Recent Actions Prove NCAA is Broken
By Ken Reed
In the NCAA’s world this all apparently makes sense.
In the past week, the NCAA let the University of North Carolina off the hook for its long-lasting and wide-ranging academic fraud involving more than a 1000 athletes over 18 years, while at the same time taking away a year of eligibility from an incoming freshman basketball player who was taking real classes at Ohio State University but transferred to North Carolina State when the coach that recruited him at OSU, Thad Matta, abruptly quit.
Braxton Beverly was a four-star recruit looking to take a few summer classes before his freshman fall semester began. But then Matta left Ohio State, due to health reasons and recruiting problems. Beverly decided that if Matta was gone he was going to leave also. He dropped the two classes he’d been enrolled in for a couple weeks at OSU and went to N.C. State, with Ohio State’s blessing. But the NCAA ruled him ineligible because he had set foot in an Ohio State classroom and ruled he’d have to sit out the entire year at N.C. State.
N.C. State was also the victim of another bizarre NCAA ruling when basketball player Terry Henderson was denied another year of eligibility because he played seven minutes in 2015 before injuring his ankle and missing the rest of the season. For some reason, the NCAA counted those seven minutes as a full year of play.
Meanwhile, on the same day of the Beverly ruling, the NCAA basically told the University of North Carolina to carry on without penalty.
As Mark Zeigler of the San Diego Union-Tribune put it:
“North Carolina is No. 30 in U.S. News & World Report’s rankings of best national universities, and an internal probe concluded the fake, sham, bogus, phony, pretend, phantom classes constituted “academic fraud.” The regional accreditation body was so appalled it took the drastic step of placing the entire university on probation.
“But UNC’s lawyers quickly realized their error, and expunged the phrase from future correspondence with the NCAA so it could slip through a bureaucratic loophole. When queried about the discrepancy and shifting positions, UNC said it was, cough-cough, ‘a typo.’”
If these three cases — Beverly, Henderson, and UNC — aren’t enough to convince you that the NCAA is a broken mess, I don’t know what will.
— Ken Reed, Sports Policy Director, League of Fans
Sports Forum Podcast
Episode #33 – League of Fans’ Sports Forum podcast: Ken Reed Announces His Retirement and Chats With League of Fans Founder Ralph Nader – Ken and Ralph talk about the history of League of Fans and the reasons it was created. They then move into a discussion of a variety of contemporary sports issues that League of Fans has been working on in recent years. Ken and Ralph end by talking about the need for sports fans, athletes, and other sports stakeholders to get involved in the sports reform movement and be activists and change agents on issues important to them, whether that be at the local, state, or national level.
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Media
"How We Can Save Sports" author Ken Reed appears on Fox & Friends to explain how there's "too much adult in youth sports."
Ken Reed appears on Mornings with Gail from KFKA Radio in Colorado to discuss bad parenting in youth athletics.
“Should College Athletes Be Paid?” Ken Reed on The Morning Show from Wisconsin Public Radio
Ken Reed appears on KGNU Community Radio in Colorado (at 02:30) to discuss equality in sports and Title IX.
Ken Reed appears on the Ralph Nader Radio Hour (at 38:35) to discuss his book The Sports Reformers: Working to Make the World of Sports a Better Place, and to talk about some current sports issues.
- Reed Appears on Ralph Nader Radio Hour League of Fans’ sports policy director, Ken Reed, Ralph Nader and the New York Times’ Tyler Kepner discussed a variety of sports issues on Nader’s radio show as well as Reed’s updated book, How We Can Save Sports: A Game Plan. Reed's book was released in paperback in February, and has a new introduction and several updated sections.
League of Fans is a sports reform project founded by Ralph Nader to fight for the higher principles of justice, fair play, equal opportunity and civil rights in sports; and to encourage safety and civic responsibility in sports industry and culture.
Vanderbilt Sport & Society - On The Ball with Andrew Maraniss with guest Ken Reed, Sports Policy Director for League of Fans and author of How We Can Save Sports: A Game Plan
Sports & Torts – Ken Reed, Sports Policy Director, League of Fans – at the American Museum of Tort Law
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