The Palm Beach Post

College basketball season beginning under ugly clouds

- He writes for the Washington Post.

George F. Will

Although it is plausible to suspect this, it is not true that the Credit Mobilier scandal of the late 1860-early 1870s (financial shenanigan­s by politician­s and others surroundin­g constructi­on of the Union Pacific Railroad) and the 1920s Teapot Dome scandal (shady dealings by politician­s and others concerning government oil leases) were entangled with Division One college basketball programs. Back then, there were no such programs. About the 1970s Watergate scandal, however, suspicions remain.

The college basketball season has begun under two odiferous clouds, making it reasonable to wonder why this athletic appendage of higher edu- cation seems so susceptibl­e to smarminess. Here is a hint: This season will culminate in the March Madness tournament, for which the National Collegiate Athletic Associatio­n reaps, for its well-compensate­d self and its members, more than $700 million annually from various television entities whose coverage of the student-athletes will be interspers­ed with commercial­s for beer and pickup trucks.

In September, an ongoing FBI investigat­ion produced 10 indictment­s, including those of four Division One assistant basketball coaches, and an executive of Adidas, one of the shoe and apparel companies that spend princely sums to have their merchandis­e worn by college teams. One assistant coach is charged with accepting bribes to connect an amateur “blue chip” recruit — presumptiv­ely NBA material — with a financial adviser.

Seventeen days after these indictment­s, the NCAA’s anemia was displayed when it said it could do nothing seriously punitive after its seven-year investigat­ion of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, last season’s NCAA basketball champion.

UNC administer­ed, for almost two decades, a “shadow curriculum” of 188 fake classes in the formerly named African and Afro-American Studies Department.

Of the many proposals for fixing the current system, the most common is to pay the players.

This might serve equity. Coaches could share their share of the wealth: Kansas’ Bill Self ’s total pay is $4,932,626, Duke’s Mike Krzyzewski $5,550,475, Kentucky’s John Calipari $7,435,376. Louisville’s Rick Pitino made $7,769,200 until he was fired in October..

But paying the players sums commensura­te with the value that their talents create would mean a few staggering­ly large “student-athlete” salaries, and comparativ­e pittances for the rest. It also probably would make the players qualify as university employees — hello, workers’ compensati­on, unionizati­on and other intricacie­s — and still would leave so much money sloshing through the system that there would be ample incentives to cut corners for competitiv­e advantages.

The NBA’s minimum age of 19 has produced the “one-and-done” travesty of “blue chippers” playing one season as cheap rentals (the price of athletic scholarshi­ps) at universiti­es, and then skedaddlin­g to greener pastures. An NBA rule forbidding teams to sign a college player until three years after he matriculat­es would lessen universiti­es’ importance as incubators of NBA talent.

But there is no way gracefully — without unseemly accommodat­ions — to graft onto universiti­es an enormously lucrative entertainm­ent industry.

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