Is it time for the NCAA to be replaced? | Page 2 | The Boneyard

Is it time for the NCAA to be replaced?

Joined
Aug 17, 2011
Messages
14,474
Reaction Score
79,855
While the NCAA is still under the mushroom cloud of allegations that surfaced following an FBI investigation that uncovered widespread corruption at several high-profile schools, NCAA president Mark Emmert was at Harvard University on Monday night for a panel that explored the relationship between athletics and higher education.

Emmert, Ivy League executive director Robin Harris, UConn president Susan Herbst, and Robert Morris president Chris Howard discussed college sports’ more pressing issues from gender equity to race to concussions to mental health.

But the elephant in the room was the scandal that swept the NCAA, and moderator James Soto Antony of Harvard asked Emmert pointedly, “Does the NCAA have any teeth?”

While Emmert explained that the NCAA was simply an association self-regulating colleges, he acknowledged that the system as presently designed is a flawed one.

“When you look at the NCAA’s ability to oversee sport, you’re really asking, ‘Can universities and colleges themselves oversee sport?’ ” Emmert said. “When you look at the basketball scandals that have been unearthed by the FBI and the Southern District of New York’s attorney’s office what you see is a group of relationships that have evolved, or maybe more accurately devolved, over a period of time and created an environment that is incredibly unhealthy and a system that is clearly not working in this dynamic.”


NCAA’s Mark Emmert discusses scandal, fallout at Harvard panel - The Boston Globe
 

dennismenace

ONE MORE CAST
Joined
Apr 19, 2015
Messages
3,010
Reaction Score
8,216
While the NCAA is still under the mushroom cloud of allegations that surfaced following an FBI investigation that uncovered widespread corruption at several high-profile schools, NCAA president Mark Emmert was at Harvard University on Monday night for a panel that explored the relationship between athletics and higher education.

Emmert, Ivy League executive director Robin Harris, UConn president Susan Herbst, and Robert Morris president Chris Howard discussed college sports’ more pressing issues from gender equity to race to concussions to mental health.

But the elephant in the room was the scandal that swept the NCAA, and moderator James Soto Antony of Harvard asked Emmert pointedly, “Does the NCAA have any teeth?”

While Emmert explained that the NCAA was simply an association self-regulating colleges, he acknowledged that the system as presently designed is a flawed one.

“When you look at the NCAA’s ability to oversee sport, you’re really asking, ‘Can universities and colleges themselves oversee sport?’ ” Emmert said. “When you look at the basketball scandals that have been unearthed by the FBI and the Southern District of New York’s attorney’s office what you see is a group of relationships that have evolved, or maybe more accurately devolved, over a period of time and created an environment that is incredibly unhealthy and a system that is clearly not working in this dynamic.”


NCAA’s Mark Emmert discusses scandal, fallout at Harvard panel - The Boston Globe
Well said Mark. He answers a question with a question. Then he said what everyone else already knows. He has no responsibility for any of it and takes no responsibility for it. Well what the hell are you getting paid for Mark?
 
Joined
Aug 26, 2011
Messages
35,403
Reaction Score
31,042
Well said Mark. He answers a question with a question. Then he said what everyone else already knows. He has no responsibility for any of it and takes no responsibility for it. Well what the hell are you getting paid for Mark?
To retroactively enact and enforce laws against UConn.
 

CL82

NCAA Men’s Basketball National Champions - Again!
Joined
Aug 24, 2011
Messages
56,875
Reaction Score
208,370
To retroactively enact and enforce laws against UConn.
'68 I was thinking the same thing. As I said at the time, we never should let the retro-active punishment go unchallenged.
 

Online statistics

Members online
398
Guests online
3,450
Total visitors
3,848

Forum statistics

Threads
156,894
Messages
4,069,640
Members
9,951
Latest member
Woody69


Top Bottom