CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Rick Pitino, Jim Boeheim, Larry Brown and Roy Williams are dealing with stunning escort allegations, embarrassing academic fraud and multi-game suspensions. [...] that's just when the season starts. [...] Williams' North Carolina program is part of the school's academic fraud scandal involving athletes across numerous sports, a case currently crawling through the NCAA infractions process. Pitino has denied knowledge of alleged activities, which have led to four investigations while raising questions about Pitino's future with the program he led to the 2013 NCAA championship. While the school faces financial penalties, scholarship reductions and probation for academic, drug and gifts violations, Boeheim must serve a nine-game suspension during ACC play. The school last year self-imposed a postseason ban that kept the Orange out of the ACC Tournament, with Boeheim skipping his postgame news conference after the season-ending loss at North Carolina State. Team spokesman Pete Moore said Wednesday the plan is for longtime assistant Mike Hopkins, Boeheim's designated successor, to coach any games Boeheim misses. In May, the NCAA hit UNC with lack of institutional control among five charges in a scandal centered around 18 years of no-show courses featuring artificially high grades and significant athlete enrollments. The NCAA issued a report in September blaming the fourth-year Mustangs coach for multiple infractions tied to academic fraud, including lying to NCAA investigators, while issuing a postseason ban for SMU. The well-traveled coach also had a Final Four appearance at UCLA in 1980 vacated after two players were determined to be ineligible, while Kansas ended up on probation for violations during Brown's tenure the year after he won the 1988 national championship and left for the NBA.