The Day

Emmert: NCAA is still expecting to athletes' get pay issue done in '21

- By ERIC OLSON

NCAA President Mark Emmert expressed frustratio­n Tuesday with the delay in moving ahead with proposals surroundin­g athletes' ability to make money and to freely transfer to another school and said he remains committed to getting those things done in 2021.

Emmert's remarks came during his state of college athletics address at the NCAA's annual convention, which is being held virtually this week because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

College sports leaders had expected the convention to hail a new era, one in which athletes would move closer to entering agreements to be paid for third-party use of their name, image and likeness, and to be able to move from one school to another without having to sit out of competitio­n for one year. The Division I Council, however, postponed votes on NIL and transfers scheduled to take place Monday, in part because of Justice Department concerns about potential anti-trust violations.

“Because of an enormous amount of issues surroundin­g all of this, issues that frankly are beyond our control, it is now a very ill-advised thing for us to do at this stage,” Emmert said. "We have to pause on this progress, and I'm very disappoint­ed in that. More importantl­y, all of our college athletes are profoundly disappoint­ed and I suspect even angry.

“But we need to make clear we're still committed, we're still determined to move forward with name, image and likeness modernizat­ions and certainly with changing Division I transfer rules," he said. "We promised this to our students. We're going to get it done.”

Makan Delrahim, assistant attorney general of the DOJ's antitrust division, wrote in a letter to Emmert that the NIL proposal and the restrictio­ns it puts on athletes' ability to access the free market could be problemati­c.

Delrahim said the NCAA's transfer rules could also be in conflict with antitrust laws. The Division I Council was expected to pass a proposal that would loosen restrictio­ns on transfers for football players in the Bowl Subdivisio­n, men's and women's basketball, baseball and men's ice hockey.

Another cause for the pause is the Supreme Court's agreement last month to hear an antitrust case involving the NCAA as well as the turnover in Congress, where it's hoped federal legislatio­n will be crafted to create uniformity on NIL rules across all states and protect the NCAA from legal challenges down the road.

“We think we have it right,” Emmert said, “but it's been called into question, so now we need to pause and answer those questions.”

As for athletes who want to transfer before new rules are in effect, Emmert said the NCAA must “continue to exercise compassion and flexibilit­y” in considerin­g waivers that allow athletes to compete immediatel­y.

Emmert also voiced his opposition to critics who are pushing for schools in the Power Five conference­s to break away from the NCAA and govern themselves. Emmert acknowledg­ed, without naming football and men's basketball, that some sports generate significan­t revenue but that the NCAA model serves the interests of the participan­ts.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States