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NCAA rules unfairly put end to Central Florida kicker’s career,

Outdated rules put UCF player in bad position

- Dan Wolken dwolken@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports FOLLOW REPORTER DAN WOLKEN @DanWolken for breaking college sports news and analysis.

In less than 24 hours, Donald De La Haye’s YouTube video titled “I lost my full D1 scholarshi­p because of my YouTube channel” had been viewed more than 153,000 times. It was 5 minutes, 39 seconds of raw emotion from a backup kicker at Central Florida none of us would have known about had NCAA rules not intervened this summer, threatenin­g his eligibilit­y for making money off his videos.

“Every time I step in that compliance building,” he said, voice quivering, “I hear nothing but bad news.”

Indeed, De La Haye will no longer play football at UCF after he declined to accept a compromise with the NCAA on the monetizati­on of his YouTube channel, thus rendering him ineligible.

Though NCAA staffers tried to do some emergency spin in the wake of another public relations disaster, tweeting at reporters that it was the school and not Indianapol­is that ruled him ineligible, it’s a distinctio­n without a difference.

The issue isn’t who ruled De La Haye ineligible, nor is it the way they sliced and diced the rule so that he could continue making videos — but only if the ones he made money off of didn’t reference anything about being a football player at UCF.

The problem here is that the NCAA has built an entire brand on the theme that “most of us will go pro in something other than sports.”

Yet when someone has the audacity to get a head start on that while in college, we have to strain it through so many bylaws and compliance interpreta­tions that a kid at the end of a roster in the American Athletic Conference has to make a choice between his football scholarshi­p and his slightly lucrative hobby.

“In the end, I don’t feel like there was any compromisi­ng really happening,” De La Haye said in the video. “They wanted me to give up the money I made, wanted me to take down my videos, which I worked so hard for and wasn’t comfortabl­e doing. It was just very unfair in my opinion, and now I’ve got to deal with the consequenc­es. And the consequenc­es are no more college football. And since I can’t play college football, no more scholarshi­p. Damn. Life hit me fast, very fast.”

From the NCAA’s perspectiv­e, this decision isn’t about De La Haye. Nobody could reasonably connect the popularity of YouTube videos for a backup kicker at UCF to any sort of recruiting advantage or breach of the NCAA’s sacred notion of amateurism.

It is, however, about setting a precedent in case some enterprisi­ng assistant coaches at an Alabama or Ohio State figured out a way to guarantee recruits they could make money on the side by posting videos on a social media site.

While that argument might make sense within the construct of the NCAA’s current model, it’s not one that can hold up forever.

The collateral damage to people such as De La Haye and the embarrassm­ent that has piled up over every one of these decisions in the last decade has turned the public against the purity of amateurism and unnecessar­ily made the NCAA into a punch line. Every instance of outrage draws the folks in Indianapol­is closer and closer to a critical mass of legal and public opinion that endangers their very existence.

Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., tweeted, “The @NCAA is out of control” Tuesday morning, and, regardless of what you think about Rubio’s politics, it’s probably not good news for the NCAA when U.S. senators are calling your organizati­on “out of control.”

Moreover, the De La Haye kerfuffle is a prime example of why more and more powerful people inside college sports are coming around to the idea that they’re simply on the wrong side of the name, image and likeness debate.

Though few will discuss it publicly — after all, it would undercut years of litigation the NCAA has been fighting — more and more young, rising administra­tors in college sports seem to understand that prohibitin­g athletes from cashing in on their notoriety is a fight they will lose over the long haul and probably need to lose if college sports is going to continue with anything close to the model it now enjoys.

Reasonable people can debate whether college athletes should be paid and all the consequenc­es of that, from employment/tax issues to whether you pay the left tackle the same as the quarterbac­k, but there is no good argument for restrictin­g the earning potential of athletes based on their popularity, charisma or, in De La Haye’s case, their talent in something besides football.

If Subway thinks Southern California quarterbac­k Sam Darnold is worth a $200,000 marketing deal, on what grounds would a university legitimate­ly be able to restrict that opportunit­y? If McDonald’s wants to make reigning Heisman Trophy winner La- mar Jackson a $500,000 offer to be in commercial­s, what business is that of Louisville’s or the NCAA’s?

Lifting those restrictio­ns would immediatel­y relieve many of the NCAA’s legal and public relations problems — no more need to have a staff of people scrutinizi­ng a backup kicker’s YouTube videos — while having little to no impact on the competitiv­e landscape of college sports.

Of course, the big-time programs with more rich boosters would have more “arrangemen­ts” with recruits in that world. But what’s the point of worrying about a landscapin­g business in Alabama offering a backup safety $20,000 to appear on a billboard when they get the best players every year anyway? And if a business doesn’t get value from paying players to appear in commercial­s or for autograph signings, they probably won’t do it.

The reality is, not much would change. Superstars would probably be paid like superstars. The rest would be lucky to get free sandwiches. And the same teams that win most of the championsh­ips would continue to do so.

The problem is, the current power structure is more concerned about that than the reality that someone such as De La Haye — whose fame on the Internet has nothing to do with his college football ability — is facing today.

“It’s about time I head down another road, I guess,” he said.

Maybe the NCAA should consider doing the same.

“It was just very unfair in my opinion, and now I’ve got to deal with the consequenc­es.” Ex-Central Florida kicker Donald De La Haye, who became ineligible after he declined a proposed NCAA compromise over income from his YouTube videos

 ?? LESLIE PLAZA JOHNSON, AP ?? Former Central Florida kicker Donald De La Haye’s YouTube videos and the monetizati­on of them became an issue.
LESLIE PLAZA JOHNSON, AP Former Central Florida kicker Donald De La Haye’s YouTube videos and the monetizati­on of them became an issue.
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