the self-imposed sanctions are a tad harsh. if the infractions were any greater, IU might have had to force itself to buy the NCAA a coke. Apparently there were 3,041 reported secondary violations last year overall. Unfortunately, this one being committed with Harris is going to make it more of a story. In a vacuum, the violation is ostensibly irrelevant. It's a rather mundane rule and similar mistakes happen basically all the time across the country. The mistake was reported immediately. IU self-imposed a penalty that I'm guessing is, at least, equally stringent as other punishments for similar infractions. I doubt much, if any, a competitive advantage was obtained (it could theoretically even be viewed as a negative). However, Crean/IU are not living in a vacuum. Crean's priority when hired -- along with winning, obviously -- was to restore credibility and integrity to a program that enjoyed both until the Sampson debacle. While mundane, the rule was not arcane; not open to interpretation; not nonsensical. Simply: on this day you cannot do what Crean did. And, yet, Crean was ignorant or negligent or careless. He didn't know the dates. He didn't program the dates into his computer. He didn't program the dates into his phone. His assistant didn't know the dates. His assistant didn't program the dates into his computer. His assistant didn't program the dates into his phone. It's embarrassing; hopefully it's not foreboding.