Week in review: Nov. 8-12

National media feasted on comfort food for the week of Nov. 8, with familiar fare of media deals, eligibility and potential infractions dominating newspapers, blogs and websites. Commentators also revisted the familiar territory of pay-for-play:

Horns o’ plenty?: A website that exclusively follows the University of Texas athletics program reported Monday that Texas will receive $12 million per year in a deal with ESPN for distribution rights to a Longhorn Network starting in fall 2011.

Orangebloods.com reported that the agreement would include an up-front $10 million payment. USA Today said that with the addition of an anticipated $20 million from the Big 12, Texas would become the nation’s top revenue-producer for television rights, earning close to $30 million next year and more than $32 million beginning in 2012-13.

It’s a big deal, in every sense of the expression. As they say on the Texas promos, “What starts here changes the world.”

Pay-for-play brigade: The Cam Newton episode at Auburn this week set off an outburst of commentary to pay student-athletes in revenue-producing sports (the thinking apparently being that the Newton story, with an as-of-now uncertain set of facts, demonstrates the hopelessness and hypocrisy of the current system). The PPP proponents ranged from Ben Watanabe at LehighValley.com to National Public Radio’s Frank Deford, a perennial NCAA basher. Unrelated to Newton, a fresh round of opinion from Maryland basketball coach Gary Williams about athlete compensation showed up Wednesday on a basketball blog on About.com.

A personal observation: Writers should be more careful about what they mean when they say they want to “pay” student-athletes (Wantanbe deserves credit for making this distinction, even if we disagree about his conclusion). Do they mean market-based pay, as we do with the traditional notion of compensation, or do they mean provision of a stipend? They are entirely different concepts, and yet they too frequently are used interchangeably.

It’s worth noting that NCAA President Mark Emmert has raised the possibility of changing Division I financial aid packages so that they reflect the full cost-of-attendance. If the cost of attendance were covered, would that satisfy the provide-a-stipend crowd?

Kanter decision: The NCAA student-athlete reinstatement staff Thursday ruled that Kentucky basketball student-athlete Enes Kanter is permanently ineligible, based on payments above actual and necessary expenses when he played professional basketball in Turkey.

Whether people agree or disagree with the Kanter decision, they should remember that amateurism regulations have been shaped over the years through votes of NCAA member colleges and universities. The membership also has shaped the eligibility-review process, including the appeal to which Kanter remains entitled.

For those who are interested, NCAA.org’s Michelle Brutlag Hosick provides an overview of eligibility certification.

Conference realignment: The aftershocks: The official slogan of Fort Worth, Texas, is “Where the West Begins,” so it is more than a little ironic that the latest conference realignment chatter has hometown school TCU possibly considering membership in the Big East Conference.

North Dakota State and the Big Sky Conference also appear to be discussing a relationship.

There was actual action Thursday when the Western Athletic Conference, which was been repeatedly affected by Division I conference realignment, invited Texas State and UTSA as new members in all sports and Denver as a member in all sports but football. That action created buzz in the Northwest, where Seattle University had hoped to hook up with the WAC. Montana also had been reported to be in the WAC mix, but the Grizzlies remained with the Football Championship Subdivision’s Big Sky Conference.

Plus or minus $79 million: You’ll have to pay ESPN Insider to see Shaun Assael’s five lawsuits that could change the NCAA. However, the teaser to the story contains some serious misinformation when it states that the NCAA paid $84 million in legal fees last year. The most recent set of NCAA tax documents shows the Association paid about $5.1 million in legal fees in 2008-09. The same $84 million figure showed up two weeks ago on the SportsBizBlog.

Emmert faces the faculty: NCAA President Mark Emmert used the Faculty Athletics Representatives Association Fall Forum as the platform Thursday to deliver one of his first public speeches. The Chronicle of Higher Education captured several of his thoughts.

Call ’em as they are: Charleston (S.C.) Daily Mail columnist Jack Bogaczyk produced a good column Thursday on efforts to make basketball officiating more consistent nationwide.

“The idea,” prominent official Curtis Shaw told Bogaczyk, “is to referee the game the way the rules are written … call the game according to the rulebook. If a shooter’s elbow is hit, no matter the clock, it’s a foul. If you get into this ‘allow the players to decide the game’ stuff, the guy who committed the foul is deciding it.

“It’s not the job of the referees to choreograph the game. It’s their job to officiate the game. We’re going to hold officials accountable. The ones that are will be rewarded with big games and postseason tournaments. The ones that don’t, won’t.”

Recommended reading: The Nov. 8 issue of Sporting News contains an excellent interview with Michigan State men’s basketball coach Tom Izzo. An excerpt (discussing guard Kalin Lucas): “You have to continue to be a better teammate, be a better leader, because he’s quiet. Some people will say, ‘That’s just his personality.’ I get a kick out of those people. When a parent sends a kid to college, they want you to make him a better person, make him a better student. If he’s not a very good dribbler, make him a better dribbler. If he’s not strong enough, change his body. If his jump shot is broke, fix his jump shot. But if his personality is broke, leave it alone? That doesn’t make any sense to me.”

NCAA Insider is an occasional take on college sports issues, as viewed by NCAA communications staff member David Pickle. Opinions are his alone.

Week in review: Nov. 1-5

This was a busy, interesting and sad week around the college sports world. Let’s take a spin through the headlines:

BCS controversy redux: CBSSports.com reported Thursday that Utah’s attorney general met with Justice Department officials earlier in the week to discuss a possible federal investigation into college football’s Bowl Championship Series. The report said the Justice Department declined to comment on the meeting.

BCS Executive Director Bill Hancock said it was “hard to imagine a bigger waste of taxpayer money than to involve the government in college football.”

I don’t pretend to know the right answers about postseason football, but I can’t imagine how this seemingly endless controversy is helping the game.

Full cost of attendance: An item buried in Thursday’s Wall Street Journal didn’t attract much attention, but it seems notable: “Mark Emmert, the new president of the NCAA, said he’d be open to increasing the value of athletic grants-in-aid by perhaps $2,000 to $4,000, in order to cover the full cost of attending school. Doing so could help combat the problem of agents giving illegal benefits to players. ‘It’s not paying players; it’s covering the full cost of attendance,’ he said in an interview. But he’s adamant about not paying players. ‘They’re not employees; they’re students,’ he said.”

You make the call: The Chronicle of Higher Education this week noted that the the NCAA is considering creating a simulation of an NCAA investigation to help educate institutions and journalists on how the Association builds a case against an athletics program it believes may have run afoul of its rules. New Enforcement VP Julie Roe Lach said the “Enforcement Experience” would debut next year. Reporters and athletics officials would fill roles as NCAA investigators and members of the Division I Committee on Infractions in a mock case, Roe told the Chronicle.

This idea has its roots in the ultra-successful mock Division I basketball selections that the NCAA has sponsored now for several years. It’s a great approach, and everybody will benefit if influential media take part in this program, if it is launched. Exercises like this help achieve better understanding, which is good for the media, the NCAA and the public.

Testing the limits: It will be interesting to see how far websites can push their free-speech protections. Early in the week, Deadspin editor A.J. Daulerio told a sports media class in Indianapolis that he had no regrets about paying an informant for nude photos relating to the Brett Favre sexting scandal and then keeping the man’s identity secret. “That’s just how I operate,” he told the Indianapolis Star.

The Star noted that Deadspin’s work has been criticized by many major news outlets, but Daulerio told the class that “the payoff was much larger” since computer hits to the site quadrupled last month.

There’s some serious hubris there. It’s a bit reminiscent of the National Enquirer in the days preceding its Carol Burnett fiasco.

Spotlight on the faculty role: The role of the faculty athletics representative is one of those inside-baseball matters that isn’t likely to pique the interest of hard-core sports fans. But faculty reps do provide a vital role in the enterprise of college athletics, serving as the critical link between student-athletes’ educational and athletics experiences.

The Chronicle of Higher Education delivered a whopper of a package on faculty representatives, and I’m sure many faculty reps didn’t like what they read. Be that as it may, it’s a net gain for a prominent publication to actually pay attention to the function. Parts of the report are undeniably painful, and failures may be overstated (as in the main headline, “Faculty reps botch sports-oversight role”). But the package mainly illustrates the difficulties of the job while making a case that poor judgment or malfeasance in the function can be catastrophic.

Here’s the package (you’ll need to purchase if you’re not a Chronicle subscriber):

Same job, different views

Complaints and compromises lead to an abrupt departure

Former Alabama faculty rep describes his role in purported coverup

How to be an effective faculty athletics rep

Frequent flier: One faculty athletic rep’s busy schedule

Faculty reps botch sports-oversight role

Forever young: Finally, last week was notable because of sad news. A little more than a month ago, Nick Bell was the starting defensive end for Mississippi State. He experienced headaches in late September, was diagnosed with a brain tumor, was operated on Oct. 1 and died Tuesday.

Meanwhile, Notre Dame student videographer Declan Sullivan was buried Monday. Sullivan died last week after falling from a tower while taping a Notre Dame football practice in a windstorm.

I know everybody hopes their families can find peace in these worst of times.

NCAA Insider is an occasional take on college sports issues, as viewed by NCAA communications staff member David Pickle. Opinions are his alone.

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