“I have been vocal in the past regarding the need for integrity by NCAA member schools, athletics administrators, coaches and student-athletes,” Emmert said. “That same commitment to integrity applies to all of us in the NCAA national office.
(From an ESPN.com story yesterday.)
One of the things that Dr. Mark Emmert, the current president of the NCAA, is big on is integrity and accountability. Remember, this is the person who unilaterally punished Penn State University for the institutional issues that plagued the upper university administration in their mishandling and covering up of the Jerry Sandusky situation on campus.
So it is safe to say that Emmert is a big believer in responsibility and making sure that the right thing is done in all circumstances. After all, as he said yesterday, the NCAA has to act with integrity.
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Isn’t NCAA making head coaches, those in charge, responsible for assistants’ actions? Uh, Mr. Emmert, about this happening on your watch…
— Jay Bilas (@JayBilas) January 23, 2013
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- There was a shambolic investigation into Auburn and the recruitment of Cam Newton that ended with Newton being suspended and reinstated in about 25 minute because Cam didn’t commit the violations, but his father did.
- There was the allowing the Ohio State football players who had sold their gold pants to play in the Sugar Bowl (aka the “Tattoo Five”) because to not allow them to play would have hurt the Sugar Bowl somehow, so they were granted a special waiver to be allowed to play.
- Former USC assistant Todd McNair, the fall guy in the Reggie Bush case, was able to get a court to admit that the NCAA investigators violated their own rules in handling the investigation into McNair. The judge refused to throw out a lawsuit that McNair has filed against the NCAA.
- Emmert himself unilaterally decided to punish Penn State’s football program for the crimes committed by Jerry Sandusky and the inaction of former Penn State football coach Joe Paterno, former athletic director Dr. Tim Curley and former president Dr. Graham Spanier. The punishment meted out by Emmert, the harshest given to an insitution since the death penalty placed on SMU, was for a perceived lack of institutional control. The problem is that Emmert used powers that, well, upon a reading of the rules, don’t really seem to exist.
Yes, investigators have been fired. The investigator from the Muhammed case referenced above has been relieved of duties, as has the person who apparently retained Shapiro’s attorney from the Miami case.
Although on the heels of the latest trumpeting of change in the NCAA enforcement arm, in which coaches are to be held accountable for the actions of their subordinates, isn’t it fair to hold Emmert to the same standard?
NCAA’s Emmert: “In my 2+ years I’ve certainly never seen anything like this, and don’t want to see it again.” Boy, he sure says that a lot.
— Jay Bilas (@JayBilas) January 24, 2013
//platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsGiven the spate of Level I and II violations that the enforcement arm seems to be committing of late, maybe a zero based review of the rulebook is not enough.
Sometimes, you have to blow it all up and start over. A mass change needs to occur, and that change should probably start at the top.

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