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Home » Boys' Basketball News

3A BASKETBALL TITLE TAKEN AWAY

May 14, 2009
By Cavalier Dave Forrester of Hugh M Cummings High School



May 13, 2009

Northern Guilford Vacates 2009 Title

Several of you have inquired about news involving Northern Guilford High 
School. 

Northern Guilford has turned itself in to the NCHSAA for use of ineligible 
players in several sports, including men's basketball. Use of ineligible 
players does mean forfeitures of contests. 

Thus, according to NCHSAA policy, the men's basketball championship which 
Northern had won earlier in 2009 will officially be vacated. 

MORE TO THE STORY FROM NEWS-RECORD:

Northern basketball team stripped of championship title

THURSDAY, MAY 14, 2009

Accompanying Photos

File photo (News & Record)

Photo Caption:Northern Guilford basketball coach Stan Kowalewski is hugged by his players after the Nighthawks defeated Gastonia Forestview in the 3-A state championship game in March.

Timeline

2007: Guilford County Schools clears Northern Guilford High’s athletics program of allegations of recruiting.

Fall 2008: Superintendent Maurice “Mo” Green opens a new investigation into Northern Guilford’s athletics program.

April 10: Three Northern employees — principal Joe Yeager, Athletics Director Derrell Force and head custodian Louis Lawson — resign. Schools system officials later announce they are investigating Northern’s athletics program over eligibility issues.

April 16: Lawson, whose son plays for the Northern Guilford basketball team, rescinds his resignation, saying he was coerced.

April 23: The N.C. High School Athletic Association announces that Page High used an unnamed, ineligible player during the 2008 football season. Patricia Hughes says the player is her son, Gabe King. Hughes said Page officials knew her son was ineligible all along. Schools system officials are investigating her allegations.

April 24: Guilford County school board members vote unanimously to fire Lawson.

May 6: Green tells Northern Guilford parents, teachers and students he will investigate other schools if credible evidence is presented.

May 6: Sources tell the News & Record that school system officials are investigating whether Northeast Guilford basketball coach Curtis Hunter attempted to recruit Northern Guilford basketball player Michael Neal last month.

May 13: Guilford County Schools rules that five students at Northern are ineligible because of residency issues. The school has been stripped of its 3-A state championship title. Green says the county is investigating other schools.

GREENSBORO — Two months after Northern Guilford made history as the first school to win a state basketball title without a senior on its roster, the school earned another, less noble distinction Wednesday when it became the first Guilford County school to be stripped of a state championship.

The N.C. High School Athletic Association saw to that, vacating the Nighthawks of their 3-A title a day after Guilford County Schools determined the Nighthawks used two players who should not have been attending the school.

Hours after the Nighthawks lost their title, they lost their head coach, too. School Superintendent Maurice “Mo” Green told basketball coach Stan Kowalewski his contract would not be renewed.

Kowalewski criticized the investigation, calling it “flawed from start to finish.” He described schools attorney Jill Wilson, the leader of the six-monthlong investigation, as “obviously an amateur.”

He said school system officials will have to face the wrath of Northern parents, particularly those whose boys played on the basketball team.

“This is not about me; this is about the kids,” he said. “I can assure you (the parents) will rise up and stand for their kids. This is not over.”

It’s not. Green said that the Northern investigation remains open and that other teams — including the football program — are being looked into for ineligible players. Green and Wilson said other Guilford County schools are being investigated, based on findings and accusations that have come out of the Northern probe.

School system officials said Wednesday that five Northern students playing on four athletics teams were determined ineligible based on the state athletics association’s domicile rule. Green said those students will be allowed to finish the school year at Northern but will be sent back to their correct school in the fall. Those students will be ineligible to participate in athletics next year, an indication school officials believe they tried to deceive Northern officials on their residency.

Some of the students ruled ineligible played in more than one sport at Northern, Green said. In addition to the two basketball players, investigators found that:

  • The baseball team played with one ineligible player. The team, which was preparing to play in this week’s first round of the state playoffs, forfeited all its game and was removed from the playoffs. Western Alamance, a wild card team, took Northern’s place in the playoffs. Northeast Guilford, which was out of the playoffs Wednesday morning, became a wild card team Wednesday night.
  • The wrestling team used two ineligible wrestlers. Both have forfeited their matches. Officials are still determining if the team must forfeit overall matches in which those players won.
  • The junior varsity softball team played an ineligible student and must forfeit all its games.
  • A JV cheerleader was also found to be ineligible. Cheerleading is not a sanctioned sport.

The high school association also fined Northern $1,250, or $250 for each infraction. The school must also return more than $7,800 in playoff revenue.

Green declined to name the athletes, citing privacy issues. He said the basketball team lost its state title because school system officials believed the ineligible players should have been caught by Northern principal Joe Yeager and Athletics Director Derrell Force.

Yeager and Force resigned from Northern on April 10 — the same day school system officials announced they were looking into the eligibility issues.

Wilson said she found “red flags” immediately after looking at some students’ records.

“Those flags should have come up just as quickly” with school officials, she said.

Vacating a state championship is rare in North Carolina. The last time it happened was in 1995, when Cary High lost its state basketball title for using an ineligible player. Que Tucker, deputy executive director of the high school athletics association, said Wednesday she looked at “every angle, every possibility” before making the decision.

Northern defeated Gastonia’s Forestview for the state title on March 14. Tucker said no team would be recognized as the 3-A state champion.

Green said coaches and parents need to be better educated on the system’s residency policy. He hopes to have public meetings to address that issue.

“It’s a sad day for Northern and Guilford County,” Green said. “But we’re going to learn from this and we’re going to get things right.”

Flanked by Wilson and Guilford County Athletics Director Leigh Hebbard at Wednesday’s news conference, Green declined to discuss why Kowalewski’s contract would not be renewed. Green said the status of other coaches is being reviewed.

Kowalewski said Green told him Wednesday the school had found no wrongdoing on Kowalewski’s part. He said Green wanted “a fresh start” to the program.

Kowalewski said Wednesday night he would not recommend his players ever play basketball within Guilford County as long as Green was superintendent, but he reserved most of his anger for Wilson. He accused her of trying to find fault where there was none to justify the cost of the investigation. Wilson and Green said they didn’t know the cost.

Wilson, Kowalewski said, “is obviously an amateur and that her underlings wanted to treat rumor as fact throughout the investigation.”

“In recent days the techniques that (Wilson) used were absolutely despicable, trying to frame me to look like I’ve done something wrong,” he said.

School officials stressed that the findings released Wednesday dealt with eligibility issues related to where students said they lived. Green declined to discuss allegations of academic abuse or recruiting — issues sources have said the school system was looking into. He said investigators were still examining those issues.

School system officials also released more than 1,200 pages of e-mails — conveniently packaged in a box — between Northern officials that were requested by the News & Record and WFMY-2 last year in response to a lawsuit filed by Kowalewski against Northwest Athletics Director John Hughes. Sources have said those e-mails could show Northern coaches were involved in recruiting athletes, a violation of local and NCHSAA rules.

Contact Robert Bell at 373-7055 or robert.bell@news-record.com

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jksal2002

May 13, 2009 - 3:56 pm EDT

Cheaters never win and winners never cheat. Undoubtably some kids and their parents knew what they were doing was wrong and did it anyway. I feel bad for the kids that didn't make the team this year due to the recruiting/cheating that went on.

commonsense

May 14, 2009 - 8:40 am EDT

There is plenty of fault to go around here, however, it is certainly not the superintendent nor the lawyer. Northern and Coach K are clearly at fault in this situation. The guy was fired from Bishop McGuinness several years ago for guess what? You guessed it, recruiting. With a history like his, Northern was idiotic to hire him and is now seeing the consequences from hiring a coach with clear ethical issues. Unfortunately this does stink for the kids and here again is another case of youngsters having to pay for coaching and administrative errors. The hope is that other schools with learn from this and that we can get back to having coaches that abide by the rules and are truly in this for the kids.

Panacea

May 14, 2009 - 1:20 pm EDT

Well, it came out of his own mouth. He can't recommend a student "play anywhere in Guilford County." So . . . either that means he doesn't think anyone should play basketball in Guilford County anymore, since you can only play at the school you're eligible for. Or he really does think it's OK to cherry pick where a student athlete will play at, which is certainly what I heard in this statement.

eduguytoo

May 13, 2009 - 4:17 pm EDT

Glad that this train wreck has reached its terminus. Apparently Mo Green got the message that he needs to deal with important issues IN PERSON and DIRECTLY WITH THOSE MOST AFFECTED. Word is that he actually made a trip himself to the Northern campus today. So he did learn something! Congratulations.

But now that decisions have been rendered, I still go back to something that's seemed quite obvious since the "resignations" on April 10. There is nothing that required that this turmoil had to occur now, and it could have easily and logically have been dealt with on or after June 15. The bulk of students, teachers and parents affiliated with the Northern HS community are completely outside the realm of this garbage. While infractions are not to be condoned, judgment must be used about when and where to make a stand. The timing of this one was very ill-conceived. If the leadership of this school system does not think this will affect student performance on class exams, final projects, EOGs, EOCs, AP tests, etc., they're sadly mistaken. It's already taken a toll. Perhaps the referee has made the right call, but he did so at the wrong time. I've said it before and I'll say it again...Guilford County's children deserve much better than what they're getting.

tammac

May 14, 2009 - 8:49 am EDT

I think the timing had to do with the baseball playoffs. Basketball was not the only team that was affected by ineligible players. The baseball team also had to forfeit games and this affected other schools and the state baseball tournament as a whole. But I do agree that it is awful that the sports teams are dominating what goes on at the school to the detriment of academics.

Illiterati

May 14, 2009 - 9:18 am EDT

Timing is irrelevant. If a student is cheating academically and gets caught during the school year, would it be prudent to postpone punishment to a time more convenient and less supposedly traumatic for everyone? No. In this case, school employees, parents, and students were caught cheating, so they're being punished. Unfortunately it's a situation where others are roped into the punishment by association, but that's what being a team is about: all for one and one for all.

I would hope these teenage students aren't so coddled and delicate that they can't function in these situations. If they can't hack it now, how will they hack it in the workplace? They're teenagers, not preschoolers.

Panacea

May 14, 2009 - 1:21 pm EDT

The only students who should be stressed are the ones with something to hide.

mike.tre

May 13, 2009 - 4:19 pm EDT

Did u read it didn't say they got in trouble for recruiting, they got in trouble for using 2 inelgible players. How is the school supposed to kno that the kids were using a fraud address.

Panacea

May 14, 2009 - 1:23 pm EDT

Because the kids are supposed to provide documentation on where they live to show they are eligible. This includes things like medical records (to show they are fit to play sports), and that information will have the billing address of the parents.

 

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