soccer star’s first career Super Bowl ad.

Messi joined MLS club Inter Miami in 2023 after leading Argentina to its third world championship at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar. An eight-time Ballon d’Or winner as the world’s best player, Messi’s team is set for a globetrotting MLS preseason tour in the weeks to come.

In the teaser for the commercial, Messi orders a Michelob Ultra at a bar only for the tap to run dry, setting off a stare-down with the bartender.

Messi’s relationship with Anheuser-Busch – Michelob’s parent company – began in 2020.

Michelob Ultra was also named the official beer sponsor for this summer’s Copa America tournament being held in the United States.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

University of Alabama golfer Nick Dunlap, after winning the American Express Tournament on Sunday to become the youngest amateur to win a PGA Tour event since 1910, announced he will turn pro at a news conference Thursday, and said he will make his pro debut at the AT&T Pro-Am.

The sophomore became the first amateur to win a PGA Tour tournament since Phil Mickelson in 1991. With a sponsorship exemption, he finished an incredible 29-under par to win by one stroke. He shot a 2-under par 70 in his final round Sunday.

‘If you had told me that I had the opportunity to live out my dream as a 20-year-old, it’s pretty surreal,’ Dunlap said. ‘But it’s also scary. There’s a lot of changes and (Alabama) coach (Jay) Seawell has been gracious enough and I’m gonna continue to live here and hang out with the guys and, and at least live out some of my college life the rest of this year.

‘It’s an incredible opportunity and you know, very grateful for it.’

At 20, he’s also the youngest amateur to win a PGA Tour event since 1910. However, as an amateur, he wasn’t able to take the tournament’s cash prize of $1.5 million. With the victory, the Huntsville, Alabama, native and former U.S. Amateur champion made the biggest jump in the history of the Official World Golf Rankings, soaring from 4,129th to 68th.

When Mickelson won the Northern Telecom Open in 1991 as an amateur, he opted to remain at Arizona State until graduating in 1992.

Retired Alabama football coach Nick Saban called into The Golf Channel during Dunlap’s Sunday push.

Reach Tuscaloosa News columnist Chase Goodbread at cgoodbread@gannett.com. Follow on Twitter @chasegoodbread.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Philadelphia Eagles aren’t wasting any time.

They’re hiring Vic Fangio on Thursday as their defensive coordinator less than 24 hours after he and the Miami Dolphins parted ways Wednesday.

ESPN first reported Thursday morning that Fangio is traveling to Philadelphia on Thursday morning to sign his contract.

Fangio, 65, is replacing Sean Desai, who was demoted in December and fired after the season, and Matt Patricia, who took over play-calling duties from Desai. Patricia’s contract expired after the season, and he informed the Eagles that he won’t be returning.

Fangio, 65, is a noted defensive guru, and was actually under contract with the Eagles as a consultant in the two weeks leading up to the Super Bowl last February. Fangio was then hired by the Dolphins. A few days after the Super Bowl, Eagles defensive coordinator Jonathan Gannon left to become the Arizona Cardinals head coach.

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The Eagles then hired Desai, considered a disciple of Fangio’s as the two worked together in Chicago while Fangio was the defensive coordinator there from 2015-18.

It didn’t go well. The Eagles finished 26th in total defense, allowing 356 yards per game. They ranked 31st in pass defense, allowing 253 yards per game, and 30th in scoring defense, allowing 25.2 points per game.

The defense was especially bad during the Eagles 1-6 finish to the season, when they gave up an average of 30.4 points per game.

The news of Fangio’s departure from the Dolphins came Wednesday afternoon during the season-ending press conference with head coach Nick Sirianni and general manager Howie Roseman.

Sirianni was then asked if Fangio will become the Eagles’ top target.

‘We’ve got a lot of good targets that we’re working through, and there are a lot of guys that have done really well in their interview process, and I look forward to continuing on that process,’ Sirianni said. ‘We’ll see what happens.’

The Eagles had reportedly interviewed former Washington Commanders head coach Ron Rivera and former Jaguars defensive coordinator Mike Caldwell.

Then Fangio became available. The Eagles were long enamored with Fangio’s system. Fangio first made a name for himself as the San Francisco 49ers defensive coordinator from 2011-14. The 49ers went to the Super Bowl in 2012.

He then left to become the Bears DC from 2015-18, with Desai on the defensive staff. Fangio left to become the Denver Broncos head coach in 2019, and went 19-30 in his three seasons.

After serving as a consultant for the Eagles briefly in 2022, Fangio took over the Dolphins’ defense. Miami ranked 10th in yards allowed per game, 15th in passing yards allowed and 22nd in points allowed per game.

The Dolphins, like the Eagles, were eliminated in the wild-card round, losing 26-7 to the Kansas City Chiefs.

‘We’re looking for the guy who is the best person for the job,’ Sirianni said. ‘There are many different systems that work well. We’re looking for the guy who’s going to be best for the job that can utilize the skills that our players have so they can play at their highest level.’

That will now be up to Fangio.

Contact Martin Frank at mfrank@delawareonline.com. Follow on Twitter @Mfranknfl.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The San Jose Sharks have won three in a row since captain Logan Couture returned from injury and made his season debut.

The Chicago Blackhawks have lost 18 consecutive road games.

As a result, the teams are tied with 30 points at the bottom of the NHL standings.

The Sharks, who lost to the Blackhawks in the game before Couture’s return, hold last place on a tiebreaker and have the best odds to win the 2024 NHL draft lottery.

The Anaheim Ducks, Columbus Blue Jackets (who just activated injured defenseman Zach Werenski) and Ottawa Senators round out the bottom five.

The Ducks, Blue Jackets, Blackhawks and Sharks were the bottom four teams last season. The Blackhawks (Connor Bedard) won the lottery and the Ducks (Leo Carlsson) won the second pick.

NHL Central Scouting this month named Boston University center Macklin Celebrini as the top North American prospect in its midseason rankings.

Teams can move up a maximum of 10 spots in the lottery so only the bottom 11 teams have a chance to gain the No. 1 pick in the 2024 NHL draft.

Which NHL teams have the best draft lottery odds (this file will be updated during the season)?

Which NHL teams have the best draft lottery odds?

Odds in parentheses. Standings as of Jan. 24.

San Jose Sharks (25.5%): 48 GP, 13-31-4, 30, .313Chicago Blackhawks (13.5%): 48 GP, 14-32-2, 30, .313Anaheim Ducks (11.5%): 47 GP, 16-30-1, 33, .351Columbus Blue Jackets (9.5%): 46 GP, 14-23-9, 37, .402Ottawa Senators (8.5%): 43 GP, 18-24-1, 37, .430Montreal Canadiens (7.5%): 47 GP, 19-21-7, 45, .479Buffalo Sabres (6.5%): 48 GP, 21-23-4, 46, .479Minnesota Wild (6.0%): 47 GP, 21-21-5, 47, .500Calgary Flames (5.0%): 47 GP, 21-21-5, 47, .500Seattle Kraken (3.5%): 47 GP, 20-18-9, .521Arizona Coyotes (3.0%): 46 GP, 23-20-3, 49, .533

Who is Macklin Celibrini?

The 6-0, 190 center is the top scorer for Boston University as a 17-year-old freshman and ranks fourth in the NCAA in points per game and second in goals per game with 16 goals and 32 points in 19 games. He was Canada’s leading scorer at the world junior championship with eight points in five games.

Central Scouting says Celibrini plays a complete game and is a strong skater with a fluid stride and top-end NHL speed.

“Macklin plays at a level all his own and it’s truly impressive to see how he thrives in every environment he competes in,’ said Dan Marr, vice president of NHL Central Scouting.

Who are the top prospects in the 2024 NHL draft?

Behind Celebrini, the remaining top five North American skaters are:

Michigan State defenseman Artyom LevshunovMedicine Hat center Cayden LindstromUniversity of Denver defenseman Zeev BuiumTri-City (USHL) left wing Trevor ConnellyThe top three international skaters are Finnish center Konsta Helenius and two Russians, 6-7 defenseman Anton Silayev and right wing Ivan Demidov.

How does the draft lottery work?

There are two drawings, first for a chance at the top pick and then for a chance at the second pick. The last-place team can draft no lower than third overall. Beginning with the 2022 lottery, a team cannot win more than twice in a five-year period. There are 14 ping pong balls in the machine and each team is assigned a series of four numbers. The lower a team is in the standings, the more series of numbers it gets. If a team’s numbers are chosen, it wins the lottery. If a team in the 12 to 16 range wins, the last-place team retains the No. 1 overall pick.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Detroit Lions will square off with the San Francisco 49ers in the NFC championship game Sunday, seeking a significant win in the team’s mostly futile history.

Detroit is one of four NFL teams to never reach the Super Bowl (the Cleveland Browns, Houston Texans and Jacksonville Jaguars are the others), and the last time they reached the conference championship was 1991, a 41-10 rout at the hands of Washington.

The 49ers, the NFC’s No. 1 seed, are looking for their eighth appearance in the Super Bowl. Teams with No. 1 seeds have won 34 of the 48 conference championship games played since seeding for the NFL playoffs started in 1975.

What is the weather for the Lions-49ers game?

Unlike the rain storm that is expected in Baltimore for the AFC championship game between the Ravens and the Kansas City Chiefs and in the NFC divisional round last weekend against the Green Bay Packers, the weather should not be an issue Sunday at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California.

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Temperatures could reach a high of 74, with slight and variable winds for the 3:30 p.m. local time kickoff, according to weather.com.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Coach Deion Sanders and his Colorado football program got dinged for 11 minor NCAA violations since his hiring in December 2022, including some that show how the prolific use of social media by a coach sometimes can get tripped up by the 452-page NCAA rulebook.

USA TODAY Sports obtained documentation of the violations, all of which were self-reported by the university to the NCAA and none of which risked any serious penalties.

To be clear, such minor violations are common in virtually every major college athletic department, such as at Ohio State, which reported two minor violations in football in 2022-23, and Alabama, which self-reported nine minor violations that same year, including none in football. Self-reporting them is considered a positive sign of diligence and integrity, as opposed to not reporting them at all to avoid scrutiny. All appear to be inadvertent violations of an NCAA rulebook that can be highly complex.

In this case, the violations under Sanders provide a window into how his frequent activity on social media sometimes tested technical bylaws. Colorado’s transfer-heavy recruiting approach under Sanders also clashed at times with NCAA regulations.

In one case, a security breakdown led to an impermissible “gameday simulation” for a recruit, followed by a write-up from the NCAA that said “future similar violations may result in more significant penalties including suspension of the head coach from a contest.”

Colorado self-reported at least 16 minor violations overall in athletics discovered since December 2022, including the 11 in football, according to the documents obtained by USA TODAY Sports. Colorado issued a statement when asked for comment from Sanders and the university:

‘The University of Colorado Boulder Athletic Department is committed to complying with NCAA regulations and will continue to educate our coaches, student-athletes, and staff to ensure that we remain in compliance, ‘the statement said. ‘We take all infractions seriously, regardless of the severity, and in these specific cases, these minor infractions were all self-reported to the NCAA.’

Here is a summary of the issues:

Transfer portal violation

On May 30, Colorado hosted a postgraduate camp that was open to recent high school graduates and transfers from other colleges who had entered the transfer portal. More than 350 players participated, but the university later identified seven that did not have an “active” status in the transfer portal, violating rule 13.1.1.3, which prohibits tampering with a transfer prospect who is not officially in the portal. The violation was discovered when another NCAA institution reported that one of their players participated in the camp without first providing notification of transfer.

As a penalty, the school imposed a two-week recruiting ban from all recruiting activity from June 15 to June 28 and a one-day recruiting ban on all recruiting activity with transfer recruits beginning on the first day of the portal window in December 2023. The recruits in question were mostly from smaller colleges and were declared permanently ineligible at Colorado. Rules education was ordered for the football staff.

“While this is a violation of NCAA Bylaw 13.1.1.3, the intent was not to solicit enrollment to CU Boulder prior to a student-athlete entering the transfer portal,” the school reported. “The communications with the participants was limited and only occurred related to camp participation. We believe that this violation should be viewed more as a procedural issue, as opposed to a tampering violation.”

The problem stemmed from not forcing camp participants to certify they were in the transfer portal.

“There were no additional procedures in place to prevent participants who did not meet the camp requirements from participating,” the report stated.

Deion Sanders’ Instagram violation

In May 2023, all Colorado football coaches were removed from recruiting duties on the road and no recruiting evaluations were allowed for a week as a penalty for violation that occurred on May 16.

That’s when Sanders was hosting an Instagram Live session on his Instagram account and a recruiting prospect was featured in the livestream.  The recruit’s name was redacted in documents from the university, but USA TODAY Sports has identified him as receiver Aaron Butler, who orally committed to play for Sanders on that livestream before later changing his mind and signing with Texas last month.

Sanders didn’t have a public conversation with Butler, but he was a featured participant for about two minutes, which violates NCAA rule 13.10.1.2, a bylaw that prohibits recruits from being involved in media activity conducted by a school’s head coach.

After being alerted to the live stream, Colorado’s rules compliance staffer, Chase Meyer, called to have the activity stopped.

Ironically, Sanders indicated at the time that he couldn’t say the recruit’s name or talk about the recruit on the Instagram livestream because that would have violated NCAA rules. Sanders’ son Bucky filmed Sanders reaction then after Butler committed to play for him.

“I can’t talk, because it’s a violation,” Sanders said then. “I can’t talk, but I can jump and clap, right, Bucky? I can shout, right?”

A two-week recruiting ban on this recruit also was imposed at Colorado.

Security breakdown before game

Colorado played a home game against Stanford Oct. 13, when former Colorado player Matt McChesney went to the game with his son, a recruit for the class of 2028. Both were on the field before the game and then were escorted off the field before kickoff. But what happened next violated an NCAA rule that limits what a recruit can do on an unofficial visit, including a prohibition on “gameday simulations,” such as running onto the field with the team during pregame introductions.

After being escorted off the field, the report said the former player and his son entered the locker room for the pregame speeches by the football coaching staff.

McChesney “is well known and told security that they were permitted to entire the tunnel and also the lockerroom,” said the school’s report. “The football coaching staff was not involved and was in the midst of pre-game preparations and did not know (McChesney and son) were in the lockerroom. Following the speeches, he exited with the football team as they ran out onto the field, triggering a gameday simulation violation.”

As a result, CU’s report said the former player had field access revoked for the rest of the season and rules education was provided to the football staff.

“An institutional staff member that has been educated on the rules related to gameday simulation is now standing and monitoring the tunnel for prospective student-athletes prior to the team taking the field during each home game,” the school’s report stated.

The NCAA noted that Colorado should be required to count the impermissible activity as a contact with the recruit and reduce the remaining number of future contacts by one

“The football program should reduce 2023-24 recruiting-person days by two,” the NCAA said in the case summary. “Future similar violations may result in more significant penalties including suspension of the head coach from a contest.”

The school’s report said a “breakdown in security measures is what lead to the violation occurring.”

Asked for further comment, McChesney told USA TODAY Sports he’s been going to games for years and noted that his son is a recruit.

Social media team violation

On Dec. 28, 2022, Sanders’ social media team posted an image on Twitter that showed a spreadsheet of recruiting prospects, violating rule 13.10.1, which prohibits a school from publicizing recruits before they officially sign with the school.

“The intent of the post was not to publicize the recruitment of the listed (recruits), because the majority of the (recruits) posted are not being recruited by CU; the intent was to show (recruits) that they were not being ignored,” Colorado’s report said.

The violation was discovered through routine social media monitoring, leading the spreadsheet to be removed after 10 minutes. As a penalty for the violation, rules education rules education on social media was provided to the football coaching staff and the head coach’s social media team.

Another Instagram violation

In January 2023, Sanders reposted a video on Instagram of his team engaged in voluntary activities, violating NCAA rule 17.02.19, which regulates voluntary workouts and prohibits recording players’ participation in such workouts “for the purposes of reporting such information to coaching staff members or other student-athletes.”

“The activity would have been permitted had the video not been posted to social media,” the school’s report states.

The video clip was less than 30 seconds long and was posted for about 20 minutes.

As a penalty, Colorado’s countable athletic activities were reduced by 30 minutes at the first opportunity and rules education on voluntary activities and social media was provided to the football staff, according to the school’s report.

Previous forbidden gameday simulation

In January 2023, a recruiting prospect made an official visit to Colorado and participated in a “gameday simulation” that is forbidden by rule 13.6.7.9. That rule states that a school may not permit a recruit on an official visit to engage in any gameday simulations, such as running onto the field with the team during pregame introductions. The recruit’s name was redacted from the report, but USA TODAY Sports has identified him as cornerback Cormani McClain.

“The prospective student-athlete was lined up in an athletic stance, while wearing a uniform on the field, lined up across a coaching staff member (Sanders),” the report stated. The report noted a third-party website posted the simulation on social media, which ran afoul of another NCAA rule that prohibits publicity of official recruiting visits.

“The head coach historically poses like this with celebrities and others as he was a former professional cornerback,” according to documents in the case. “The head coach was not aware that this would trigger a gameday simulation.”

McClain signed with Colorado last February.

As a result of the violation, rules education was provided to the coaching staff and creative team. The total number of permissible contacts with the recruit was reduced by one. The NCAA also noted Colorado should be required to reduce football evaluation days in 2022-23 by three.

“The coaching staff should note that future similar violations may result in more significant penalties including suspension of the involved staff member and/or head coach from a contest,” NCAA staff said in a case summary.

Another transfer portal issue

Just a few days after Sanders was hired at Colorado in December 2022, a high school coach submitted an academic transcript for a transfer recruit, Joshua Kelly, even though Kelly had not yet entered the transfer portal. This risked violating the NCAA rule against tampering.

“The transcript was received by the CU Boulder football staff and submitted to compliance so that an academic evaluation could be performed,” the school’s report states. “Upon receiving the transcript, the Office of Compliance Services (OCS) informed the football staff that the student had not yet submitted his notification of transfer request. OCS then immediately required that the football staff permanently stop recruiting Kelly and that all communication be ceased. There was zero direct communication with Kelly.”

The school noted that “minimal recruiting advantage was gained” because the recruitment of Kelly was immediately stopped.

Rules education on tampering and transfer recruiting rules was provided to the entire football staff as a result. The NCAA noted that Colorado should be prevented from calling or sending correspondence to the recruit for one week.  

Impermissible contact with recruit

Colorado linebackers coach Andre’ Hart was evaluating a spring game for recruiting on May 19 when a recruit asked to take a picture with him, which then was posted to social media by the recruit. This was deemed to be “impermissible contact with a prospective student-athlete prior to the first permissible date to have in-person contact.”

Hart asked the recruit to remove the picture and self-reported the violation. In consequence, this led to the reduction of two contacts with the recruit, a reduction of six recruiting person days during the 2023-24 recruiting year and rules education for the football staff.

Yoga coach violation

On Aug. 16, a strength and conditioning intern conducted a team-wide yoga session with the football team that lasted 30 minutes, according to the report. The intern was not one of the five declared strength and conditioning coaches, causing the football staff to exceed the NCAA limit of strength coaches by one.

The associate athletic director for compliance discovered the violation after being told that the football team was holding a yoga session before a preseason practice. As a result, countable athletic activities were reduced by one hour on Aug. 17 and rules education was provided to the strength staff and football staff on Aug. 16. The NCAA also said a letter of admonishment should be issued to the person responsible for the violation.

Premium seating access by recruit

A recruit made an unofficial visit to Colorado on Sept. 30, when the Buffaloes hosted Southern California, but ran afoul of NCAA rules that limited entertainment and tickets on recruiting visits. That’s because he gained access to a premium seating area after leaving a bathroom and then showing his lanyard to a security guard. The value of a ticket in this area is $475, according to the report.

“The violation was discovered because the (recruit) posted a video of himself in the area watching the game,” the report stated.

As a result, rules education was conducted with the football staff, “with a more in-depth education session targeted to recruiting staff,” the report said.  “A reminder on credentials was issued to the security team that staffs the area. Additional monitoring of this premium area by compliance staff will occur throughout the remaining home football games. The (recruit) has been declared ineligible until a repayment ($475) is made.”

Why these minor NCAA violations matter

If Colorado and other schools didn’t report such minor infractions, they could get in more trouble later if it’s discovered they failed to monitor and report them. In another case, Colorado self-reported a clerical issue that resulted from changing football coaches in late 2022. The designated eight weeks of discretionary time for players were not placed on file in writing prior to Jan. 1, 2023, as required. Such reporting matters, even if the rules seem small and obscure.

“Issues can really arise when Level III (minor) violations are undiscovered, unaddressed, and/or consistently pertain to the same bylaw,” said Joshua Lens, an assistant professor at Arkansas who previously worked in NCAA rules compliance at Baylor.

At the same time, some coaches stay off social media and avoid any possible rules entanglements there. Others are more engaged, believing the rewards exceed such risks.

“It’s reasonable to expect a coach who’s active on social media will be at risk for implicating more NCAA rules than coaches without social media accounts since there are so many rules that social media activity can trigger,” Lens said.

NCAA rules require such self-reporting. Evidence of this reporting also shows the school is maintaining institutional control of athletics.

‘This demonstrates the effectiveness of our established compliance systems which are the basis of our department’s positive partnership with the NCAA,’ Colorado said in its statement.

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com

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