NCAA head Emmert to step down
As college sports evolve, what will be next president's job?
One of Mark Emmert's go-to lines when talking about his role as NCAA president and the extent of his power to lead the association is to explain how those outside college sports 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 last summer in a lengthy interview.
Tom McMillen, the former Maryland basketball player and congressman who now leads the Lead1 association of Division I athletic directors, summed up the NCAA presidency this way: “The job is tough. Expectations without power.”
Emmert announced Tuesday he was stepping down from the job he has held for the past 12 years by June 2023, depending on how quickly a replacement is found.
Before the NCAA chooses its next president and determines the skills and characteristics it wants from a new leader, the decision-makers for the nation's largest governing body in college athltics must first decide what they want the NCAA to be and to do.
“I think it's a little bit premature to define the characteristics you'd be looking for in a leader without really getting through whatever is described as the restructuring, transformation, rereinvention process,” former Big Ten Commissioner Jim Delany said Wednesday.
The NCAA is in currently reshaping Division I —- the wealthiest and most prominent level of college sports, de-emphasizing the role of the national office and handing more power to confer
ences and schools. A new, streamlined constitution was ratified in January, opening the door for each of the NCAA's three divisions to govern themselves.
The Division I transformation committee, cochaired by Southeastern Conference Commissioner Greg Sankey and Ohio University athletic director Julie Cromer, has been meeting weekly and is expected to deliver a report with proposed reforms by August.
The 21-member panel has been charged with examining what should be required of Division I
schools, what benefits athletes should receive, how rules should be made and enforced, and how revenue should be shared.
All of this activity comes as the NCAA's ability to govern has been undercut by loss after loss in court, most notably last year's unanimous Supreme Court ruling against the association.
“It's obviously a very different job than it was 12 years ago or even eight years ago,” said Gabe Feldman, director of the sports law program at Tulane. “And the role of the NCAA president may be significantly diminished if the decentralization efforts continue and the authority moves more toward the
conferences.”
Feldman added: “But it doesn't matter how good the leader is. The captain of the ship can't navigate the ship if they don't have a map and if there are holes all over the ship.”
Emmert's role during a decade of sweeping upheaval in college sports was to lead an association that governed by representative democracy. There are more than 1,100 member schools serving nearly 500,000 athletes. It's a slow-moving bureaucracy, with a wildly diverse membership — even just within Division I's 350 schools.
The role of the NCAA going forward could be to simply run championships, including the management
of media rights deals for those big-ticket events such as the March Madness basketball tournaments.
If that's the case, is an NCAA president — or CEO or executive director —even necessary?
“I think if we want to continue having March Madness the way we've had it, if we want to continue having the coordination among the schools, if we want to continue to have this, at least in theory, being education first and academic institutions competing athletically, then yes, I think it is beneficial to have a central figure over all of it,” Feldman said. “But if this becomes more conference-based, then potentially no.”