OSU trustees to review athletic program


Associated Press

COLUMBUS

Ohio State University trustees will spend up to six weeks reviewing the athletic program after the scandal that led to the suspension of five players and the forced resignation of football coach Jim Tressel.

“We want to assure ourselves that there are no new issues in any existing athletics matters that have not been dealt with,” Robert Schottenstein said Thursday during the trustees’ audit committee meeting. “And I will say today that we believe that is the case.”

In the first public comments from a member of the board of decision-makers that oversees the university, Schottenstein added that the school reported every alleged football team violation it was aware of to the NCAA.

“The process and decision-making to date by the university has in our judgment been fundamentally sound,” said Schottenstein, chairman of the audit committee. “For the most part, we believe our compliance protocols in athletics are good.”

Schottenstein, who did not directly address Tressel’s resignation, promised additional comment from trustees when the full board meets Friday.

Tressel’s successful, 10-year Ohio State coaching career ended last month when he stepped down after failing to tell alert his superiors that players were getting improper benefits under NCAA rules.

“When our university discovered anything that appeared to be an NCAA violation, it was timely reviewed and timely reported to the NCAA,” Schottenstein said. “There has never been any attempt to act with concealment or with indifference towards the NCAA.”