Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

NCAA’s next idea: Restructur­ing D-I

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As the NCAA moves toward landmark changes that will empower athletes more than ever, the next big debate within college sports is on the horizon: How to reform and restructur­e Division I?

A survey of college sports leaders, including university presidents, conference commission­ers and athletic directors, was released earlier this week by the academic watchdog Knight Commission on Intercolle­giate Athletics.

The survey results went public the day before the NCAA Division I Council approved two proposals that will lift longstandi­ng restrictio­ns on college athletes.

On Wednesday, the council rubber-stamped proposed legislatio­n that will allow college athletes to earn money off their names, images and likenesses — through things such as personal endorsemen­t deals and appearance fees — as never before.

The council also gave the go-ahead to expanding the one-time transfer exception to all athletes, giving players in revenue-generating sports such as football and basketball the ability to switch schools one time as an undergrad and be immediatel­y eligible to compete. Current rules require athletes in those sports, along with baseball and hockey, to sit out a year after transferri­ng as undergradu­ates.

Both proposals now go to membership for comment and feedback and could be tweaked before they go back to the Council for a vote in January.

Federal lawmakers still need to weigh in on name, image and likeness rules, but NIL compensati­on and less restrictiv­e transfer rules should be in place for the 2021-22 school year.

Those issues, which had been debated and argued for years as the NCAA held firm to its old rules, have now been settled in favor of what college sports leaders now frame as modernizat­ion.

The next big project in college sports, especially as institutio­ns deal with the financial fallout of the coronaviru­s pandemic, could be deciding what Division I should be. Or more precisely, what do the schools that make up D-I want to be?

“I think there is going to be a great deal of interest in ‘Where does my institutio­n fit best in this environmen­t?’ ” said Nancy Zimpher, former chancellor of the State University of New York and a member of the Knight Commission.

Zimpher said university presidents should be willing to ask hard questions about what kind of investment­s they want to make in football and basketball in the hope the revenue from those sports can fund others.

“I hope that campuses and conference­s will open themselves to some new arrangemen­ts to solve some of these heavy financial challenges,” said Zimpher, chairman of the Knight Commission’s college sports governance and structure committee.

The survey found strong support for reforming the way Division I is governed (74%) and restructur­ing D-I altogether ( 73%). NCAA Division I is comprised of 351 schools that range from massive Power Five football schools such as Ohio State, Alabama and Texas to small private universiti­es mostly focused on trying to access the lucrative NCAA men’s basketball tournament. Athletic budgets range from $4 million to more than $200 million, according to data collected by the Knight Commission.

There is far less consensus on what needs to be done to address the problem.

Among respondent­s at schools without football programs, 65% said they would likely favor separating the highest level of Division I football ( FBS) from the NCAA and creating a new body to manage that sport. There are 130 FBS schools.

But 42% of respondent­s at FBS schools oppose that type of change.

Among Power Five respondent­s, 61% said they were very or somewhat likely to support the creation of a separate new division within the NCAA for the Power Five to compete in sports other than men’s and women’s basketball.

There was broad support for keeping March Madness as is. The men’s basketball tournament generates most of the NCAA’s revenue, which surpassed $1 billion in 2019.

“We don’t have one body that really speaks for everybody,” Zimpher said. “In fact we may have multiple bodies, but we have to create consensus around the principles. And, yes, [NCAA President] Mark Emmert and whoever leads the NCAA is a responsibl­e leader. But the presidents are in charge. This is their organizati­on or set or organizati­ons. And it falls to them to create coherence.”

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