On Bilas, I don't agree with him. His argument isn't based on facts, it is based on his view that th emajors shoudl have freedom to act as they wish. I'm not smarter than him, but I'm also not paid to shill for the big programs. He also wants to pay players, he want the NCAA to eliminate automatic bids for conference champs and just give all 68 to the highest RPIs, thereby eliminating about 20 bids that go to smaller conferences, and he hates the APR and proposes that individual schools make their own rules, which led to the situation that caused the creation of the APR to begin with, and he wants to do away with the NCAA minimum standards for incoming freshmen, again leaving elibility decisions to individual schools. I happen to disagree with his logic on each of those points, all of which would work to the advantage of the major conferences, and the big time programs in particular. Please explain to me why you are so hung up on players who have no interst in staying beyond 1 year taking courses "that lead to a degree"...how are intersession and summer courses any more bogus than harrick's basketball course or BC sending athletes to the night school? You take English 101 in September or you take English 101 in a 6 week summer course, presuably it is still English 101. You admit a player with an 865 SAT because he can hit a mid-range jumper when everyone else has 1200 that kid's will likely struggle in the classrom anyway. Maybe he actually does better in the less pressured intersession or night school course. If you went back to a system where most or all athletes were actually students, were there for 4 years, there would be far less need for all the nonsense, but with programs like mens basketball where players neither intend nor even want to really even be there, most driveby players would likely have gone to the NBA right out of high school had they been allowed to do so, I'm not sure how the APR can pervert the system any more than it already is perverted.