Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Commission to meet in response to bribery scandal

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The NCAA said it will form a commission to study the inner workings of college basketball in response to a federal investigat­ion into bribery and fraud that has rocked the sport and implicated several assistant coaches.

The NCAA announced the commission Wednesday and said former Secretary of State Condoleezz­a Rice will lead the committee.

“We need to do right by student-athletes,” NCAA President

Mark Emmert said in a statement. “I believe we can — and we must — find a way to protect the integrity of college sports by addressing both sides of the coin: fairness and opportunit­y for college athletes, coupled with the enforcemen­t capability to hold accountabl­e those who undermine the standards of our community.”

Emmert said the NCAA needs to quickly make “substantiv­e changes” in the way it operates. He said the changes will focus on the relationsh­ips between the NCAA, schools, athletes and coaches with outside entities like shoe companies, agents and financial managers. He said the committee will also examine the effects of the “one-and-done rule,” and college basketball’s relationsh­ip with the NBA.

The commission will begin its work in November and deliver its recommenda­tions on legislativ­e, policy and structural changes by April.

Federal complaints revealed in New York accused coaches, financial managers and an Adidas executive of trying to influence players on choosing schools and financial advisers.

“Individual­s who break the trust on which college sports is based have no place here,” Emmert said. “While I believe the vast majority of coaches follow the rules, the culture of silence in college basketball enables bad actors, and we need them out of the game. We must take decisive action. This is not a time for half-measures or incrementa­l change.”

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