The Evening Leader

NCAA grants more power to schools; adjusts constituti­on

- By RALPH D. RUSSO AP College Football Writer

The NCAA on Monday set the stage for a dramatic restructur­ing of college sports that will give each of its three divisions the power to govern itself.

The nation’s biggest and most influentia­l governing body in college athletics released a draft of an 18 1/2-page constituti­on, cut down from 43 pages over the last three months at the direction of President Mark Emmert.

The rewritten constituti­on focuses more on the NCAA’s broader goals of athlete welfare than the previous version, which took a more granular approach.

Most important, it would provide Division I — the highest level of college sports that includes major college football and the 351 schools eligible for the lucrative men’s basketball tournament — the autonomy to reshape everything from how revenue is shared to how rules are made and enforced.

“Once we got into this, we really found out that many of the issues were the Division I level,” West Virginia athletic director Shane Lyons, the chairman of the Division I Council and a member of the constituti­on committee, told the AP.

The goal is to have changes in place in less than a year.

“The ratificati­on of a new constituti­on in January is the first step in the process of transformi­ng NCAA governance,” said Jack DiGioia, chairman of the NCAA Board of Governors and the president of Georgetown. “A new constituti­on will provide the divisions the flexibilit­y they need to act.”

The proposed new constituti­on still needs to go to the more than 1,200 member schools for feedback after next week’s scheduled special constituti­onal convention, and could be amended before it is put before the full membership for a vote in January.

The new constituti­on shrinks the NCAA’s highest governing body, the Board of Governors, from 21 members to nine and changes its duties.

“The question is going to be asked: What is the new role and responsibi­lities of the board of governance? That’s still all three divisions, but their priorities and what they would be doing would be just those very, very high level issues of the associatio­n, as opposed to some of the things they have been getting involved in right now,” Lyons said.

Emmert called the convention in August, not long after the Supreme Court hammered the NCAA in a ruling that left the associatio­n vulnerable to further legal challenges. It quickly became apparent a new constituti­on was merely the first phase of transformi­ng the NCAA in a way that de-emphasizes the Indianapol­is-based associatio­n and gives more power to schools and conference­s.

The next phase figures to be more contentiou­s, at least at the highest level of college sport.

SEC Commission­er Greg Sankey and Ohio University athletic director Julie Cromer will lead the Division I Transforma­tion Committee, which has already begun exploring ways to restructur­e.

Lyons is also a member of that committee.

“There’s a huge gap in Division I with schools roughly with $175 million budgets and schools with $4 million budgets,” Lyons said. “A lot of times we’ve tried to legislate from an equality standpoint. Is there possibly a new division? Is there a Division Four? Do some schools break away and make a Division Four, and what is the membership requiremen­ts?”

He added: “So those are the things that we’re really going to have to get to the granular spot, and some of those are going to be very difficult conversati­ons to have.”

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