In the news: April 5

Is it time to look into a group rate for anger management for sportswriters?

Jason Whitlock of Fox Sports wants to blow up the NCAA. George Diaz of the Orlando Sentinel wants the same thing.

Would it be too much to ask to cut back a little on the rhetoric? Any reasonable person would know that Whitlock and Diaz are speaking metaphorically, but here’s late-breaking news: A few people out there aren’t reasonable. Witness how NCAA President Mark Emmert has been forced to use a security detail at times this year because of threats made in the wake of the Enes Kanter decision.

Loose language is nothing new. Back in the mid-1990s, former Temple basketball coach John Chaney became angry at the NCAA and also suggested blowing us up. I’m not sure his suggestion was quite as metaphorical.

Anyway, Whitlock and Diaz should know better. Nobody talks about blowing up newspapers because newspapers really have been blown up before. Likewise, no responsible person would talk about blowing up Cantor Fitzgerald, for obvious reasons.

Let’s take the next step and get rid of such references altogether.

In the news: April 4

Amid all the hoopla of the Final Fours, the weekend brought a tough reminder that the real world rolls on.

Yale ice hockey student-athlete Mandi Schwartz died Sunday after fighting a tough two-year battle with acute myeloid leukemia.

The Yale community closed ranks around Mandi throughout her struggle. As of last September, bone-marrow drives on her behalf had added more than 4,200 people to donor registries in the United States and Mandi’s native Canada.

Like so many cancer victims, Mandi’s was a tale of hope, followed by disappointments, followed by renewed hope. But when she learned in December that the cancer had returned, you had to be concerned that this wasn’t going to end well.

The fact that she motivated 4,200 people to register for bone-marrow registries, however, raises the possibility that another cancer victim down the line might have a survival chance that previously didn’t exist. If only we could all make such a difference.

In the news: April 1

Only the Bizarro World of American sports journalism could somehow find problems with Butler and Virginia Commonwealth reaching the Men’s Final Four.

This sentiment started out as a trickle, borne of the idea that one-and-done problems are diminishing the overall quality of Division I men’s basketball and eroding the worth of the tournament. It was ESPN’s Michael Wilbon who may have been at Ground Zero of this attitude when he claimed that the tournament was merely “good” and not “good and exciting,” which equals “compelling.”

Since then, this concept has gained traction among the basketball snobs, including Paul Daugherty of Sports Illustrated  and Darren Everson of the Wall Street Journal.

Daugherty offered this:

“I prefer the meritocracy of a tournament to the monopoly of a bowl system. I’m glad VCU and Butler have done well. Ditto Richmond and Morehead State. I just don’t want to see any of them in the Final Four. It’s a great story, sure, though with Butler and VCU playing each other Saturday, it’s great by half. Maybe they can each wear one slipper. But do we want high drama? Or high-level basketball?…

“The casual fan drawn to the drama will enjoy the coming weekend more than the connoisseur who prefers his basketball straight up. Props to Butler and VCU. Their stories belong in books. But this is basketball we’re producing. Not literature.”

Everson came up with this:

“It’s practically sacrilege to criticize the fundamental design of the NCAA tournament, whose brackets, filled with small schools from scrappy conferences, are universally lauded. But now that the upsets have gone on ad infinitum, be honest: Are you clearing your schedule to watch Butler battle VCU?”

In a word, yes. In fact, Mrs. P and I are planning to drive across town to watch the game on the big screen at Butler’s Hinkle Fieldhouse − not because we’re Butler fans but rather because we want to be part of the experience.

Sportswriters may remember a long-ago time when they were outraged that an upstart team from a mid-major conference won all of its games and yet didn’t get the chance to play for the national championship. Oh wait…that was TCU in football back in mid-January.

Now that two Cinderella teams have earned their way to the final round (and VCU has earned it like no other team in history, having won five games to reach the Final Four), sportswriters don’t like that either.

Come on, folks. Relax and try to enjoy the moment.

In the news: March 30

If the allegations surrounding the Fiesta Bowl are true, somebody has a lot of explaining to do.

The New York Times on Tuesday provided a detailed expose, making the case that (among other things) the bowl underwrote $1,200 in expenses at a strip club, paid $30,000 for the chief executive’s birthday party and reimbursed employees for political contributions to preferred candidates.

In response, the Fiesta Bowl fired Executive Director John Junker. At the same time, Bowl Championship Series leaders said they would review whether the Fiesta Bowl should remain affiliated with the BCS, setting off positioning for which bowl might take its place.

Commentators were harsh in their reactions.

Read it all and draw your own conclusions.

In the news: March 29

 Maybe Frontline’s program tonight on money in college sports will be a balanced portrayal of a complicated issue. The promotional material from PBS offers little hope in that regard.

“March Madness” isn’t just a basketball tournament,” says the PBS release. “It’s become big business, with television rights alone worth $10.8 billion over 14 years….Lowell Bergman takes a hard look at the economics of the annual NCAA tournament − a cash cow for amateur athletics that generates enormous dollars for everyone except the players themselves, raising basic questions of fairness that are now leading a handful of influential figures to challenge the way the NCAA operates.”

Is it heat or is it light?

I’m going with “heat” since the framework of the program appears to be based on commonly known information guaranteed to ruffle the feathers of college sports critics.

The NCAA media contract generates a lot of money? No secret there.

Sonny Vaccaro has little use for the NCAA? Got it.

Ed O’Bannon is suing the NCAA? Tracking on that one, too.

To create a crusading impression, Bergman (a highly qualified reporter, by the way) clearly plays for the camera as he questions NCAA President Mark Emmert. Almost all of Bergman’s interrogatives on a video clip could be answered through a cursory Internet search, but he still manages to whip up an I-must-have-misunderstood expression of astonishment as Emmert describes the size of the NCAA agreement with CBS and Turner. “That’s 10.8 billion dollars?’” Bergman asks, adding his own verbal italics, as if he were hearing the information for the first time.

The program no doubt will play well with crowds predisposed not to favor big-time college sports. Already, Washington Post reporter Rick Maese has checked in with a gushing review. From Maese’s enthusiasm, one might conclude that PBS was preaching to the converted, which is my concern: Efforts like this are less about genuine understanding than about inflammation.

Let’s switch to the real world, where about three dozen Lock Haven student-athletes participated in a relay to the state capital in Harrisburg to protest higher education funding cuts.

Wrote Libby Sander of the Chronicle of Higher Education: “When students, faculty, and staff at Lock Haven University of Pennsylvania gathered last week for an on-campus rally to protest proposed budget cuts that would slash state funds for public higher education by more than 50 percent, it wasn’t long before chants of ‘March to Harrisburg!’ rose from the crowd.

“That’s when Nick Hilton, a three-sport varsity athlete, turned to his cross country coach, Aaron Russell, with a question that rang like a challenge.

“ ‘Why march when you can run?’ he asked.”

And so the student-athletes ran 100 miles to a rally at the capitol to call attention to the widening gap between their desire for a college education and their ability to afford it.

Lowell Bergman may want to look at this issue as he considers what to do next.

In the news: March 25

 What does Ralph Nader want?

After reading Thursday’s proposal from his League of Fans, the only thing that’s clear is that he’s mad as hell and back in front of a microphone.

In case you missed it, Nader called Thursday for the elimination of athletically-related financial aid, saying the move was necessary to “de-professionalize” college athletics. In its stead, Nader called for need-based financial aid for college sports participants, which sounds like much the same thing.

Nader and his affiliate, the Drake Group, had problems getting their signals straight when the League of Fans announcement stated that its cohort, the often overwrought Drake Group,  favored eliminating college athletics scholarships. That got passed along by the Associated Press, necessitating a correction. Apparently the Drake Group actually favors need-based aid, along with Nader, although Nader describes his position as “eliminating the athletic scholarship.”

If you’re following along at home, give yourself permission to be confused.

As you might imagine, Nader’s concept is not a big hit with the NCAA. He does seem to have worked special magic by uniting bloggers with the NCAA, if only for a moment.

You do have to give Nader credit for stirring the pot, though. The AP story (the one that needed the correction) had generated 1,891 comments as of 2:09 p.m. Friday. It is not recommended reading.

In the news: March 24

Is the number of scholarship equivalencies in Division I baseball high enough?

Chris Lewis, a baseball student-athlete at Texas Lutheran, sent a note yesterday saying that the 11.7 permitted grants-in-aid isn’t sufficient.

Here’s his letter:

“Compared to other collegiate sports, baseball does not receive an adequate number of full scholarships and should receive more.

“Football programs have 85 full scholarships to give to recruits, although only 22 players play in games. Baseball programs only receive 11.7 full scholarships for eight starting position players and roughly 10 to 12 pitchers who pitch regularly during a season. Therefore, collegiate baseball players rarely receive full scholarships while most players in collegiate football programs receive full scholarships, even if they do not play all season. In this scenario, baseball players who play significantly throughout a season are crippled by tuition and do not get the same financial relief as football players.

“The distribution of scholarships between sports should be re-evaluated and redistributed adequately between football and baseball. This will make for better recruiting, better player signing and, ultimately, better collegiate baseball.”

Texas Lutheran is a Division III member, so Chris isn’t directly affected by this issue at the moment. However, he does plan to make a career of coaching college baseball.

Whether 11.7 is the correct number is a matter for the Division I membership. The Division I Awards, Benefits, Expenses and Financial Aid Cabinet currently is looking at financial aid limitations in all Division I sports, although that shouldn’t necessarily suggest that radical changes are on the way. Members can access Michelle Hosick’s recent update at NCAA.org.

As part of its examination, the financial aid cabinet is looking at how much permissible aid is being used in each sport. In baseball, 282 programs (96 percent of sponsoring institutions) provide some financial aid. Of those programs, 79 percent provide less than the permitted 11.7 equivalencies. Baseball also has a maximum head count of 27 student-athletes, but only 144 programs (51 percent) field that many players.

Similar shortfalls exist in almost all sports throughout Division I.

Also, it’s worth noting that NCAA and institutional financial aid limits must be constructed to facilitate compliance with Title IX. Because so much men’s financial aid is directed at football, other men’s sports sometimes feel the effects. Michelle Hosick examined this complicated relationship among revenue sports, men’s nonrevenue sports and women’s sports in the Winter 2010 issue of NCAA Champion magazine.

Chris raises an interesting argument. The short answer: The Division I membership is currently reviewing financial aid limits in all sports to make sure that they are appropriate.

Correction included: This post originally had the wrong last name for Chris Lewis. My apologies to Chris.

In the news: March 22

How refreshing is this? Almost nobody blamed the officials after the wacky finish to Saturday’s Butler-Pittsburgh game.

Not only did broadcasters and sportswriters not find fault, some of them dispensed praise.

Time to toot horns for NCAA referees (Tom Shatel, Omaha World-Herald)

NCAA tournament officials calls aren’t perfect, but aren’t wrong (1080 ESPN)

What was most impressive, however, was the postgame performance of coaches and players. Responding under the greatest pressure that sports can bring, they exhibited class up and down the line, with nobody disputing two foul calls in the final 1.4 seconds:

From Butler coach Brad Stevens: “You hate to see a game end that way. But I asked (Sheldon Mack), did he think he fouled (Gilbert Brown), and he thought he fouled him. And (Matt Howard) thought he got fouled. So that was the way the game ended.”

From Pitt coach Jamie Dixon: “It’s their call. It’s their game, and they did a very good job all the way through. And we’re not going to blame officials. But I’m very proud of our guys, and as always, I’ll take responsibility for the loss….

“I think you gotta call it consistently all the way through. It doesn’t change from time to time, team to team at any time.”

From Pitt player Nasir Robinson, who committed the final foul: “I blame myself. I am smarter than that. I have been playing this game too long to make a dumb mistake like that.”

All of that makes you proud to be associated with college athletics.

In the news: March 21

After one of the most exciting first weekends in NCAA men’s basketball tournament history, it’s time to revisit Michael Wilbon’s question: The tournament is good, but is it compelling?

To review, the second and third rounds featured 17 games decided by five points or less, including Saturday’s Butler-Pittsburgh game, which surely will be remembered as long as college basketball is played.

The nation’s TV viewers voted with their channel-changers. The ratings for the first full day of the tournament were the highest in two decades, and the ratings through Saturday were up 11 percent over last year. March Madness on Demand was up 47 percent in total visits.

Which brings us back to Michael Wilbon.

The ESPN personality last week predicted that the tournament would achieve drama but that it wouldn’t fulfill its promise because, more or less, the players aren’t as good as in the past.

“I’m not expecting the game to look like it did in the 1980s and early 1990s when the really good teams like Michael Jordan’s Tar Heels, Patrick Ewing’s Hoyas, Chris Mullin’s Redmen, Christian Laettner’s Blue Devils and Tark’s Runnin’ Rebels had multiple All-Americans, multiple player-of-the-year candidates, juniors and seniors and — get this — redshirt players who stuck around for four, maybe even five years … long enough to actually learn how to play the game.

“Exciting is good, good and exciting is compelling. And right now it looks like this NCAA tournament, even at its best, will have to settle for the former.”

To buttress his argument, he brought in The Great Grinch, Jay Bilas, who said: “The competition still is going to be great. But the quality of play is not what it has been. We’ve still got outstanding players; we don’t have the tremendous superstars that are older that we used to have.”

Would it be good for athletes to stay for four years? Sure. Is it possible to restrict their professional ambitions? No. So what’s the point in the discussion?

The NCAA, as usual, can’t win. If you listen to the Drake Group, college sports is nothing but a minor league for the pros. If you listen to Michael Wilbon and Jay Bilas, the NCAA fails in basketball because it’s not a minor league for the pros.

My head spins.

Usually at times like this, women’s basketball provides the needed stabilization. But along comes Christine Brennan of USA Today, banging away at the NCAA for not supporting the Division I Women’s Basketball Championship.

Psst, women have hoops tourney, too

Brennan’s smoking gun appears to be the lack of an NCAA bracket contest for the women.

“March Madness is about basketball, of course, but to many it’s really about the brackets,” she wrote. “Quite a few top websites offer a men’s bracket contest, encouraging interactive participation. But the women? It’s few and far between. USA Today doesn’t have one. Nor does the NCAA, which tells us everything we need to know about how it views its two tournaments.”

Excuse me?

Of all things that the NCAA can be criticized for, the failure to support women’s sports would be way down the list. Male-female participation for NCAA championships is about 50-50 male-female, which is decidedly more equitable than the front page of USA Today on almost any day of the year. If she wants to fix the uneven promotion of women’s sports, she needs to do a lot more corner work on her own editors.

In the news: March 18

Schools don’t have to pursue big-time Division I sports; athletically gifted individuals shouldn’t be required to do so, either.

The institutional question was addressed in a David Moltz article in Inside Higher Ed in which he examined UC San Diego’s contemplated move from Division II to Division I.

Athletics Director Earl Edwards says that the overall profile of the university matches that of Division I more than it does Division II. That may be so, opponents say, but it ignores the fiscal crisis in California higher education that surrounds the examination.

A similar debate recently reached a conclusion in Nebraska, where officials at Nebraska-Omaha did choose to reclassify their successful Division II program to Division I. In so doing, the university announced that it was eliminating both its football and wrestling programs. The wrestling team learned of the decision just after it had won the Division II national championship.

The decision led to harsh words from Dennis Dodd of CBSSports.com.

Division I is taking action these days to control its ever-expanding membership. A membership moratorium is currently in place, and when it’s lifted, the cost of admission is going to be much higher than it was before. Will the seven-figure price tag deter new members? We’ll see.

But the bigger, harder, long-term question involves not the entry fee but rather the ongoing expense required to sustain a Division I program, especially a competitive one. Any institution choosing that route is in for a long fiscal pull (only 14 Division I programs generate revenues over expenses, when institutional subsidies are removed). Perhaps the image boost is worth it, but the cost over time is huge. That’s not opinion; that’s a fact.

As for the choices facing individuals…

Mass media is virtually crackling these days with op-ed pieces and blogs about the need to pay players. Here are three that showed up today, but there are others:

The Madness of not paying college athletes (Boyce Watkins, The Huffington Post)

Frontline digs into NCAA business (ESPN)

The final frontier in worker exploitation − the NCAA (Warren Meyer, Forbes)

If everybody agreed that student-athletes were workers, then these commentators would have a point. But they aren’t. They are students. The fact that large amounts of money can accrue from the enterprise does not change their role.

There’s no point here in rehashing the pros and cons of pay-for-play. If you’ve read this far, you already know them.

But if you’re looking for a fresh perspective about choices that should be available to all young athletes, I encourage you to read John Infante’s Bylaw Blog from yesterday, entitled “The Deal.”

My only regret is that I didn’t write it myself.

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