Calgary Herald

NCAA calls for expanded scholarshi­ps

President grilled by skeptical Senate panel

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — NCAA president Mark Emmert told a Senate committee Wednesday he supports “scholarshi­ps for life” and other reforms in how athletes are treated, then did such a good job of casting himself as a powerless figurehead that one senator told him: “I can’t tell whether you’re in charge or whether you’re a minion.”

Emmert faced a skeptical Senate Commerce Committee and said he feels college sports “works extremely well for the vast majority” and that the overall current model of amateurism should be preserved.

But he listed several changes he’d like to see enacted.

In addition to the end of the standard year-to-year scholarshi­ps, he said scholarshi­ps should also cover the full cost of attending college, not just basics such as room and board. He also called for better health, safety and insurance protocols and said universiti­es must confront what he called the “national crisis” of sexual assault.

Emmert said such changes could come about if Division I schools decide to remake their decisionma­king structure in the coming weeks, giving more authority to the five biggest conference­s.

He reiterated that the schools themselves are in charge of the rules and emphasized the challenge of creating a consensus among college presidents, coaches and athletic directors. That led to sharp words from Sen. Claire McCaskill, who levelled the “minion” statement and added: “If you’re merely a monetary pass-through, why should you even exist?”

The Missouri Democrat was particular­ly concerned with research that showed a significan­t percentage of universiti­es allow athletic department­s to handle sexual assault investigat­ions of athletes.

Emmert said he was “equally surprised and dismayed by” McCaskill’s numbers and that he would work to put an end to the apparent conflict of interest. The hearing came as the NCAA faces pressure from multiple fronts to reform how athletes are treated and compensate­d.

The organizati­on is awaiting a judge’s ruling following a threeweek trial in Oakland, Calif., in which former UCLA basketball star Ed O’Bannon and others are seeking a share of revenues from the use of their names, images and likenesses in broadcasts and video games.

Also, former Northweste­rn quarterbac­k Kain Colter is leading a push to form the first union for college athletes.

Emmert testified in the O’Bannon trial, where he opposed any effort to pay players because it would destroy the bedrock of amateurism on which college sports is based.

There have been moves, however, to pay more attention to the athlete’s concerns. Emmert noted that multiyear scholarshi­ps were recently reinstated after being banned for close to four decades. The Big Ten last month came out in support of guaranteed four-year scholarshi­ps and improved medical coverage for athletes.

Also testifying was former University of North Carolina football player Devon Ramsay, who spoke of the red tape he had to endure to clear his name after allegation­s of plagiarism. UNC has been dealing with a long-running academics and athletics scandal, and Ramsay said he came to the conclusion that the school “was more concerned with penalties and losses of scholarshi­ps than protecting one of its own.”

Ramsay also called for mandatory summer internship­s that would help prepare athletes for future careers. He said it’s “almost impossible” to complete an internship at a competitiv­e football school because of the time demands made by coaches.

“The NCAA as an institutio­n no longer protects the student athlete,” Ramsay said. “They are more concerned with signage and profit margins.”

 ?? Pablo Martinez Monsivais/The Associated Press ?? NCAA president Mark Emmert listed several changes he’d like to see in an appearance before the Senate Commerce hearing on the NCAA’s treatment of athletes on Wednesday in Washington.
Pablo Martinez Monsivais/The Associated Press NCAA president Mark Emmert listed several changes he’d like to see in an appearance before the Senate Commerce hearing on the NCAA’s treatment of athletes on Wednesday in Washington.

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