Did Michael McAdoo's Plagiarism Force UNC to Fire Butch Davis?
The big question on everyone's mind tonight is exactly why was Butch Davis fired now? The university had stood by the coach for an entire year, but suddenly showed him the door eight days before the players arrived for camp. This was the first meeting of the board of trustees since the NCAA released their notice of allegations, so if it was truly driven by the board, it sort of makes sense. Chancellor Thorp however is saying the decision to fire was his, not the boards. This may or may not be the case – there's a rumor the UNC system president forced Thorp's hand, and also one that word of the firing leaked out in advance of the board meeting– but let's say it's the case. What had happened recently that would have changed Thorp's mind?
The first thing that comes to mind is the Michael McAdoo lawsuit, and the resulting evidence of plagiarism that came to light because of it. As part of McAdoo's effort to have his eligibility reinstated by the NCAA, his paper where he received impermissible help from a tutor that resulted in the honor court awarding a failing grade and semester suspension was submitted into evidence. SportsbyBrooks took a look at that paper and found it was heavily plagiarized, a fact that was missed by the student attorney general who prosecuted McAdoo and possibly the professor. (I say possibly, because professors often just turn these cases over to the honor court once cheating is uncovered, and I don't know what this particular professor reported when he did so. Said professor, Julius Nyang'oro, is currently out of the country, but the fact that the honor court case came after the NCAA investigation started and over a year after the class in question does not reflect well on him. It's quite possible he never reported anything to the honor court at all.)
The problem is, UNC's athletic department was also either unaware of or purposely hiding the plagiarism. In two separate instances with the NCAA, in September and December attempts to get McAdoo reinstated, UNC claims that the work is entirely McAdoo's, and in fact he only sought Wiley's help to ensure he didn't accidentally plagiarize by failing to cite references correctly. Dick Baddour makes this claim, Steve Keady of the legal counsel office makes the claim, and McAdoo himself makes the claim.
And it wasn't true. This was cut-and-dry plagiarism.
(My very charitable explanation is that McAdoo probably didn't understand he was plagiarizing, and that the citations made it kosher. This is apparently a pretty common problem. I doubt the higher-ups at UNC ever read the paper, instead going off of the e-mails Wiley sent McAdoo and the questioning of the pair. Still incredibly stupid on everybody's part, but not knowingly deceitful. But like I said, I'm being charitable.)
The plagiarism was re-reported in the News and Observer last week (days after the Daily Tar Heel published their story, I must say). The report came paired with two editorials, one calling on system president Tom Ross to step in and have Thorp and Baddour fire Butch Davis, and a second demanding the reform or abolition of the entire honor court system. Both of these were direct attacks on principles the university holds dear and appealed to people above Thorp to step in and fix a problem portrayed as ever-widening. A week later the board of trustees met, and Butch Davis is shown the door, suddenly and at a very inopportune time.
Is this what spurred everyone to action? I don't know enough to say, but if you're looking for a recent turn of events to explain things, this is the only thing that fits the bill.
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Timeline in McAdoo documents prove UNC Professor missed plagiarism
Case wasn’t sent to Honor Court until it was discovered that WIley provided help, which was in the Fall. He took the class in the summer.
by Paul Pettengill on Jul 28, 2011 2:02 AM EDT reply actions
The Question Then Becomes
Was the professor – or God help us the athletic department – complicit in this, or just too lazy to notice. (For that matter, he may have never seen the paper; it could have been farmed out to a teaching assistant.)
The scariest part of the N&O article is the quote from the faculty survey of the honor court:
“The evidence of cheating could not have been more obvious, and the excuse given was completely implausible,” one wrote. “Also, this case dealt with a student-athlete, and I found the interventions from the athletics department asking that the case not be brought before the honor court unethical.”
No matter what , it is clear that folks in the athletic department dropped the ball here. As a Prof. at Carolina I have been embarrassed by this whole mess. To waste resources on this issue in a year that we took a 17% budget cut is amazing. Davis was a program builder, but a marginal game coach—we will all survive.
What? No love for the Pack Pride message boards...
…who ferreted out the plagiarism in the first place? Sure, SportsByBrooks ran with it and allowed it to enter the mainstream, but it was the work of State’s “monkey board” peeps that cracked that nut wide open.
So, in essence, if it was the McAdoo plagiarism that did in Butch, one could make the argument (scary as it may be) that State’s message board community ultimately nailed the largest and most damning nail in Butch’s coffin.
Mind boggling.
www.riddickandreynolds.com
by RiddickAndReynolds on Jul 28, 2011 4:46 PM EDT reply actions
Yes and no
If this was the final straw that made the BOT want Davis gone, then I get it.
At the same time, that means he’s being scapegoated for academic issues. By design, the athletic dept isn’t allowed any oversight over the tutoring program (any specific allegations of cheating should be from a professor or fellow student, but not something any coach should reasonably be expected to know is going on). If it’s determined that Davis, by being the man overseeing the football program, was ultimately at fault, then the Dean of the College of Arts & Sciences should be blamed for allowing the tutoring program to run so badly. The Dean at that time? Holden Thorp

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