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Warren K. Zola

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A Call to Action

Posted: 02/20/2013 11:34 am

In recent years the NCAA has demonstrated worse decision-making abilities than Lance Armstrong, Lindsay Lohan, and, Ronaiah Tuiasosopo combined. Hired as NCAA president in 2010, Mark Emmert, has run an organization that has botched countless investigations around the country while ignoring the requirements of due process and its own rulebook (see Penn State). And, most recently, the NCAA has admitted that during an investigation into suspected violations by the University of Miami, it paid an outside investigator to sidestep the NCAA's bylaws in an effort to obtain evidence.

Disturbingly, President Emmert has either sanctioned or hired the individuals responsible for these repeated blunders and errors in judgment. Ethics, decency, and accountability are principles no longer displayed by the NCAA increasingly since Emmert assumed control of this association. When confronting the ineptitude shown by his organization, Emmert has skillfully deflected blame while displaying an amazing ability to proffer excuses and scapegoats.

Anyone associated with college athletics understands the term "institutional control." In fact, the NCAA explicitly requires each member institution to exhibit "institutional control" in its operations. And a loss of institutional control, depending upon the magnitude of the violation, will result in punishment from the NCAA. The NCAA Manual even delineates the purpose of the association, in part, "to uphold the principal of institutional control." Yet, sadly, Emmert has failed to ensure compliance of his organization with this important tenet.

Undeniably, the NCAA has lost its credibility -- with its members, the student-athletes, the media, and the general public. It is time for a change, and since Emmert -- despite his reported $1.6 million salary -- shows no interest in being accountable as the steward of this flailing organization, it is incumbent upon the leaders of higher education to take action. While there are 1,066 active member schools in the NCAA, under the NCAA's bylaws, it is a 19-person executive committee comprised primarily of college presidents tasked with hiring and evaluating the NCAA president.

Now is the time for the NCAA's executive committee to take a stand and replace the individual who has refused to hold himself accountable for his institution's failures. The nearly 400,000 student-athletes competing in intercollegiate athletics deserve better. Perhaps a conference call is in order to discuss taking action?

 

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In recent years the NCAA has demonstrated worse decision-making abilities than Lance Armstrong, Lindsay Lohan, and, Ronaiah Tuiasosopo combined. Hired as NCAA president in 2010, Mark Emmert, has run ...
In recent years the NCAA has demonstrated worse decision-making abilities than Lance Armstrong, Lindsay Lohan, and, Ronaiah Tuiasosopo combined. Hired as NCAA president in 2010, Mark Emmert, has run ...
 
 
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03:25 PM on 02/22/2013
I actually don't support institutional control. I don't know why any decent human being does. The idea of institutional control gives these universities to turn blind eyes to actual atrocities in favor of control. We live in constant chaos yet we believe the biggest, fastest, and strongest of us must be controlled by archetypes of people who may have been bullied by archetypes they now control. We cannot bring order to a chaotic system only destroy it completely. Kill the revenue producer like Meerkatx suggests so this country can be exposed for propping themselves up on the backs of college football players. Not one city with a college football stadium can afford not to have and increase that revenue earned from college football every year. Not one city could afford to lose millions in revenue.

So if the corruption is more important than the millions of people that earn a living from college football than hey so be it. We would have never seen more white starve in this country after that is done.
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Meerkatx
07:32 PM on 02/20/2013
I'm inclined to look past the NCAA making mistakes and errors when colleges violate rules at whim. The problem isn't the NCAA it's Penn State, Miami, Ohio State, USC, and others who turn blind eyes in the name of wins in football in particular.

You want to clean up college athletics? Kill all football programs and you'll erase a vast majority of the problems with college athletics.
03:00 PM on 02/20/2013
The Report found that no NCAA Bylaws were violated. See "Badly Flawed NCAA Enforcement Review Uses Ouija Board - Not Rule of Law- to Find Violations" http://wp.me/p15xE1-qo