Nebraska Cornhuskers Football & Coach Scott Frost Under Investigation for NCAA Violations | The Action Network

Steven Branscombe/Getty Images. Pictured: Scott Frost.

Nebraska’s football program and coach Scott Frost are under NCAA investigation for improper use of analysts and consultants during practices and games, sources told The Action Network.

The school, sources said, has “significant video footage” confirming the practice violations took place in the presence of Frost and other assistants.

Frost has obtained legal counsel, and the NCAA has interviewed Frost, multiple current and former staff members, administration and football players regarding the allegations, sources said. The allegations date back 12 months.

Also, last year — when the NCAA prohibited organized athletic activities because of the pandemic — Nebraska relocated its strength workouts to an undisclosed off-campus location to avoid detection by non-football school officials, sources said.

The unauthorized organized workouts were held at the direction of NU’s strength and conditioning staff, which was in direct violation of NCAA rules. It is unknown if the NCAA is investigating these specific allegations, a source said.

Among the possible NCAA penalties Nebraska could receive include Frost’s suspension for an unknown number of games, an NCAA source said. Nebraska opens the season at Illinois on Saturday, Aug. 28.

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Coincidently, two of Nebraska’s staff members — analyst Jonathan Rutledge and chief of staff Gerrod Lambrecht — have left the program in the past eight months. It is unknown if these departures are related to the ongoing investigation.

“There were some egregious actions taken by the football program,” a source said.

The investigation and allegations compound Nebraska’s unfulfilled expectations under Frost, who is entering a critical season in his fourth year at his alma mater.

The NCAA’s investigation includes Nebraska’s impermissible use of analysts and consultants conducting and controlling drills pertaining to special teams.

Last year, Frost put Rutledge in charge of the special teams as the senior special teams analyst, even though Rutledge was not one of Nebraska’s 10 full-time on-field assistants. NCAA rules allow analysts to speak to assistants and the head coach, but analysts may not have direct contact with the players. This includes practices, film room hours and during games.

However, the school has significant video footage documenting the impermissible use of analysts and consultants while assistant coaches and Frost were on the field or on the sideline, sources said.

Rutledge was fired on Jan. 14. Local media reported Rutledge’s departure was due to Nebraska’s poor special teams play.

Then on Aug. 6, Frost announced that Lambrecht was leaving the program to pursue another business opportunity. Lambrecht had been Frost’s chief of staff the past five years at UCF and Nebraska. Frost told reporters he considered Lambrecht “one of my best friends in the world.”

The Lincoln-Journal Star reported that Lambrecht helped oversee the development of Nebraska’s football response to the pandemic last year. He was credited by Frost with NU’s organization through the uncertainty during the spring and summer. This timeframe would coincide with Nebraska’s alleged unauthorized off-campus organized workouts under the direction of the strength and conditioning staff.

The NCAA does not comment on pending investigations.

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Earlier this year, Frost and Lambrecht were key proponents, along with other administrators, in trying to drop Nebraska’s Sept. 18 game at Oklahoma, a source said.

In March, I reported Nebraska was trying to get out of playing OU, marking the 50th anniversary of the 1971 OU-NU Game of the Century. Nebraska contacted several Group of 5 Conference schools to replace Oklahoma on the schedule, sources told me. However, once my report became public, the negative blowback from Nebraska’s fan base forced the Huskers to play the game as scheduled.

“Frost and Gerrod Lambrecht shopped around trying to find a replacement for Oklahoma without the permission of (then-athletic director) Bill Moos,” a source said. “Frost was in favor of removing the Oklahoma game.”

Moos, who announced his retirement as NU’s AD three months later in June, “jumped on the grenade for that debacle” and took the public relations hit, a source said.

Frost, a former Nebraska quarterback, came to NU after two seasons at UCF. He went 13-0 at UCF in 2017 but is only 12-20 in three years at Nebraska. Frost is the first Huskers coach with three consecutive losing seasons in 60 years.

Entering 2021, Frost already had one of the hottest coaching seats in college football. Add in these NCAA allegations, the Oklahoma game embarrassment, the hiring of new athletic director Trev Alberts and it’s apparent this will be a critical season for the former Nebraska quarterback great.

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