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Head in the sand (*NCAA Stupidity*)
Yahoo Sports ^ | August 19, 2005 | Dan Wetzel

Posted on 08/22/2005 11:07:58 AM PDT by Little_shoe

On Sept. 3, Georgia will host Boise State in football, the most anticipated game in Boise State history. Starting for Boise will be sophomore guard Tad Miller.

Tad's father, Dan, is a retired police lieutenant who currently works in Iraq training Iraqi police officers. Dan is planning to fly halfway around the world, at the cost of $2,700, to make the big game.

All of this was detailed in an Atlanta Journal-Constitution article last week and when Georgia fan Sam Hendrix read it online, he had an idea.

"It hit me that he shouldn't have to bear the cost of the flight," says Hendrix, a 57-year-old marketing consultant from Signal Mountain, Tenn. "I was struck by the fact that not only was he serving the country, but as a parent this might be the best athletic moment of his son's career."

So Hendrix posted on the message board on his favorite website, ugasports.com.

"I said, 'You know guys, let's all kick in $100, get 25-30 of us and pay this guy's way to Sanford Stadium in recognition of what he is doing for the country.'"

The response was overwhelming. Within minutes the money was pledged, not all $100 bids. Some Georgia undergrads offered $20 each. A few people only had $50 to spare. It was a community effort. A great idea. Everyone agreed.

Until someone posted a joke, "what if this is against NCAA rules?"

Someone checked with the compliance officers at both schools. Guess what?

"We were in violation of two NCAA rules," Hendrix says. Athletes are prohibited from having friends or family receive free travel. In theory, the rule makes sense; you can't have boosters flying a player's mom and dad in for games. Allowing such would provide an unfair advantage to the big schools that can afford it.

"I understand the intent of the rule," Hendrix says.

He just can't understand the NCAA. The rule is designed to stop boosters for helping out players for their team, not the other team. Tad Miller doesn't play for Georgia. He plays for Georgia's opponent.

Yet somehow, someway, by chipping in to this cause, all of those rabid Georgia fans who want nothing more than to beat Boise State somehow would have become official Boise State boosters.

And by showing respect and goodwill in paying Dan Miller's airfare, they would have put Boise State at risk of NCAA probation.

"If I had known it was that easy to get a team in trouble, I would have done this to Tennessee a long time ago," Hendrix jokes.

The NCAA has no official word on this as it only comments on actual rule violations, not speculative ones. The NCAA never ruled in this case because there was no case: The Georgia fans gave up so Boise wouldn't get sanctioned. It turns out Miller's airfare will be paid for by his company, which provides two trips home a year.

But Hendrix remains dismayed. The NCAA often gets things wrong it arrogantly thinks it is getting right. Hendrix would have violated the letter of a NCAA law, but certainly not its spirit. And as a serious college football fan, he knows many schools excel by doing the opposite: obeying the letter of the law but trampling fair play.

"It's pretty ludicrous," he says. "And this was in the week with the politically correct ruling banning Indian mascots. We've lost touch with reality. This is not what the NCAA should be involved in."

No it shouldn't. But it is. It always is. Almost two years after NCAA president Myles Brand vowed the culture would change, little has.

The NCAA is too busy making money and imposing its view of a politically correct society to make common-sense rulings in favor of Dan and Tad Miller.

It is spending time extending the football season to 12 games so players can pay for bloated campus salaries instead of accommodating an act of goodwill that benefits one of those players and his far-off father.

Simply put, it is so busy trying to do things it shouldn't do that it has no time left over for things it should.

"Of all the things," Hendrix says, "you wouldn't think helping out someone serving America in Iraq would be considered abnormal."

No, you wouldn't. But Myles Brand's NCAA would.

Dan Wetzel is Yahoo! Sports' national columnist. Send him a question or comment for potential use in a future column or webcast.


TOPICS: Sports
KEYWORDS: boisestate; college; collegefootball; football; georgia; georgiabulldogs; irag; ncaa; police; sports
I think that rules have a time and place. However there is also a time to break the rules. The NCAA is wrong for not allowing this act of Generosity from taking place. This on top of the mascot fascio shows all the NCAA cares about is the Bottom Line. Maybe they should worry about making sure players graduate with a useful degree. The last true bastion of amature athetics in Div 1 is the Service Academies. There players compete not for the hope of a future NFL contract but because of the pride of the school. Go Navy Beat Army....
1 posted on 08/22/2005 11:08:03 AM PDT by Little_shoe
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To: Little_shoe

This may not be terribly constructive, but I'm fed up beyond words. The NCAA eats it...Myles Brand is a serious tool...and RIP to the NIT.


2 posted on 08/22/2005 11:14:01 AM PDT by duffthor (Is it fishing time yet?)
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To: Little_shoe
Let's hear it for the ethnic cleansing of the NCAA! No more American Aboriginals allowed!
3 posted on 08/22/2005 11:19:53 AM PDT by John O (God Save America (Please))
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To: Little_shoe

My alma mater recently made the jump from DivII to DivI-AA in football, and I have really been enjoying Div1-AA football.


4 posted on 08/22/2005 1:45:30 PM PDT by SoDak
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To: Little_shoe

NCAA is a joke. No wonder kids want to make the leap directly to the pros. Hell, I'd bypass the NCAA too.


5 posted on 08/22/2005 1:48:01 PM PDT by Extremely Extreme Extremist
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To: Little_shoe

Actually they're wrong on one point, the rule exists to keep players from being paid, most of the NCAA rules revolve around that. Short of scholarships and that those imply NCAA athletes aren't allowed to receive any compensation. Yeah sometimes it sucks, OK most of the time it sucks, but thems the rules.


6 posted on 08/22/2005 1:49:14 PM PDT by discostu (When someone tries to kill you, you try to kill them right back)
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