November 4, 2011: Jerry Sandusky is indicted for child molestation.
December 8, 2011: LSU starts issuing ceast-and-desist orders to anyone making apparel that has anything to do with Tyrann "Honeybadger" Mathieu. By NCAA rule, Mathieu is responsible for any merchandise that references him directly, or he is inelligble.
December 14, 2011: Pitt Coach Todd Graham leaves to coach Arizona State, says goodbye to his players in a forwarded text.
December 15, 2011: East Carolina University sells tickets to the "Virtual Bowl." ECU isn't in a bowl game, so they sell $50 tickets to an imaginary game for fundraising.
February 14, 2012: ESPN's Brett McMurphy reports West Virginia University will have to pay $20 million to the Big East before they move to the Big 12, who are expected to cover half.
March 10, 2012: Arkansas State Trooper Royce Denney pulls over Arkansas State's Micheal Dyer for doing 96 in a 70. The officer discovers marijuana and a firearm. The trooper dumps out the marijuana and confiscates the gun, and at one point turns the dashcam off in his vehicle. The recorder does capture audio of the Trooper talking over how to handle the situation with Dyer, saying he will speak with his coach, and asks if Dyer wants him to hold onto the gun, which Dyer agrees to. Dyer is only ticketed for the speeding. When the story becomes public later in July, Dyer is dismissed from ASU on July 28, and the officer is fired on August 3. Dyer was the BCS title game MVP while at Auburn under then-offensive coordinator Malzahn, before being released in January of 2012 following an armed robbery involving four of his teammates.
April 1, 2012: Arkansas Coach Bobby Petrino is involved in a motorcycle crash outside Fayetteville. Within the next couple of days, it is discovered he had a 25-year-old passenger: former volleyball player and current staffer Jessica Dorrell. After having to admit to an improper relationship with Dorrell, prior to her hiring at the University, Petrino is fired 10 days after his accident.
April 30, 2012: ESPN The Magazine addresses what it feels is college football's biggest problem: weed.
May 3, 2012: Notre Dame backup QB Tommy Rees and LB Carlo Calabrese are arrested after an officer responds to a loud noise complaint at a party near campus. Rees is arrested trying to escape, then tries to fight the officers until he is pepper sprayed. Calabrese yells at the officers, warning "My people will get you," and is arrested for threatening an officer. Both remain players on the team.
July 2, 2012: The University of Maryland announces they will cut seven sports programs in an attempt to offset a budget shortfall of $4 million for the fiscal year, which they estimate could total $17 million by 2017. Outdoor track stays off the chopping block by raising almost $2 million. Football and basketball are unaffected.
July 23, 2012: Following the university-sponsored Freeh Report on the Sandusky scandal, the NCAA announces sanctions against Penn State, including: a four-year postseason ban, a $60 million fine to go to child abuse charities, reduction of scholarships, and the vacating of all wins from 1998-2011. No "death penalty" was accessed to the university. Two days later, opposing coaches wait in Penn State's parking lot to speak to players free to sign elsewhere.
August 14, 2012: The Big East hires former CBS Sports executive Mike Aresco as it's commissioner. It's the first conference to actually hire a television executive as its commissioner.
August 30, 2012: Notre Dame radio analyst Allen Pinkett is suspended three games for saying in a radio interview that the team needs to recruit more "criminals" to be successful. Pinkett misses games against Navy in Ireland, Purdue, and Michigan State. Tommy Rees and Carlos Calabrese are only suspended for the opener against Navy for their arrests in May. The Michigan State game was the one Manti Te'o played in after learning of the death of Lennay Kekua.
September 3, 2012: Prior to 8:00pm, Pickens Police Officer Michael McClatchy pulls over Clemson Coach Dabo Swinney for doing 63 in a 35 as he is running late for his radio show to be recorded at a Bi-Lo in Pickens, South Carolina. The dashcam video is later posted to Youtube by the Pickens County Courior.
1:20 - Swinney's truck enters the frame, visibly traveling twice as fast as other vehicles seen earlier.
2:10 - After parking his truck in the Bi-Lo parking lot, Dabo Swinney and his unnamed brother approach the officer and tell him Dabo needs to get to his radio show. The officer asks them to wait as he processes their information.
5:00 - Dabo's brother walks up to the officer's window and tells him he is retired from "30 years" of law enforcement, and that he should "understand that."
5:30 - Someone approaches the officer's window and asks him if he knows who that is. The officer asks, "Who?" and the person answers "Dabo Swinney," repeatedly.
10:40 - Someone approaches the officer and tells him someone wants to speak to him. McClatchy later says at one point the Bi-Lo manager approached him and said a city official wanted to speak to him on the phone.
14:00 - After given his citation, Dabo Swinney puts it in his truck, shoots the officer a glare, and proceeds to the Bi-Lo. Swinney's older brother then tells the officer, "I'm gonna tell ya, I've never been so dissappointed in a uniform than I am right now. I'm extremely dissapointed." The rest is unintelligble. Throughout the video, Dabo talks on his cell phone and his brother stares directly into the police car.
Even though he had recently been promoted to Corporal, McClatchy was fired two weeks after the incident.
September 12, 2012: Scott Wolf of the L.A. Daily News is banned for two weeks by USC after reporting on an injury to kicker Andre Heidari, and is told his press credential for the Cal game will not be issued. His ban was lifted two days later by AD Pat Haden.
September 19, 2012: Columbia, SC's The State newspaper's Ron Morris writes an article criticizing Steve Spurrier playing QB Connor Shaw with a shoulder injury. Spurrier shows his displeasure by refusing to speak to any media for two days. When addressing the criticism in a radio interview, Morris reminds everyone that the media taking orders from the coach is how incidents like Penn State happen. This was followed by a written apology in the paper, not only for his Penn State comments but for the Shaw article itself. Spurrier then goes on his own radio show and calls for "changes" to be made by "the guy that runs the newspaper." Morris loses his job at the local ABC affiliate, but manages to keep his job at The State to this day.
September 19, 2012: Fresh off a 52-0 loss to Alabama, Interim Arkansas Head Coach John L. Smith berates media members in his weekly press conference, and says he will not answer questions unless everyone smiles.
September 20, 2012: Two weeks after banning a reporter for writing about an injury, Lane Kiffen runs out of a press conference less than half a minute in after asked about an injury.
September 27, 2012: The Dayton Daily News publishes a report of Ohio State president E. Gordon Gee's salary and expenses. Since 2007, Gee makes "$8.6 million in salary and compensation, making him the highest paid CEO of a public university in the country." His expenses, which the Daily News said was "hidden among hard-to-get records that the university took nearly a year to release" were as high as $7.7 million. The University has compensated $895,000 for gatherings at the president's mansion, which was remodeled for $1.3 million, decorated with $673,000 in decorations and furnishings, and a $532 shower curtain in the guest bathroom. $64,000 alone has been spent on Gee's signature bow ties, bow tie cookies, and bow tie pins. Ohio State were banned from the 2012 postseason following a scandal where five football players traded jerseys for tattoos.
September 29, 2012: L.A. Times writer T.J. Simers reports not only have media been kicked out of practices for UCLA games, but reports on a SID assistant being called over and berated in front of the entire football team by Coach Tom Mora, who made the staffer "make the walk of humiliation off the practice field" when cameras are set up in the wrong area.
October 2012: The South Bend Tribune, one of the many media sources who published the Lennay Kekua story, create a campaign website called "Te'o For Heisman."
October 5, 2012: Kansas' student newspaper The University Daily Kansan publishes a cover with the headline "Road Kill Ahead" with a cartoon depicting a Kansas State Wildcat threatening a Jayhawk clinging to a goalpost. The article is about the 1-4 Jayhawks low expectations compared to Kansas State. After Coach Charlie Weis tweets dissatisfaction, Director of Football Operations Katy Lonergan and Assistant Director of Communications Mike Cummings meet with student reporter Blake Schuster. They warn him that there could be "negative attitudes" towards him over the cartoon. They do not tell him directly to not ask questions, but do warn him there could be a "change of tone" towards him. No other media outlets are told of this, and Schuster does not ask Coach Weis a question in his next press conference.
October 5, 2012: Ohio State third-string QB Cardale Jones tweets: "Why should we have to go to class if we came here to play FOOTBALL, we ain't come here to play SCHOOL, classes are POINTLESS." The tweet is later deleted, although saved for posterity by Deadspin.
November 7, 2012: In a game between USC and Oregon, officials discover game balls supplied by USC are underinflated, making them easier to throw and catch. USC would later claim a football student manager was solely responsible for his actions, and he was fired.
November 11, 2012: On Friday, No. 2 jerseys go on sale in the Texas A&M bookstore, without Johnny Manziels name on them. The school can sell them as long as Manziel's name is not on them and he cannot profit from them. A Texas A&M executive promises "a bigger shipment coming on Monday."
November 19, 2012: Maryland accepts an invitation to join the Big Ten. After slashing seven sports programs due to a projected shortfall of $17 million over five years, Maryland is leaving the ACC, which requires a $50 million buyout fee. While many expect most of this to be covered by Under Armor founder and Maryland alum Kevin Plank, Maryland is now suing the ACC, claiming they should not have to pay because they voted against the increase of the buyout. The next day, Rutgers announces they will be joining the Big Ten, requiring a $10 million payout to the Big East. The Big Ten Network can now increase it's cable footprint into the Mid-Atlantic and Tri-State areas.
November 24, 2012: More than a year after Jerry Sandusky's indictment, and four months after being dealt a punishment "worse than the death penalty," Penn State defeats Wisconsin to finish 8-4, with the knowledge they will be playing next year.
November 25, 2012: Two seasons removed from a BCS Title, Auburn fires coach Gene Chizik after a 3-9 overall (0-8 SEC) season. The buyout of he and his staff's contracts total over $11 million. Nine days later, they hire Gus Malzahn, who coached Arkansas State for one single season.
December 12, 2012: Texas Tech hosts a dinner for prospective recruits. After the meal was served, Head Coach Tommy Tuberville gets up from the table as if he is going to the bathroom. He does not return. It is discovered the next day he left to take the Head Coaching job at Cincinatti.
January 2, 2013: The State of Pennsylvania files suit against the NCAA, in an attempt to overturn the sanctions against Penn State.
January 6, 2013: Notre Dame plays Alabama in the BCS National Championship game. On Notre Dame's sideline is Tommy Rees, Carlo Calabrese, Manti Te'o, the player who is believed to be the one alleged to have raped Lizzy Seeberg, possibly any of the players who sent her and another alleged victim threatening texts, and the coaching staff who sent Declan Sullivan up in a scissor-lift in 50-mph wind gusts to videotape a practice. The next day, ESPN apologizes for comments made by Brett Musberger about A.J. McCarron's girlfriend, Miss Alabama Katherine Webb.
January 6, 2013: Oregon's Chip Kelly announces he will stay at Oregon and not go to the NFL. Ten days later, he signs with the Philadelphia Eagles.
January 16, 2013: The Delta Cost Project at American Institutes for Research releases a report about the cost of college sports. The report, based on numbers from 2010, shows SEC schools spend on average over $160,000 per athlete, as opposed to almost $14,000 on regular students. Later that afternoon, Deadspin publishes the Lennay Kekua story.
January 18, 2013: A report by the National College Players Association and Drexel University shows that the average fair market value of an FBS-level football player is worth $121,000, and the average basketball player is worth $265,000, but the average athlete has an annual budget shortfall of over $3,000. When factoring in a team's worth, the average fair market value of a Texas Longhorn football player is $513,000, and Duke basketballers are worth over $1 million, but both live $700 below the federal poverty line. Florida had the highest combined football and basketball revenues, but their players live $2,250 below the federal poverty line, and with a $3000 scholarship shortfall.
Over a year later, it's hard to argue we've learned anything, especially as Notre Dame holds a press conference to announce they conducted an investigation into a fake woman, but not a real one who claimed she was raped.
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