The NCAA is investigating the football program of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln amid allegations of improper use of analysts and consultants by the Cornhuskers staff. The allegations are that this was done with the knowledge of coach Scott Frost.

It is also alleged that Frost moved workouts off-campus last year when such activities were banned during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The investigation was first reported by The Action Network. Frost has denied any wrongdoings and said that any workouts were approved by his superiors.

“Everything we did through COVID was in the best interest and health of our players in mind and everything we did was approved by athletic department administration and campus administration,” Frost was quoted as saying by the Associated Press.

According to a report by The Action Network, Nebraska has “significant video footage” confirming practice violations occurred in the presence of Frost and other assistants.

Athletic director Trev Alberts said that the investigation had started even before his hiring was announced on July 14 and that he found out about it after he started his role.

“We thought it was important the two of us come out and validate what you all have read on the internet and the reports that are out there nationally,” AP quoted Alberts as saying.

The NCAA has interviewed Frost, current and former staff members, administrators, and football players, and Frost has hired an attorney. The alleged violations occurred in the last 12 months.

“We want you to know we have complied 100% with the NCAA, been very collaborative in our approach with them in terms of all of their investigation,” Alberts said. “We will continue to do whatever the NCAA has asked us to do. Our coaches, including coach Frost, have done a great job and have been very accessible in working with the NCAA as we’ve worked through these allegations.”

Alberts refused to comment further citing the ongoing investigation.

The report comes less than two weeks before the Huskers open Frost’s fourth season with a game at Illinois. Frost, who quarterbacked the Huskers to the 1997 national championship, returned to his alma mater in his home state after being named national coach of the year for leading Central Florida to a 13-0 record in 2017.

Frost has struggled at Nebraska, going 12-20 in his first three years and never finishing higher than fifth in the Big Ten West. The program has had four straight losing seasons, its most in a row since the late 1950s.

Frost is under contract through 2026, and his current buyout is $20 million.

The NCAA investigation includes Nebraska’s impermissible use of experts running special teams drills. Analysts are not among the 10 full-time on-field assistants and are not allowed to speak with players.

A year ago, the NCAA disallowed organized workouts because of the pandemic. According to the report, Nebraska allegedly relocated its strength workouts to an undisclosed off-campus location to avoid detection at the direction of NU’s strength and conditioning staff.

Frost and former Nebraska athletic director Bill Moos had been vocal in wanting to play in 2020 after the Big Ten initially canceled its season. The Big Ten reversed course and set up an eight-game conference-only schedule starting in late October.

(With AP inputs)