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NCAA makes major overhaul to college basketball rules, still misses on core issue

NCAA Basketball
Photo: Las Vegas Review Journal

The more often than not corrupt and crooked NCAA has taken some steps to be less of the sort, specifically within the sport of college basketball. These sweeping changes come amid a FBI investigation into the seedy recruiting practices from some Universities that included the exchange of money, goods and in some cases sexual favors such as what we saw at Louisville.

The changes announced Wednesday focus on basketball’s bylaws, the recruiting calendar plus further legislation that will provide more entitlements to student athletes.

However the biggest changes are outlined by the following (via CBS Sports):

In addition to the player entitlements the NCAA will look to implement harsher penalties for programs that could include five-year postseason bans, suspensions for coaches that can last longer than a year and lifetime bans for level-one show cause violations. Whatever that means

Furthermore the perception of the NCAA seemingly doing the right thing here, which it is most certainly a step in the right direction there’s always some fine print and ambiguity with what the NCAA is laying out.

First It’s assumed the NCAA will determine who ‘elite prospects’ will ultimately be. That in and of itself should be pretty interesting to see how that works out on both ends in terms of the players and NCAA.

Second, not that it’s any kind of fine print but the NCAA is making sure they have even greater oversight when it comes to investigations into potential violators. CBS put it as the NCAA trying to institute a de facto version of subpoena power when it comes to just about every aspect of a University to comply with any future investigations.

Finally when it comes to coaches they will now have to report all income they receive from sports apparel companies. Furthermore the NCAA says they are “pursuing an agreement” with those companies to promote a more transparent environment.

Transparency and the NCAA… how ironic.

Ultimately though what these new rules and entitlements fail to touch though is the idea of paying players or allowing them to benefit from their likeness. Until that happens we’re going to continue to have problems when it comes to violations something no rule can fully extinguish no matter how strict the punishment. And before anyone starts going on about amateur athletics and scholarships, the NCAA and what they helped create is so far behind amateurism. The NCAA essentially prints money at the expense of the players and have been doing so for far too long without being held accountable. And I’m not saying something needs to get done overnight but the NCAA has been extremely reluctant to even have the conversation.

So are these new changes a start to paving the way for fair compensation for the players? Possibly but we also have to be real with all of this. What these new rules actually provide the NCAA is just another way to de-incentivize players and coaches from pursuing their own marketing deals. And if they do the NCAA has implemented ways for the punishments to be far stricter.

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