OC
Men’s Basketball Forced to Forfeit Season
by Peter Dybdahl
In
a drama normally associated with the dark world of Division I basketball,
the Oberlin men’s basketball team forfeited its season on Wednesday,
giving up its best record in 10 years due to an administrative oversight.
Coming on the heels of Tuesday’s playoff upset over Ohio Wesleyan,
the Yeomen’s withdrawal centers on a basketball star, the rigamarole
of college athletics and the penalties for failing to fact-check.
In January, as the Yeomen began heating up in the North Coast Athletic
Conference, eyes were on one of Oberlin’s new post players,
a transfer student, who was shooting .475 from the field and almost
.500 from three-point range
NCAC policy requires that when a college recruits a student athlete
from another school, the recruiting college must contact the other
college for two things: permission to speak with the student and
assurance that the student is eligible to participate in college
athletics.
The recruiting college is still required to double-check on a player’s
eligibility. Oberlin recruited the player, made the transfer and
added him to the roster, but never double-checked. Any number of
administrative offices could have caught the oversight.
Last week, Oberlin’s Athletic Director Mike Muska was contacted
by the NCAC requesting proof of the transfer student’s eligibility.
Muska sent the NCAC the paperwork from the school the student had
transferred from.
Muska did not hear from them again until Wednesday morning, after
the Yeomen’s victory over OWU. The NCAC said they had documentation
that the transfer student would have been ineligible at his original
college and was therefore ineligible in the NCAC.
The error could be interpreted as an underhanded play to get an
extra season out of solid player, but it seems, instead, to be a
negligent mistake.
Oberlin decided to forfeit every game he played in, which, according
to Muska probably would have been Oberlin’s punishment. The
NCAC will not review the event until the end of the current NCAC
basketball tournament. They could further rebuke Oberlin, or allow
the voluntary forfeiture to suffice. “It was important that
Oberlin took the step to do this,” Muska said.
According to Muska, Oberlin plans to make an internal review into
the snafu, and who should have prevented it. “[We] could point
fingers everywhere…” Muska said, “But I think the
responsibility would rest with me, I have to take responsibility.”
But no one is leveling a finger on the transfer student. His eligibility
for future season is uncertain, but Muska added, “The player
shouldn’t suffer for the mistakes of other people.”
The forfeit of the season is a sudden conclusion to the Yeomen’s
turn around season. The team had not had an eight win season since
the ‘91-92 season, and the team’s five- game winning streak
that carried into February would be a significant success for any
Oberlin team of the past years. The forfeiture also ends all further
advance following hopes of the Yeoman’s unexpected bid in the
NCAC semifinals.
“We had a good season, the team worked very hard. It’s
disappointing it had to end like this,” assistant coach Evan
Gerking said.
Regardless of culpability, the disappointment of forfeiting and
the requirements of the athletic conference, the circumstances of
the abrupt end to the men’s basketball season signals an odd
irony of Division III athletics — and specifically the NCAC,
which prizes academics over athletics: that an inadvertent mistake
would mandate big-league punishment.
|