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APR, penalties to go unchanged

Jul 19, 2012 12:59 PM ETAssociated Press
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INDIANAPOLIS -- The NCAA is keeping the academic performance procedures it uses to determine postseason eligibility, an issue that has angered Connecticut after the Huskies' men's basketball team was banned from the postseason.

The NCAA said Friday that its Committee on Academic Performance decided the current system uses the most accurate data available and provides the fullest opportunity for appeals.

Under rules implemented last October, the NCAA requires a team to have a 900 Academic Progress Rate average over four years or a 930 over two years to qualify for the postseason.

The NCAA previously released its annual APR report for 2010-2011, and UConn received a 978 of a possible 1,000 -- not enough to allow the team to qualify for the 2013 NCAA tournament.

UConn knew last fall it would be banned, and in January filed an appeal for an NCAA waiver, citing improving academics and other changes in the program. But that appeal was denied. UConn wants the NCAA to use data from 2011-12, arguing that tougher academic standards should not be applied retroactively to scores recorded before the rule was in effect.

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