Football: York's McLean to sit out over Hooey fallout

There was a reason York Lions coach Mike McLean was not on the OUA football conference call earlier Thursday:
:"(York athletic director Jennifer) Myers also suspended McLean from coaching in York's next game, Saturday in Guelph.

"York is a repeat offender of the eligibility rule – previously in soccer, field hockey, men's ice hockey and track and field – and could face a hefty fine or other sanctions." — Toronto Star
Five violations in seven years? York could be at the point where it has to cover its tokhes to look good to Canadian Interuniversity Sport.

Related:
York quarterback ineligible, suspended for season; 'It was a mistake that has impacted on many people,' director says
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6 comments:

  1. Most NCAA programs have five violations every year!

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  2. I recall that uOttawa blew the whistle on themselves about 10 years ago when they discovered players that, if I recall correctly, simply weren't taking enough credits and ended up having their post-season victories forfeited, went unranked for a season, played all playoff games on the road, and paid a hefty fine.

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  3. I do find the lead in the Star story a bit disingenuous (and maybe I'm being harsh). Hooey is ineligible to play for a year since he transferred and is NOT in a graduate program, so how do you suspend a guy who isn't allowed to play in the first place?

    Yes, York suspended the coach for a game, but I think they will have to do more self-punishment than that if this repeat offender wants to avoid CIS sanctions. On the other hand, the CIS rarely swings the big stick, unlike the NCAA to the south ...

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  4. Isn't it punishment enough just to sit and watch a York Lions football game?

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  5. Wait a second. How can York claim to have self-disclosed this ineligibility when Grossman reports that it was Steve Sarty at SMU who "blew the whistle"?

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  6. Rob:

    It depends on what your definition of "is" is.

    Perhaps Sarty told York directly and they self-disclosed. That wouldn't be blowing the whistle, in the literal sense.

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