- Joined
- Mar 30, 2012
- Messages
- 8,816
- Reaction Score
- 26,164
Badly broken. It needs pretty radical surgery not the minimal fixes they are talking about. My top 5 are:
1. End 1-done. Once a guy signs his scholarship is considered taken until his class graduates
2. Make transferring more difficult not less. No waivers ever. You can transfer anywhere any time. You sit for a year. No it’s ands or buts.
3. End grad transfers. You graduated from college. You have no debt. You are better off than 90% of your peers. Now get a job and move on with your life.
4. End the shoe deals. If you played for a shoe company funded aau team you sit for 6 months. No practice, no sitting on the bench, you go to the games you sit in the student section if you can get a ticket.
5. End the endless NCAA appeal process. You don’t get a trial. You don’t get an investigation. You don’t get a team of lawyers. They call the AD and say you violated rule 10 so you lose a scholarship next year. And you lose a scholarship next year. If you refuse to speak to the NCAA you get suspended and it is presumed you are guilty. If you lie you get suspended for the season. This ain’t the federal court system. You are not entitled to due process. It is a wholly voluntary association of academic institutions.
I said it needs radical change. Those would be a start.
#1 I like this if you increase the number of scholarships to 15-16.
#2 Consistency is better than arbitrariness. Not sure there's a major problem here however.
#3 amounts to saying grad students can't play college sports. That seems unnecessarily tough.
#4 -- why? The AAU system gives guys a lot of playing experience and exposure.
#5 -- I don't understand why appeals are wrong. The bigger problem is that the NCAA is corrupt and ignores bad behavior at powerful schools while indulging in petty vindictiveness against the weak and powerless.