Knight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics

Knight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics

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COMMISSION REPORTS

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Keeping Faith with the Student Athlete
The Knight Commission's Groundbreaking Report

A Call to Action
A Call to Action: Reconnecting College Sports and Higher Education

COMMISSION MEETINGS

PUBLISHED OP-EDS

Miami Herald
Feb. 4, 2007

Indianapolis Star
Apr. 2, 2006

COMMISSIONED RESEARCH AND POLLS

WHITE PAPERS

Athletics Recruiting and Academic Values: Enhancing Transparency, Spreading Risk and Improving Practice
University of Georgia Institute for Higher Education

Challenging the Myth
A Review of the Links Among College Athletic Success, Student Quality and Donations by Robert H. Frank

Executive Summary Division I-A Postseason History and Status

Division I-A Postseason History and Status
by John Sandbrook

NCAA sued (again) over scholarship limits

According to a story on ESPN.com, three former Division I athletes are suing the NCAA because of its rules limiting scholarships to tuition, room, board, books, and fees. The lawsuit alleges that the NCAA’s limits violate federal antitrust laws.
The lawsuit, according to ESPN reporter Tom Farrey, claims that “"While big-time college sports have become a huge commercial enterprise generating billions in annual revenues, the NCAA and its member institutions do not allow student athletes the share of the revenues that they would obtain in a more competitive market...by denying athletes the benefits of competition, the [grant-in-aid] cap has imposed a lower standard of living and significant hardships on many student athletes.”
Periodically, the NCAA has discussed raising scholarship limits to cover the full cost of attendance, including travel to and from college, personal expenses, and other necessary items for college students. Colleges have argued, however, that doing so would be ruinously expensive for some colleges, particularly those with higher costs of attendance.
Practically every year, somebody files a lawsuit against the NCAA on antitrust grounds. Most of these are dismissed, but they are watched closely. If the NCAA were to lose a suit like this, the damages would run into the tens of millions of dollars and might force major changes in NCAA rules.
What do you think of this story? Do the athletes have a legitimate beef, or is the NCAA on firm ground in this lawsuit?

Posted on 2/21/06 in StudentsMediaEducatorsPermalink

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