NCAA Football

Washington State Hit Hard by APR

Whee I'm a plane I'm a plane.... what do you mean that doesn't count for course credit?

The APR has been a frequent topic of discussion on the Fanhouse and elsewhere, but this is the first year that the NCAA's squad size adjustments have gone away. As a result, multiple teams are getting hurt by it, some badly. The latest is Pac-10 struggler Washington State. The Cougars announced yesterday that they were going to be playing six scholarships down in 2008.

What's more, the APR penalty isn't going away any time soon. From the article:

Sterk said the department has been planning for the sanctions, and said it shouldn't negatively affect the team's ability to sign players. However, he is still concerned that the problem won't go away for some time.

"It'll be a lingering number because (the NCAA APR) has a four-year rollover," Sterk explained. "If you look at it, we've had a blip last year with people leaving. We'll have to deal with it and move on."

Put this in perspective: when teams are caught with major NCAA violations they lose a few scholarships for a period of a few years and basically proceed as if nothing ever happened. Washington State, a middling BCS team, has just been hit with a penalty equivalent or worse.

APR has teeth, and it's one thing Myles Brand and the NCAA should be lauded for. Now, about everything else...

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