Sally Jenkins (WaPo) destroys the NCAA..

resurrection

By Way of Deception, Thou Shalt Do War
Joined
May 31, 2012
Messages
5,402
Reputation
-330
Daps
16,888
Reppin
Dallas, TX
http://www.washingtonpost.com/sport...1aa64e-6905-11e4-b053-65cea7903f2e_story.html

Not sure if I agree with all the specific recommendations (like capped coaches' salaries) but the general idea that any governing body needs to be much more focused on benefiting the athlete, I can certainly get down with

In defending its alabaster-pure reputation, the NCAA likes to criminalize others. Recently, it sentenced Georgia running back Todd Gurley to “40 hours of community service” for selling his autograph. But I’ve been leafing through the sheaves of the NCAA rule book, and in a diligent search of its 432 pages, I failed to find a single sentence empowering NCAA President Mark Emmert to put a tin star on his chest and serve up phony lawman imitations. I also can’t find the part where the NCAA is allowed to conduct shakedowns like a crooked sheriff.

The need to dissolve the NCAA and put its Indianapolis headquarters into foreclosure has been fully demonstrated in the past weeks. Repeatedly, the NCAA exceeds its authority in petty matters or intrudes in large matters where it has none, while completely failing in its one real responsibility: education. On the heels of the Gurley fiasco came a series of subpoenaed e-mails in a Penn State court case showing that the NCAA “bluffed” the school into forking over a $60 million fine in the wake of the Jerry Sandusky child molestation case. NCAA officials acknowledged in the e-mails that they didn’t have the right to levy the fine, but they knew the school was so wounded and embarrassed by Sandusky it could be intimidated into accepting the punishment. Now, this comes perilously close to blackmail.

Meanwhile, the NCAA has exhibited total paralysis in the one case truly in its purview: the broad, years-long academic scandal at North Carolina, in which scores of athletes were kept academically eligible with fake “paper” classes and prearranged grades.

At this point, the NCAA is limping along on sheer incumbency. The above examples illustrate that among the NCAA’s many problems is a complete lack of understanding of what it even is, or should be.

“The magnitude of failure is miserable, and so is its absence of leadership,” said former Texas athletic director Donna Lopiano, who has become a reform activist.

The NCAA so lacks coherence that every attempt to exercising authority veers from vacuous to ham-handed. A community service sentence for Gurley? What part of the community did he aggrieve, exactly, by owning his own signature? And what is the philosophy behind stripping Joe Paterno of his career victories following a child-molestation case when it’s not even established what he knew about it? While leaving Florida State quarterback Jameis Winston on the field during a sexual assault inquiry everyone in charge knew about?

If you’re getting queasy from the whiplash, avert your eyes.

Before any talk about how to “fix” the NCAA comes the question of what it is needed for at all. To establish rules? It has no means of enforcing them — short of extortion tactics. To negotiate TV contracts? All the big conferences can do that for themselves and are establishing their own networks. To stage championships? The biggest event of all, the $440 million College Football Playoff, isn’t even run by the NCAA, but instead by the five power conferences in the Football Bowl Subdivision, who hoard the revenue.

The NCAA has proven incapable of reforming itself, or anything else. The disturbingly pale and atonal Emmert, who shows the leaderly qualities of a glass of distilled water, has long preached the need for “serious and fundamental change in many critical aspects of college sports.” Yet this summer the NCAA Division I board of directors’ idea of reform was to grant even more “autonomy” to the five power conferences — which enables the top 64 schools in the five richest leagues to behave more like pocket-lining plutocrats than ever. More rake-offs and skims landing in the bank accounts of conference commissioners, athletic directors, and bowl execs, and more skyboxes for Alabama and Texas A&M.

This seems to have finally tipped the scale for lawmakers, who have long weighed revoking the NCAA’s tax-exempt status as a “nonprofit educational” endeavor, as opposed to a nakedly commercial cash grab that exploits free labor.

This fall the Drake Group, an influential lobbyist-think tank of sports-minded academics, called for policymakers to abolish the NCAA in a stinging article in “Inside Higher Ed” that got a lot of traction in Washington. Co-written by Lopiano and Drake Group president Gerald Gurney, an Oklahoma professor, it cited “the abject failure of the NCAA to retain a nexus with the educational missions,” or to preserve “a clear line of demarcation between collegiate sports and professional employment.” And it called the NCAA an unsustainable model in which “a minority of the wealthiest institutions controls a constant escalation of wasteful spending and extravagance.”

It should be replaced, they wrote, with a new federally chartered organization that oversees collegiate athletics, similar to the U.S Olympic Committee. And given the limited antitrust exemption, it needs to take power back from the plutocrat conferences.

It’s one thing to say the NCAA must disappear; it’s another to describe what should take its place. Most attempts get snarled up over whether a governing body’s proper role is to set rules, conduct championships, protect amateurism, or how to achieve competitive balance. All of this misses the point. “There is nothing in this story about the kids,” Lopiano said. The Drake Group restores the point, with a simple shift in focus: The new governing body — every rule in its book, and every dime of its revenue — should be devoted to the players on the field, not to the barnacles who cling to and sponge off them.

“What they should be doing is protecting the health, welfare, and educational opportunities of college athletes,” Lopiano said.

Those hundreds of millions of dollars in TV rights fees, bowl monies, and licensing? They should cover injury insurance for athletes and the full cost of their scholarships through graduation. “Every red cent,” Lopiano says.

The Drake Group proposal would return exclusive control of all championships to the new governing body, and not a dime of revenues from a football playoff or Final Four would go to one team over another based on win-loss record. Instead it would be split equally. No more multimillion-dollar salaries for coaches, athletic directors, conference commissioners, and NCAA presidents — those would be capped. No more fueling “the arms race of lavish exclusive and unnecessary athletics facilities” — athlete-only facilities would be prohibited. The money and the focus would be put where it belongs: on the minds and bodies of the kids who play the games.

Not everyone will like the grainy details of the Drake Group proposal, which includes everything from corporate-style governance by a 23-member board of directors made up of former athletes and college presidents, to strengthening due process for accused athletes, to prohibiting cancellation of scholarships for reasons of athletic performance or injury, to limiting practice hours, to taking oversight of academic support away from athletic departments and giving it to tenured faculty. But the basic philosophy behind it is inarguable.

Replace the NCAA with a governing organization that by law must expend all its benefits, energies and resources on the athletes themselves. The rest of the specifics will fall into place.
 

DaPresident

Miami Hurricanes football fan...
Supporter
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
18,528
Reputation
7,314
Daps
87,881
Reppin
Miami Hurricanes,Dallas Cowboys, St. John's, DMV
Agreed...



They preach "amateurism" and are for the kids... Yet they rape (no pun intended) them treat them like employees, but DON'T pay them. They cling to "amateurism" but profit off of these kids' backs. Pay coaches exuberant amounts but let a kid take a couple dollars for a burger at McDonald's and he's suspended 5 games and has to do 13 hours community service...Like, :wtf: ?

Deal out punishment quick on some cases, but take YEARS for others (after the perpetrator has BEEN left the school) and then have the NERVE to punish the "new" kids at the school for something the "older" kids did but those kids are in pro leagues now...

I mean, just backwards. But since the people controlling it have more money than all of us, this kinda backwards stuff is allowed to continue unhindered.

I don't know if we should pay kids for college sports or not...but damn, something's gotta change. If this were ANY other industry, we'd be livid at what's going on, pure exploitation. Some of these kids are the stars of their schools, but they can't take ANY money or anything associated with them, but the university will SELL their jersey in the bookstore for $100... :snoop: I mean, this is pure robbery.


Believe it though, change gonna come to the NCAA. They're just digging their graves, and they don't even know it. Damn shame, they unabashedly profit on the backs of these kids, but LOBBY to keep em broke. Tsk Tsk Tsk
 

Lucky_Lefty

Dreams Are Colder Than Death...
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
49,708
Reputation
7,375
Daps
131,147
Reppin
Purgatory
Agreed...



They preach "amateurism" and are for the kids... Yet they rape (no pun intended) them treat them like employees, but DON'T pay them. They cling to "amateurism" but profit off of these kids' backs. Pay coaches exuberant amounts but let a kid take a couple dollars for a burger at McDonald's and he's suspended 5 games and has to do 13 hours community service...Like, :wtf: ?

Deal out punishment quick on some cases, but take YEARS for others (after the perpetrator has BEEN left the school) and then have the NERVE to punish the "new" kids at the school for something the "older" kids did but those kids are in pro leagues now...

I mean, just backwards. But since the people controlling it have more money than all of us, this kinda backwards stuff is allowed to continue unhindered.

I don't know if we should pay kids for college sports or not...but damn, something's gotta change. If this were ANY other industry, we'd be livid at what's going on, pure exploitation. Some of these kids are the stars of their schools, but they can't take ANY money or anything associated with them, but the university will SELL their jersey in the bookstore for $100... :snoop: I mean, this is pure robbery.


Believe it though, change gonna come to the NCAA. They're just digging their graves, and they don't even know it. Damn shame, they unabashedly profit on the backs of these kids, but LOBBY to keep em broke. Tsk Tsk Tsk
aren't they waiting for the US Dept of Ed to complete it's investigation @ UNC because it's an "academic matter"??? when has due process ever gone into a decision they've made?
 

resurrection

By Way of Deception, Thou Shalt Do War
Joined
May 31, 2012
Messages
5,402
Reputation
-330
Daps
16,888
Reppin
Dallas, TX
aren't they waiting for the US Dept of Ed to complete it's investigation @ UNC because it's an "academic matter"??? when has due process ever gone into a decision they've made?
Right? And when have they ever cared whether or not a situation is in their purview to act? I mean, this situation is the most clear cut example of what the NCAA should act on and it's the only one they won't...
 

Tony D'Amato

It's all about the inches
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
65,864
Reputation
-11,593
Daps
155,380
Reppin
Inches
I was watching a q&a with D Smith(nflpa) and he made an interesting point. The NFL has implemented all kinds of safety guidlines and hs level has adopted many. The NCAA are still way behind in advancing players safety. They are greedy plantation owners. The gov needs to step in
 

calh45

Cal
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
12,227
Reputation
2,290
Daps
42,731
I think part of this that's missing is that the NCAA gets the power from the schools it's governing. It's like Goodell and the owners. The reason they didn't step in on the NC case? That's because the other schools know if they do then they'll be liable too. The reason they don't look into the SEC boosters paying recruits? It's because Slive doesn't want them to. The schools pay Emmert to take PR shots for their idiocy until some news outlet reports something that they can't ignore. I get the call to dissolve it, but the inmates are already running the fukking asylum. The schools themselves don't want the pressure of dealing with consequences for punishing someone too lightly or straight up ignoring a problem. That's why they keep the NCAA around. It ain't going fukking nowhere.
 

DaPresident

Miami Hurricanes football fan...
Supporter
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
18,528
Reputation
7,314
Daps
87,881
Reppin
Miami Hurricanes,Dallas Cowboys, St. John's, DMV
I think part of this that's missing is that the NCAA gets the power from the schools it's governing. It's like Goodell and the owners. The reason they didn't step in on the NC case? That's because the other schools know if they do then they'll be liable too. The reason they don't look into the SEC boosters paying recruits? It's because Slive doesn't want them to. The schools pay Emmert to take PR shots for their idiocy until some news outlet reports something that they can't ignore. I get the call to dissolve it, but the inmates are already running the fukking asylum. The schools themselves don't want the pressure of dealing with consequences for punishing someone too lightly or straight up ignoring a problem. That's why they keep the NCAA around. It ain't going fukking nowhere.

:ohhh:


well damn...:scust::mjcry:
 

big bun

Veteran
Joined
May 28, 2012
Messages
22,088
Reputation
1,005
Daps
68,311
Reppin
NULL
More uninformed, group think regarding the NCAA in this thread LOL.

First off, UGA proposed the community service piece as a way to lessen Gurley's punishment. The NCAA added that piece on in its final punishment (which I don't agree with).

I also don't agree with the NCAA's stance on doling out punishments outside of its purview. For instance, in the Penn State case the only NCAA violation they realistically could pursue was lack of institutional control. The NCAA was way out of line and set a bad precedent by taking actions that should have been left to law enforcement. Prior to that, the NCAA only punished for violations of NCAA legislation. Myself along with a lot of my peers did not agree with that.
 

Detroit Wave

Veteran
Joined
Feb 9, 2014
Messages
23,639
Reputation
8,265
Daps
98,545
Reppin
The D
More uninformed, group think regarding the NCAA in this thread LOL.

First off, UGA proposed the community service piece as a way to lessen Gurley's punishment. The NCAA added that piece on in its final punishment (which I don't agree with).

I also don't agree with the NCAA's stance on doling out punishments outside of its purview. For instance, in the Penn State case the only NCAA violation they realistically could pursue was lack of institutional control. The NCAA was way out of line and set a bad precedent by taking actions that should have been left to law enforcement. Prior to that, the NCAA only punished for violations of NCAA legislation. Myself along with a lot of my peers did not agree with that.
he shouldnt have been punished for making money off his own name in the first place :camby:
 

mastermind

Rest In Power Kobe
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
65,580
Reputation
6,544
Daps
175,372
She was insufferable during the Penn State scandal :scusthov:
she is insufferable in general.

The worst columnist in the post sports section by a lot.

Her defense of Lance Armstrong is even worse.

But she on point here. THe NCAA should be abolished.
 
Top