Brad Bohannon has learned his punishment from the NCAA after he was involved in a betting scandal which rocked the college sports world last spring.

Bohannon was fired as Alabama’s baseball coach last year as the Crimson Tide were 30-15 overall after Alabama baseball was the subject of a gambling investigation. Multiple states instructed sports books to halt bets on Alabama baseball following “suspicious” wagers during a Crimson Tide game against LSU.

The NCAA on Thursday announced that Alabama would be on probation for 3 years and pay a $5,000 fine. Bohannon has a 15-year show-cause order. During the show-cause order, any school looking to hire him shall restrict Bohannon from any athletically-related position. If Bohannon becomes employed during the show-cause period, he shall be suspended for 100% of the baseball regular season for the first 5 seasons of his employment.

The program, however, avoided a postseason ban or scholarship reduction.

After a negotiated resolution, the NCAA found that Bohannon knowingly provided insider information to an individual he knew to be engaged in betting on an Alabama baseball game.

According to the NCAA, Bohannon texted, “(Student-athlete) is out for sure … Lemme know when I can tell (the opposing team) … Hurry.”

Shortly after the bettor received that information, the NCAA said he attempted to place a $100,000 wager on the Alabama game, but sportsbook staff limited him to a $15,000 wager and declined his attempts to place additional bets due to suspicious activity.

The NCAA release also said that Bohannon did not cooperate with an NCAA investigation when he did not participate in an interview, did not disclose relevant information and did not provide access to electronic devices to further the enforcement staff’s investigation.