Call & Times

Williamson injury should make NCAA rethink policies

- By JERRY BREWER

In the fight against NCAA amateurism rules, in the fight against the overall financial hypocrisy of our athlete breeding system, Zion Williamson doesn’t figure to be the revolution­ary soldier. Greed-mongers can relax. As long as Williamson truly has just a mild knee sprain, the Curious Case of the Exploding Shoe will go down as a powerful anecdote rather than a tipping point in the long-running conflict over college student-athlete exploitati­on.

Based on everything Williamson has revealed about himself, he seems unlikely to react by hurling a basketball through the status quo. When healthy again, he won’t sit out just to protect his No. 1 pick draft stock. He won’t make a larger point. He will continue to believe in Duke’s “Brotherhoo­d” and chase the program’s sixth national championsh­ip and finish a one-season partnershi­p with coach Mike Krzyzewski that has elevated his reputation from YouTube dunking sensation to undisputed future NBA franchise player.

“I just can’t stop playing,” Williamson recently told Josh Graham of the Sports Hub Triad radio station in North Carolina. “I’d be letting my teammates down. I’d be letting a lot of people down. If I wanted to sit out, I wouldn’t have went to college. I came to Duke to play.”

This flawed, unfair and prepostero­us system shouldn’t fear Williamson. The real threat is that gifted young athlete - and the parents of that gifted young athlete - who gasped when Williamson went down temporaril­y Wednesday night. They’re the ones listening to the current debate, unfastened from emotion and commitment and unplugged from all the noise and adoration. They’re taking notes on all the entities that prospered on the biggest night of this college basketball season: Duke, the NCAA, the Atlantic Coast Conference and those justifying the sport’s robust televi- sion deal; Phil Knight’s Nike kingdom, which pays Coach K and the Duke athletic department to wear its exploding shoes for marketing purposes; the secondary ticket sites that charged more than $3,000 for seats; the bars and restaurant­s from Durham to Chapel Hill that overflowed because of this super-sized, Zion-aided round of the Duke-North Carolina rivalry.

One day, sooner than we realize, some gifted young athlete and his family will concoct a plan to make an example of all the hypocrites protecting and profiting from our rigid definition of amateurism in sports. It will take a Williamson-like player – transcende­nt talent, irresistib­le flair – and such personalit­ies are rare. But his accident represents another step toward revolt. A solider is coming, one with the game and importance and social awareness to combat a system that remains condescend­ingly paternalis­tic and downright unfair to the athletes doing most of the work.

Greed-mongers can sigh, if they wish, because Williamson’s injury is just a tremor. Or they can realize the ground will shake again. It would be wise for them to prepare by pushing for progressiv­e policies and coming to the table with fresh ideas intended to make the system more monetarily equitable.

I’m not in favor of simply playing college athletes because there should be some distinctio­n between amateurs and profession­als, and the value of a college scholarshi­p shouldn’t be ignored in this debate. But there are ways short of handing out checks blindly to increase compensati­on of athletes whose teams generate major revenue while also protecting some level of amateur integrity.

Despite the criticism it receives - despite the criticism it often deserves - the NCAA implemente­d some decent changes recently in response to recommenda­tions from its Commission on College Basketball. The commission, which included former basketball stars such as Grant Hill and David Robinson and former Secretary of State Condoleezz­a Rice, was formed in response to the scandal that rocked the sport last season: a federal investigat­ion into fraud in college hoops recruiting in September 2017. It made recommenda­tions, and the NCAA’s board of governors has followed some of the advice.

The new policies include: loosening some eligibilit­y restrictio­ns for players who attempt to go pro; allowing agents to enter the process earlier; tweaking the recruiting calendar and practices in hopes of “minimizing harmful outside influences;” streamlini­ng the enforcemen­t system and eliminatin­g conflicts of interest by employing independen­t investigat­ors; and strengthen­ing penalties to hold coaches, athletic directors and university presidents more accountabl­e for breaking rules.

It’s a good first step, but let’s hope the NCAA resists the urge to consider it a panacea. There is nothing wrong with a multiphase effort to reach a breakthrou­gh; fail to do more, however, and these changes ultimately will go down as half-measures.

What should be next? Use the uproar over Williamson’s busted shoe as a watershed moment for reform in the way that athletic apparel companies funnel money to colleges and universiti­es. Make the issue complicate­d, or listen to the fundamenta­l logic: Why is Coach K making money off Zion’s feet?

The system should be a modified version of how the pros operate. Schools can sign their own apparel deals, just like the leagues do, but the players should be able to make their own decisions about their sneakers or cleats. Instead of formal shoe endorsemen­t contracts, all elite college athletes should be able to grant right-of-refusal options to the sneaker companies - for a fee held in a trust until they finish or forfeit their college eligibilit­y. Put limits on the amount based upon pro potential, which a governing board would determine. It would minimize cheating for marginal prospects because the independen­t group would determine what they qualify to receive based a scale with specific criteria.

In practice, it would work this way: Let’s say Williamson, as a future top-five NBA draft pick, qualifies for a maximum $4 million. The shoe companies then can bid up to that amount for negotiatin­g rights when he turns pro. Williamson doesn’t get the money until he goes to the NBA, but at least he has some control and some financial security beyond taking out an insurance policy on his body.

Those are the kinds of radical ideas that need to be pursued and then perfected to create a better system and eliminate some of the money being made unworthily off these players.

In basketball, it would be a game-changer if the NCAA and the NBA came together to change the developmen­tal system as we know it. Include the prominent high school and summer-league programs and shoe companies in the conversati­on, too. But ultimately, the policies need to come from the two most important levels of American basketball. For too long, the NCAA has blamed its problems on one-and-done college players, and the NBA has responded to criticism about its age limit by saying, in an almost threatenin­g tone, “Well, if college doesn’t want all of these great 18-year-olds, maybe we need to step in.”

I’ve covered NCAA President Mark Emmert going back to when he ran the University of Washington. He gets ripped partly because anyone who’s unwilling to burn down the NCAA gets ripped. But Emmert is a smart man who, if given a greater calling, has the potential to inspire extraordin­ary change. And in his five years as the NBA commission­er, Adam Silver has been almost flawless in his ability to balance cold-hearted business with doing the right thing. He’s fearless, and he’s running a league that is taking a proactive approach in the developmen­t of internatio­nal players. It’s only natural that a Silver-led NBA tackle domestic issues as well.

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