Las Vegas Review-Journal

Commission’s report on college basketball amounts to lip service

- By Tim Dahlberg The Associated Press

Dbother reading too deeply into the report of the latest NCAA commission on the mess that is big-time college basketball.

No reason, because pretty much all you need to know about the Rice commission report released Wednesday is that the authors begin with a defense of the system as it now exists.

Not surprising­ly, they like the idea that athletes can get a college education by playing ball. Indeed, they make a point of saying that could be worth $1 million all by itself and could help change a player’s family for generation­s to come.

What they don’t like is the idea of paying the players themselves. And they have no desire to actually upend a system that — by their own report — is so flawed that it may implode at any moment.

“The state of men’s college basketball is deeply troubled,” the report says. “The levels of corruption and deception are now at a point that they threaten the very survival of the college game as we know it.”

On that at least we can all agree.

But while the probe headed by former Secretary of State Condoleezz­a Rice claims it wants actual reform, the proposals do little other than maintain the status quo. There are no real new ideas and the ones voiced — mostly about forces outside the NCAA — will be difficult, if not impossible, to implement.

No surprise there, because the real job of NCAA chief Mark Emmert and his cronies is to keep the money flowing.

Yes, the report offers legitimate proposals made in good faith that serve some purpose, like doing away with one-and-dones — something that only the NBA has control over — and allowing athletes to hire agents. There are calls for shoe companies to help sort out the mess they helped create, and proposals to outsource investigat­ions to profession­als and impose tougher penalties for coaches and schools that break the rules.

Laughably, there are also calls for the NCAA to take over youth basketball and run its own teams and tournament­s for those aspiring to play in college. Yes, the same organizati­on that has no clue how to even run itself would somehow be in charge of thousands of teams and leagues while at the same time keeping out the influence peddlers from Nike, Under Armour and Adidas.

Yeah, good luck with that.

Give some credit to Rice and others on the panel for finally fessing up to the depth of the corruption in college basketball. And the one thing the panel did get right is that the NCAA is basically paralyzed by its own incompeten­cy.

Now that we’ve establishe­d a baseline, the problem is finding a way to fix it under the umbrella of the current system. And that’s pretty much impossible, no matter how much lip service is paid to proposed reforms.

Yes, the NCAA commission speaks loudly on cheating, as it should. There are recommenda­tions like a five-year postseason ban, coaches effectivel­y fired for life and the loss of postseason money that should have been in place years ago. And the idea that the NCAA investigat­ive and enforcemen­t division should be farmed out is a good one, if only because the bumbling gumshoes currently in place are both clueless and powerless.

But the NCAA will never get its member schools — much less the NBA, shoe companies and AAU coaches and officials — to come to terms on anything of any significan­ce to fix things. The big schools don’t agree on much with the smaller schools, and the multimilli­on dollar contracts most of them have with the shoe companies ensure that won’t change.

There may be a few proposals that get implemente­d on a piecemeal basis, but the people who have run the lucrative racket that is college basketball aren’t going to give up their control easily. And good luck telling the NBA what to do about one-anddones when the league and its player union will do as they please.

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