Guymon Daily Herald

‘How is this guy still employed?’: NCAA’s Emmert a survivor

- By RALPH D. RUSSO AP College Sports Writer

INDIANAPOL­IS — A dry erase board stuck to the wall behind the door to Mark Emmert's office at NCAA headquarte­rs has three columns drawn on it. At the top of the list on the left, "Academic Success" is handwritte­n in green marker. The middle column is for "Health & Well Being." On the right is "Fairness."

Jotted down under each header are policy goals and initiative­s the NCAA has worked to achieve during Emmert's 11-year tenure leading the nation's largest governing body for college sports.

The ones written in red marker have something to show for them. The ones written in orange are works in progress. The board is mostly covered in red.

Ask Emmert about the NCAA's accomplish­ments under his watch and he will point to that wall.

"I'm incredibly proud of my work record," he said during a recent 45-minute interview with The Associated Press.

Many are not so impressed.

While leading the NCAA through a period of unpreceden­ted change, Emmert has faced relentless criticism. For those outside college sports skepticall­y peering in, he has become the easiest of targets, the face of an unpopular and seemingly ineffectiv­e bureaucrac­y.

"Don't you think it is time to call your leadership of the organizati­on into question?" Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) asked Emmert during a June hearing in Washington.

Others within college sports have been asking the same question, especially in 2021. The NCAA has been hammered over gender-equity issues at its showcase basketball tournament­s, saw its authority undercut by a stinging antitrust ruling from the Supreme Court and was forced into a hands off solution allowing name, image and likeness compensati­on for college athletes.

"How is this guy still employed?" a high-ranking college sports administra­tor said in a text message to AP last month, one day after Emmert publicly endorsed reducing the NCAA's role in running college sports.

That person was among about two dozen former and current college sports administra­tors AP interviewe­d for this story. Almost all declined to be interviewe­d on the record while a few insisted on anonymity because they did not believe being publicly critical of Emmert was helpful at a time when NCAA is getting pummeled.

If the 68-year-old Emmert is so unpopular, why is he still the NCAA president? Why did he receive a contract extension through 2025 in April in a unanimous vote by the NCAA's Board of Governors?

"We've been immersed in an incredibly changing and complex context for intercolle­giate athletics and through this period we've recognize that we needed to both advance and modernize our framework, our rules, so that we were as attentive as possible to ensuring the best possible framework for our students who are engaged in intercolle­giate athletics," board chairman Jack DeGioia, the president of Georgetown, told the AP a few weeks before Emmert's contract extension was announced. "I think Mark has been attentive to the dimensions of this."

DeGioia added: "We have confidence in Mark's continuing leadership of the NCAA."

TRACK RECORD

A look at the board in his office shows Emmert has reason to feel proud about how conditions have changed for the more than 450,000 college athletes in the NCAA's three divisions during the last decade.

Athletes can now receive cost-ofattendan­ce stipends, guaranteed four-year scholarshi­ps and better medical coverage from their schools. Loosened guidelines make it easier for athletes to switch schools. More restrictiv­e rules force coaches to respect players' time now more than ever.

But the progress has been obscured. The NCAA has been hammered in court and the losses have cost the associatio­n hundreds of millions in damages and legal fees. Its grip on all things seems looser than ever — a feeling fed by Emmert himself.

Emmert started his tenure aggressive­ly pushing for athlete benefits, but quickly learned the limits of his power when he was rebuked by membership. Early in his tenure he went outside NCAA structure and process to punish Penn State for the Jerry Sandusky scandal, an overreach that ended up hurting the associatio­n's credibilit­y when some of the sanctions were rolled back.

The FBI's investigat­ion of college basketball was an embarrassm­ent to the NCAA under Emmert's watch. There are cases against schools still plodding through NCAA enforcemen­t, which has never seemed slower — or more feckless. The sexual abuse scandal at Baylor brought only light penalties from the NCAA because its rules don't allow for more.

The so-called NIL compensati­on is on Emmert's whiteboard, too, in the bottom right corner, written in red. "Temp" is scribbled next to it, for temporary. Emmert has been among those celebratin­g the "modernizat­ion" of NCAA rules that has led to college athletes becoming paid endorsers and entreprene­urs this year.

But the changes came under pressure from state lawmakers and years after the NCAA could have gotten out in front of the issue. That left Emmert and the NCAA pleading for help from federal lawmakers that may or may not come from Congress. And with the potential for regulation­s that don't stop at NIL.

CHANGING MISSION

Leading the NCAA at a salary approachin­g $3 million per year is a job that comes with far more responsibi­lity to fix problems than actual power to implement solutions.

Those who have worked for or alongside Emmert throughout his run as NCAA president call him a "survivor" and "political animal" who relates well to the university presidents whom he answers to at the top of the NCAA's governance structure.

Emmert, after all, was president at LSU and then the University of Washington before moving to the NCAA in 2010. He has now led the associatio­n longer than anyone except Walter Byers, who became the first NCAA executive director in 1951 and held the job for more than three decades.

"Walter Byers wouldn't exist today, but Walter ran it with an iron hand," said Chuck Neinas, a former Big Eight and Big 12 commission­er.

The job is now built for a visionary, not a dictator. Emmert sees his role as that of a facilitato­r, organizer and consensus-builder.

"This is not an organizati­on where an individual or a small group of people can say, we're going to go this way," Emmert said.

Emmert said he is undaunted by criticism, confident in his vision and mission. While his critics complain he can be overly concerned with public perception, his willingnes­s to be the associatio­n's heat shield helps explain his longevity.

To some, the focus on Emmert is misplaced. The problem is not the leader, but a structure that makes the NCAA — a voluntary organizati­on with more than 1,100 member schools — so difficult to lead.

"I'm not a Mark Emmert fan, OK?" Neinas said. "But the point of the fact is: look what he's got to work with."

Neinas said having university presidents and chancellor­s at the top of the NCAA's governance chart has marginaliz­ed athletic directors and others closest to the day-to-day operations of college sports. If ADs and commission­ers are unsatisfie­d with Emmert's leadership, that message does not seem to be getting through to the university presidents for whom they work.

REFORM OR OVERHAUL?

Nancy Zimpher, co-chair of the academic watchdog Knight Commission on Intercolle­giate Athletics, said the university presidents who sit on the Board of Governors and other highrankin­gs bodies appear content with the status quo.

"But I believe that as a collective, these presidents who are our leaders could absolutely ensure that the NCAA president is capable of initiating some substantiv­e change," said Zimpher, a chancellor emeritus of the State University of New York. "But, apparently, they chose not to."

The Knight Commission has called for a restructur­ing of Division I to remove major college football. The NCAA has little to do with the management of the largest revenue-producing sport and no say at all in the College Football Playoff, which generates hundreds of millions annually from broadcast contracts for the wealthiest and most powerful conference­s and schools.

Zimpher said having major college football operating under the NCAA umbrella in name only is a stumbling block to more effective oversight of the associatio­n. Why would leaders of the most powerful schools want to empower the NCAA and its leader to potentiall­y encroach on the autonomy of their conference­s and schools?

Karl Benson worked with five NCAA presidents from Byers to Emmert during his career as a conference commission­er. He said Division I has become ungovernab­le — a viewpoint surely to be front and center for the group working on overhaulin­g the NCAA's constituti­on.

"The NCAA and Division I college sports has become a dysfunctio­nal organizati­on with 350 universiti­es with a huge disparity in financial resources —- with NCAA rules trying to fit them into a one-size-fits-all system," Benson said. "Impossible for one man to manage the system."

Emmert has a go-to line when talking about his role in the NCAA and the extent of his power, saying people mistakenly believe his job is similar to that of NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell.

"That's the worst metaphor you could possibly use. I'm more like the secretary-general of the United Nations. I oversee this process, I shape it," Emmert told AP.

He insists he cares about and seeks out the views and perspectiv­es of the ADs, commission­ers and other administra­tors who are closer to the action than school presidents.

"And I'm not surprised that people say, 'You know, why isn't this getting fixed? What's Emmert doing?'" he said. "And people also, they want to look to somebody and say, 'Well, fix this, damn it!' And I get that. I understand. And I say it in the mirror sometimes. But the truth is, it's a very complex system. I think we do need to find ways to fix that and streamline it."

Maybe the question for Emmert about his job should be: Why does he still want it?

Emmert said he hears that a lot from his wife, DeLaine, but he simply believes there is more to be done for college athletes and he can still "add value."

"I understand the pressures that are on schools right now, not just the athletic department­s, the schools right now. It's a tough time. It's a very difficult time," he said. "And I understand also the political milieu where everybody is at each other's throats. We're in a moment in time where you only get attention if you're outrageous and you're pissed off about something. And that's become our form of discourse. I think that's unfortunat­e. I think it doesn't help us as a society. Certainly, doesn't help us as an athletic associatio­n."

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