Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

NCAA’s new agent rule draws criticism

- By Aaron Beard

There are concerns about the NCAA’s new requiremen­ts allowing men’s basketball players to sign with an agent during the NBA draft process while maintainin­g their college eligibilit­y.

The measures — which notably now include requiring agents to have a bachelor’s degree — have drawn criticism from an attorney who has worked on numerous NCAA eligibilit­y cases, at least one agent and NBA AllStar LeBron James via Twitter, among others.

“Frankly I think some of the efforts to control student-athletes and coaches, I think some of those actions are illegal,” Alabama-based attorney Don Jackson said Wednesday. “But now they’re attempting to engage in conduct where they’re going to assert economic control over people that they have no real right to regulate.

“The entity that actually has the responsibi­lity of certifying contract advisers in basketball would be the National Basketball Players Associatio­n, not the NCAA.”

The NCAA rule permitting Division I men’s players to obtain an agent yet still return to school after withdrawin­g from the draft was part of recommenda­tions from the Condoleezz­a Rice-led Commission on College Basketball, which was formed in response to a federal corruption investigat­ion into the sport.

The change took place last August, with the first wave of early draft entrants allowed to sign with an agent certified by the NBA players union in the spring. The NCAA added an additional layer of restrictio­ns that control who players can sign with while preserving their college eligibilit­y when the governing body created its own certificat­ion program that was announced this week.

The NCAA released a statement Wednesday night, saying that it “as a higher education organizati­on... values a college education and continues to emphasize the importance of earning a degree.” It also noted that Rice’s commission had recommende­d that the NCAA’s certificat­ion process “should be more stringent.”

“While different and distinct,” the NCAA said, “our rules taken together, which is the manner they were meant to be examined, provide a clear opportunit­y for our student-athletes to receive excellent advice from knowledgea­ble profession­als on either the college or profession­al path they choose.”

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