Friday, December 3, 2010

Tip of the hat to E. Gordon Gee; NCAA ruling on Cam Newton puts me on the same side with Delany and Vaccaro, opens Pandora’s Box

I’m a big believer in giving credit where it is due. So today, I tip my hat—if not my bowtie—to E. Gordon Gee, the president of Ohio State. I was one of many people who ripped Gee in the last week after he ridiculously claimed that neither TCU nor Boise State was worthy of playing for a national title even if they finished undefeated. In what struck me—and others—as a blatant attempt to make sure the 66 BCS schools kept as much of the power, money and control as possible in college football, Gee came out with some blather about how teams in the BCS Conferences play a murderer’s row schedule and don’t play The Little Sisters of the Poor.

Actually, many of them do. And they all play them at home.

I wrote a column ripping Gee and making fun of him for being pretentious. Others did the same thing. Here’s how Gee responded: He told the Columbus Dispatch he never should have opened his mouth on the subject, that he didn’t know what he was talking about and that he was going to have his foot surgically removed from his mouth. He also said he had sent a contribution to The Little Sisters of the Poor.

Good for him. How often have you heard a college president not only admit he was wrong about something but say it in such a self-deprecating way. If this was a PR move it was a good one. If it is genuine, all the better.

Gee went at least one step further. Yesterday afternoon I received an e-mail from him in which he basically repeated what he had told The Dispatch. It included the words, “Lesson learned.” He then went on to say he was an admirer of my work and would love to sit down and talk to me at some point in the future. First of all the guy clearly has good taste in writing. More important though, the fact that he would write to me at all is remarkable: I hammered him, made fun of his first name and wrote that he needed to shut up. He writes back that I’m right and wants to get together.

This is not exactly the way Tiger Woods or Bob Knight react to criticism. (Tiger fans: there’s your Tiger shot for the day; enjoy).

I wrote back to Gee and thanked him for the note and told him I’d be happy to get together with him. Then I said this: “I would love to be able to convince you to open your mouth again—but this time in favor of a playoff which would be good for the young men who play college football; good for everyone financially and, yes, good for the players in their roles as students.”

No, I’m not holding my breath on getting that done but if Gee is willing to listen I’m (surprise) willing to talk.

Now, on to another college football topic: The Cam Newton ruling is scary on a lot of levels. Let me say this first: I recognize, as most of us do, how colleges exploit players and make millions off of stars like Newton. I’ve said for years there should be some kind of trust fund set up for players on ANY team that makes a school money and players should be able to withdraw their share—which over four or five years could be fairly substantial—the day they graduate. Yes, graduate. Those who leave school early to make NFL or NBA millions don’t need the money; those who aren’t going to be football or basketball superstars do need it and this would be a decent incentive to graduate.

That’s another issue for another day. Today’s issue is the Newton ruling. Here’s what scares me most about it: I find myself reading quotes from Big Ten commission Jim (Voldemort) Delany and long-time shoe salesman/player broker Sonny Vaccaro and nodding my head and saying, ‘uh-huh, they’re right.”

The day I agree with Jim Delany and Sonny Vaccaro the apocalypse truly is upon us. Delany, who used to work in the NCAA enforcement office, points out that rules on eligibility make it clear that if someone acting on behalf of an athlete breaks rules, the athlete can—and probably should—be held accountable. The NCAA reinstatement committee chose to take the narrowest view possible on this: the sins of the father should not be visited upon the son.

In principle that sounds nice but as Vaccaro points out, this opens an unbelievably deep Pandora’s Box. From this day forward, all anyone—father, mother, coach, street-agent, sister, cousin, aunt—need do is say to a star athlete, “you decide where you want to go and we’ll take care of the rest.” As long as the athlete can claim he didn’t know what’s going on, he’s free and clear. The minute the NCAA rules in the future that someone is ineligible because someone asked for money on their behalf, there’s going to be a lawsuit based on, ‘The Cam Newton Rule.’

If the NCAA is going to take this view, it might just as well throw the towel in and say, ‘pay ‘em all.’ Now some of you out there will say that’s great, that’s the way to go anyway. Only it’s not that simple. If you think college athletics is an arms race now, imagine what will happen if the doors are opened to having players go to the highest bidder.

You think Butler will play in the national championship game anytime soon? You think Boise State will ever have a top ten team again? No. College athletics will simply be about who can get the most money out of wealthy boosters to pay players. Heck, it is already that way to some extent but you let all those folks out of the closet with no deterrent at all for paying players and you can kiss that lovely first weekend of the NCAA Tournament when Winthrop beats Notre Dame and VCU beats Duke goodbye.

The NCAA didn’t want Newton to sit out the SEC Championship game because, in spite of its claims to the contrary, it IS in cahoots with the BCS and it doesn’t want TCU in the championship game. USC Athletic Director Pat Haden (correctly) asks why Reggie Bush got nailed and Newton did not. The answer is simple: Bush is no longer of any value to the NCAA. Newton is. Don’t be stunned if sometime in the next year or two the NCAA comes back and says, ‘wait, we now believe Cam Newton knew what his dad was up to—return all the trophies.’

That’s NCAA justice: it twists and bends the way it needs to twist and bend. Newton and Auburn are fortunate the NCAA needs Newton playing—at least for the moment.

I’m also baffled by my friend Bill Rhoden’s column in today’s New York Times. Bill argues that even though Cecil Newton put his son up for sale, he’s still a good man, just one who used poor judgment. To me, trying to turn your kid into a human ATM machine—whether he knows you’re doing it or not—goes way beyond poor judgment.

In this case, it has done the impossible: put Jim Delany, Sonny Vaccaro and me on the same side of an issue. I’m not sure which of the three of us finds that most frightening.

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

John,

I am very pleased that you got to see the Dr. Gee that those of us who know him or have worked with him, see everyday. He is not only the smartest man I have ever known, he is also one the nicest, funniest and is as you discovered, a good sport. I was stunned by the continued use of the word "pretentious? in the many articles written about him as he is quite the opposite and his apology reflected that.

Any chance you could send this over to ESPN where he is still be skewered even after his mea culpa?

John from Indiana said...

OK, I will admit that this is not a comment as much as a question. Last year in the NCAA basketball tournament, that we all have come to love, little known and regarded Butler made a Cinderella jaunt through the brackets and ended up coming within a whisker of upsetting the mighty Duke Blue Devils in a championship game watched by millions. What a story that all of basketball, including CBS, played to the hilt. Who is so stupid among the BCS people that a similar story could not be exploited for similar human interest value? I might understand a championship game with TWO of those teams, but one just makes things David and Goliath all over again, and who doesn't love that story?

Unknown said...

I read your column about Dr. Gee (Mr. Gee in Timespeak) and while I agreed with your premise (about a playoff and the collusion of big schools with the BCS) I wondered, as I sometimes do, why you have to be so mean? If you make fun of, demean, etc., someone like the owner of the Redskins I think we can all draw our own conclusions. But here you gave the full treatment to a guy I've never heard of for something stupid he said, and it really makes me wonder more about your judgement than his (though, for sure, I questioned his judgement for saying what he did). To be clear: I love the mean, funny stuff about well-known, powerful people. I just wonder if perhaps you put Gee in the Lebron (or Tiger) category without giving it enough thought.

Mr. X said...

John,

You are agreeing with Delany and Vaccaro on the same day Kornheiser hitches his wagon to Krauthammer.

I know you're a big radio listener. Have you heard Paul Finebaum's show out of Birmingham? Given all their coverage of the Newton saga, including the FBI angle, something really smells in Opelika.

Maybe the best way to blow up the BCS (and Heisman Trophy) is to eventually have this season's BCS title vacated along the stiff arm trophy. If Pat Haden could live up to his reputation, USC would have vacated their BCS bauble as well.

Rich Cain said...

I think if we want college sports to truly be amateurs, then the NCAA should take only enough money from broadcasters to keep the doors open.

However, I think the concept of amateurism is antiquated and probably always was a sham. I have no problem with players getting whatever they can get. Why shouldn't a player be allowed to endorse products or make money off of his/her name? And a player certainly should be able to lend his name to a charity if he feels the need. Remember Steve Alford getting suspended for that charity calendar?

I don't think most schools would have the wherewithal to create an arms race. Maybe a handful. But there could be limits placed on the number of players allowed on a roster. Does a football team really need 85-100 players? The NFL doesn't seem to suffer from smaller rosters. Limiting the roster sizes would spread talent around even further. I think we would still see some smaller schools rise up on occasion. Basketball would be another story as the rosters are already relatively small. Maybe limiting the roster to twelve would be a start.

Coaches leveraging teenagers into multi-million dollar contracts and referring to agents as pimps is a very high form of hypocrisy. From a moral standpoint, I don't think it's right to limit a person's earning potential; especially for another person's financial exploitation.

sanford said...

John,

Did you read the Sports Illustrated article about how schools lose money going to the Bowl games? The authors said there should be a playoff.

Your friend Bill Hancock wrote a letter in response. He said the bowl experience would be ruined because a playoff would be like a business trip. He also said many bowls would go out of business. How ludicrous.

Logan said...

Big props to you (just like Gee) for giving him credit for his apology.

Can someone tell me why we cannot have bowls and a playoff? You can always name the playoff games like bowls.

Also, the NCAA tourney didn't eliminate the NIT. No one says the teams not in the playoff cannot play in a bunch of bowls leading up to the big playoff either.

Its like we've all decided we can have one or the other, nothing more. It doesnt have to be that way.

Momus said...

Funny, my mom always told me that claiming ignorance was no excuse under the eyes of the law.

The way the NCAA bends over backwards to protect its own interests (e.g. in this case, to do everything it can to ensure Auburn will play in the BCS title game) always reminds me of the great Tark quote: the NCAA was SO mad at the violations committed by the Kentucky basketball program that it is going to place Cleveland State on probation for another three years.

Bo Smolka said...

John -- I totally agree. My guess is by 2015, Auburn's title (should they win) will have been vacated, and TCU will never have gotten the shot they deserved to play in the title game. The NCAA will come out with one big "OOPS, sorry TCU"...

Anonymous said...

I'm not a fan of Auburn, the BCS or the NCCA but you omitted a huge difference between the Newton and Bush scandals -- Bush's family received huge benefits while Newton's (as far as we know) did not. You can certainly argue that this should be irrelvant but to omit it entirely is sloppy analysis, in my opinion. Also, I second the criticism of your personal attacks on Dr. Gee. You should show the same character traits of Dr. Gee and apologize for attacking him too personally. You're better than that, John.