Sports Illustrated will release next week the final part of its series on Oklahoma State University (OSU) detailing "the fallout" of several alleged violations over a ten-year period, but "the fallout" is happening now.

With the first four of a five-part series on alleged widespread violations on the OSU Cowboys football team, all that is left is to release the last part, which is due out Sept. 17 in print and online with the full report.

The 10-month investigation involved several named and anonymous former players and more going on record describing being paid, offered sex, using drugs and even having grades fixed while on the football team.

Players and coaches have spoken out against SI, to which the magazine defended itself and its reporters, and other publications and outlets are even poking holes in various aspects of the story.

The main discrepancies are in Fath' Carter's accounts. Carter is quoted heavily in all four part of SI's report and his accounts now appear to be less than accurate.

According to ESPN, one of the reporters on the SI investigation, George Dorhmann, went on CBS Sports' radio show "the Doug Gottlieb Show" and said Carter had to degrees at OSU. Carter said in the article that he graduated with a degree in education, but school records show he attended the school from 2000 to 2005, but did not graduate.

Dorhmann said he had "no reason to believe" Carter would lie and that the former Cowboy was "certainly not disgruntled."

Carter also said he and former running back Tatum Bell shared a class in 2004 and both received F's with an instructor who had previously given them A's, presumably for being on the football team. However, Bell withdrew from the OSU after the 2003 fall semester.

"I withdrew from school after the [Jan. 2, 2004] Cotton Bowl," Bell told ESPN. "I was never enrolled in 2004 and never attended classes in 2004."

Bell also denied ever receiving cash from any booster at the school. He said SI never contacted him for an interview his former teammates accusations were false.

"Not only did he lie about me attending those classes, he's trying to degrade everybody," said Bell. "I never received a dime from anybody."

Former quarterback, also not quoted in SI, said he was "shocked" to read the report. He too said his former teammates' claims of him and others receiving payments while attending school were false.

"I'm in disbelief," Fields said. "I never had anyone attempt to give me any type of payments or do my schoolwork and never saw my teammates accept money. I never accepted anything. Seeing my name in there was a shock."

Despite Dohrmann's claims, several of the article's sources could have conceivably been disgruntled.

According to ESPN and other reports, nine of the 12 former players who either admitted guilt to SI or detailed other player's violations were kicked off the team for failed drug tests, were dismissed from the team or transferred for playing time issues.

Les Miles was not outright accused, but the alleged violations began when with his tenure in 2001. The accusations of violations continued after Miles left in 2004, leaving Mike Gundy, his former offensive coordinator from '01 to '04, in charge of the team. Gundy still holds his position of head coach and Miles is currently head of the LSU football team.

Miles has denied the allegations with every new part of the report's release.

Since the release of the report, OSU announced it would conduct its own investigation into what the school's president called "very disturbing" allegations.

"We must review these accusations expeditiously, but thoroughly, determine the truth and take whatever measures are appropriate,'' OSU president Burns Hargis said in a statement.

"Whether the reporting here was fair and credible is not the issue,'' he said. "The issue is the substance of the accusations. It's my responsibility as the OSU president to assure that the review is fair, comprehensive and complete.''

Even Cleveland Browns' quarterback Brandon Weeden, who was not implicated in the SI report and who played for OSU before being drafted in 2012, spoke out against the report.

"And long story short the guy has always had it out for Oklahoma State," Weeden told Cleveland.com of one of the SI reporters. "He's got a track record. You can go look it up. I'm not going to say his name. You can go look and see what he's done... Here's what I'm surprised about is that a credible institution like Sports Illustrated would do 10 months of investigation and they have no credible facts to go along with the story."

Sports Illustrated released a statement in defense of their reporters in the same article.

"The facts of the matter are that a team of award-winning reporters conducted a 10-month investigation that included on-the-record recorded interviews with 60-plus individual players from the Oklahoma State program," the statement read. "Any attempt to discredit an individual reporter is an attempt to deflect the matter at hand.''

READ: "Part 1: the Money," "Part 2: the Academics," "Part 3: the Drugs" and "Part 4: the Sex."