

The Division I Committee on Infractions revealed on Tuesday afternoon the Ohio State fencing, women’s golf and women’s basketball programs committed multiple NCAA violations “over the course of several years.”
As punishment, all three programs have been placed on four years probation and the university has been fined $5,000, plus 3 percent of the fencing program budget and 1 percent of the women’s golf and women’s basketball budgets.
The athletic department also self-imposed several penalties, which included postseason bans for all three programs and reduction of scholarships for the 2020-21 season, as well as vacating wins in which ineligible athletes participated.
The report – which involves former fencing head coach Vladimir Nazlymov, former women’s golf coach Therese Hession and former women’s basketball associate head coach Patrick Klein – noted they violated head coach responsibility rules and/or ethical conduct rules by not fully cooperating with the investigation.
The panel held a hearing to exempt the school’s compliance monitoring program, but ultimately determined that a failure-to-monitor violation did not occur.
“The panel recognizes that the institution dedicates significant resources to its compliance program that, in many ways, exceed those of other Division I institutions,” the panel said in a statement. “To be clear, resource dedication alone does not fulfill the minimum compliance requirements … but here, the resources combined with the compliance program that Ohio State had in place outweighs the deficiencies identified by the panel.”
A brief synopsis of the violations can be found below, while the full report can be found here.
Among the wins and championships that will be vacated include the women’s basketball team’s 2017 and 2018 Big Ten regular season championships, 2018 Big Ten Tournament championship, 2017 and 2018 NCAA Tournament appearances, 2019 NIT appearance and 52 victories.
The fencing program, meanwhile, has vacated its 2016, 2017 and 2018 Midwest Fencing Conference titles, 2016 and 2017 NCAA runner-up finishes and 2018 NCAA third-place finish.
“I’m proud of our university, athletics department and the involved sport programs for our management of this matter,” athletic director Gene Smith said in a statement. “We are committed to our proactive and pre-existing system of compliance methods and rules education.
“A comprehensive compliance program ensures adherence and institutional control over the athletics department and furthers the mission of the university. We are pleased that this matter is now behind us, and our focus remains on our student-athletes.”
Ohio State’s four years of probation will end on April 18, 2026.
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