http://chronicle.com/article/Cheati...45cb39&elqaid=8521&elqat=1&elqCampaignId=2815
The NCAA leader emphasized that Syracuse had served its time and done everything the infractions committee had asked it to do. He also stressed that the university’s players "had nothing whatsoever to do with those sanctions," and that they should "be allowed to play."
That argument did not sit well with Jay Bilas, an ESPN analyst and NCAA critic, who suggested that it reflected an inconsistency in the NCAA’s application of its rules.
"So, UConn players, Louisville players, SMU players, and so many others," he wrote on Twitter, "you’re innocent, too, but can pound sand."
The NCAA leader emphasized that Syracuse had served its time and done everything the infractions committee had asked it to do. He also stressed that the university’s players "had nothing whatsoever to do with those sanctions," and that they should "be allowed to play."
That argument did not sit well with Jay Bilas, an ESPN analyst and NCAA critic, who suggested that it reflected an inconsistency in the NCAA’s application of its rules.
"So, UConn players, Louisville players, SMU players, and so many others," he wrote on Twitter, "you’re innocent, too, but can pound sand."