I don't cruise the Vulvarine boards either so I have no idea what they would be saying.
3 yards, that NCAA report you pasted had the Harrick Jr. penalty.
The former assistant men's basketball coach will be informed in writing by the NCAA that, due to his involvement in certain NCAA violations found in this case, if he seeks employment or affiliation in an athletically related position at an NCAA member institution during a seven-year period (April 17, 2004, to April 16, 2011), he and the involved institution shall be requested to appear before the Committee on Infractions to consider whether the member institution should be subject to the show-cause procedures of Bylaw 19.5.2.2-(1), which could limit his athletically related duties at the new institution for a designated period.
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This says that any NCAA member institution that wants to hire him has to come before a committee to see whether or not that college could use Harrick as a coach or not. Basically, the bylaw says that the NCAA has the power over any member institution (which is any institution that has a sports program) to not allow that college to hire Harrick for a job in athletics and that there could be a designated amount of time before he could coach athletics at that school. It is a way for the college to be screened as to why they are hiring him. They can hire him as a teacher only (which we know isn't going to happen for Harrick) and not as a coach unless they give the ok. So the NCAA is imposing this suspension, not any particular institution.
I googled the bylaw and found several cases where a coach was suspended by the NCAA and their reinstatement in athletics is up to them to decide, within the boundaries of the suspension term. I even found a case where the female coach for the woman's basketball team at Stenson was suspended from athletics for 5 years.
I didn't find anything relating to the Neuheisal hiring at Washington and whether the huskies would have to encounter initial penalties for his hiring. I don't think that's true. He was never put on any individual suspension or probation by the NCAA.