When someone commits an infraction, it is up to someone else to investigate if the infraction occurred and then decide what the corresponding punishment for that infraction should be. How do you allow someone to investigate themselves to determine if an infraction occurred, and if it did, how do they punish themselves?
If this is confusing, then welcome to the new part of the NCAA investigation that is taking place at the University of North Carolina.
Read the all installments of NCAA Violation 2010 written to date:
Part 4A - NCAA Violation 2010: Report of academic infractions at UNC may add to current NCAA investigation
Part 3B - NCAA Violation 2010: No conflict of interest at UNC
Part 3A - NCAA Violation 2010: Rumors and talk of investigation conflict of interest at UNC
Part 2 - NCAA Violation 2010: NC Secretary of State to investigate sports agents conduct
Part 1 - NCAA Violation 2010: Investigations extend into North Carolina
Thursday, August 26, 2010
It's been a long, hot summer
The summer in North Carolina has been the hottest on record and the heat and humidity continues as the upcoming Fall sports season approaches.
So much has happened since the last post here which presented wishful thinking that former Hurricanes coach Peter Laviolette and goaltender Michael Leighton and the Philadelphia Flyers would win Game 6 of the Stanley Cup playoffs, and force a Game 7 finale. Chicago's Patrick Kane doused that flame of thought as his low shot slid under Leighton's pad and ended the Black Hawks' 49-year Stanley Cup drought. Congratulations to the Hawks.
Since that time, here is what the Raleigh Sports Examiner has covered:
What has been a hot summer will continue into a 'hot' year of sports in the Raleigh-area.
Enjoy it.
So much has happened since the last post here which presented wishful thinking that former Hurricanes coach Peter Laviolette and goaltender Michael Leighton and the Philadelphia Flyers would win Game 6 of the Stanley Cup playoffs, and force a Game 7 finale. Chicago's Patrick Kane doused that flame of thought as his low shot slid under Leighton's pad and ended the Black Hawks' 49-year Stanley Cup drought. Congratulations to the Hawks.
Since that time, here is what the Raleigh Sports Examiner has covered:
- Great World Cup events and games that featured a first-ever World Cup title for Spain in addition to other firsts for teams such as Greece, who not only scored their first-ever goals in World Cup competition, but also captured their first win as well. Team USA could not make it into the quarter-finals, but still provided an exciting come-from-behind effort against Slovenia in Group play and an energizing 1-0 win over Algeria to qualify for the knockout round.
- Impressive professional golf championship tournaments ended with first-time winners as Graeme McDowell won his first major, the U.S. Open Championship and Louis Oosthuizen captured his first as well, the Open Championship at St. Andrew's. America's golfing sweetheart, Paula Creamer, the Pink Panther, earned her first major championship while playing with a painful, rehabilitating thumb injury. Great character was shown by all three players in each of their major championship performances.
- Locally, the golf scene has been great for local golf alumni as Carl Pettersson (NC State) won the RBC Canadian Open Championship and joined former Pack teammate Tim Clark who captured his first PGA Tour win at the Players Championship in May. Pettersson and Clark joined Wake Forest alum Bill Haas who captured the Bob Hope Classic title back in January.
- In college sports, the Raleigh Sports examiner began an on-going series that will continue throughout the 2010-2011 season looking into the current and recent past of NCAA investigations and impacts they are having, and have had on college athletics programs throughout the country. The series is intended to educate readers about the NCAA, its athletes and administrators, and how college sports fans and media influence the operation and administration of college athletics in the United States.
- The first three segments in the series highlight the UNC Tar Heels football program which is undergoing an NCAA investigation that has made the beginning of the upcoming season a challenging one for administrators, coaches, and players to deal with in Chapel Hill.
Part II - NCAA Violation 2010: NC Secretary of State to investigate sports agents conduct
Part III - NCAA Violation 2010: Rumors and talk of investigation conflict of interest at UNC
Part III Follow-up - NCAA Violation 2010: No conflict of interest at UNC
What has been a hot summer will continue into a 'hot' year of sports in the Raleigh-area.
Enjoy it.
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