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Opinion from a Libertarian ViewPoint

Posts Tagged ‘NCAA’

Why can’t we tell the truth about Lia Thomas?

Posted by M. C. on March 28, 2022

But acquiescing linguistically makes it more difficult for women to defend their rights. Once it is sown into our language that identity is more important than biology, it is hard to insist upon single-sex spaces. 

In her statement  Reka Gyorgy is all for Lia Thomas. Reka’s problem is Reka got bumped. But what should we expect from the an education system whose main concerns are safe rooms, trigger words and personal pronouns.

JOANNA WILLIAMS
COLUMNIST

Lia Thomas, the swimmer who won a US women’s national college championship event last week, is a man. It is because he is a man – with a body that is taller, broader and stronger than his female competitors – that he won the NCAA competition. When swimming alongside other men, which Thomas used to do, he ranked an unremarkable 554th in the college league tables.

Without knowing that Thomas is a man, it is hard to understand why his victory has been so controversial and sparked headlines all around the world. It is impossible to comprehend the anger of champion swimmer Reka Gyorgy, denied a place in the freestyle final thanks to Thomas’s inclusion. A man prevented women competitors, including an Olympic medalist, from receiving the titles they had earned. His presence made the competition fundamentally unjust.

Yet the language used to describe Thomas’s victory makes it difficult to grasp the reality of what happened last week at the McAuley Aquatic Center in Atlanta, Georgia. Everywhere, in almost every print and online publication, Thomas is referred to as ‘she’. We are told that ‘she’ stood on the podium to receive ‘her’ medal. The US National Women’s Law Center, tweeted in support of Thomas and branded critics ‘misogynists’. To the Guardian, Thomas is a ‘transgender woman’, while the BBC suggests Thomas is the ‘first known transgender athlete to win [the] NCAA swimming title’ (the implication being there may have been plenty of other transgender swimming champions, but we’ve just never heard of them).

This use of language is not just confusing – it is deliberately misleading. ‘She’ and ‘her’ are pronouns that are supposed to denote women. Statements like ‘she swam for the Pennsylvanian men’s team’, which appears in the BBC’s report, are illogical. Yet even most of those criticising Thomas, or the NCAA for allowing him to compete, use the pronouns ‘she’ and ‘her’. At best, clumsy labels refer to Thomas as ‘male-bodied’ and criticise the fact ‘she’ was allowed to compete alongside ‘female-bodied’ people, or ‘biological women’. But this suggests clarification is necessary, that the labels ‘man’ and ‘woman’ are no longer good enough descriptors on their own. Even the phrase ‘transgender woman’ is deceptive. When used in conjunction with ‘she’ and pitched against ‘cis’ women, it suggests there are two different but equivalent categories of womanhood – trans women and ‘biological’ women.

Playing fast and loose with language in this way, making it bend to match political objectives and social niceties, ends up distorting our perception of reality. If ‘she’ takes first place in a women’s event, nothing remarkable has occurred. Our capacity to push back and challenge the reality before our eyes – a man beating women – is then seriously thwarted.

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Erie Times E-Edition Article-Thanks to court, NCAA’s era of exploiting college athletes is ending

Posted by M. C. on July 5, 2021

What about taxpayer exploitation?

Why does The Godfather and Don Corleone’s desire to go legit come to mind?

For some reason I think even though the NCAA is a business and athletes are their employees, you and I will still be paying the tab. Just a lot more.

I wonder how wrestlers, gymnasts and volley ball players comp will compare to football and basketball. Will no wage gaps be allowed?

https://erietimes-pa-app.newsmemory.com/?publink=0fd1d6c5b_1345e35

Joe Nocera

Columnist The dam has broken. College athletes are going to be paid – eventually. And it’s about time.

The Supreme Court last month confirmed unanimously that the National Collegiate Athletic Association is a business that has to conform to the same antitrust rules as any other business. That means its days of operating a multibillion-dollar industry on the backs of an unpaid labor force – the players – are dwindling rapidly.

The issue in NCAA v. Alston, which was argued before the court in March, was narrower than we NCAA critics might have liked. In 2019, a district court judge, Claudia Wilken, ruled that although the NCAA might justifiably limit player compensation for their athletic activities, it could not limit benefits that were related to their education – anything from money for extra tutoring to a post-graduate internship. Both sides appealed, but the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit upheld Wilken’s ruling.

The players chose not to appeal to the Supreme Court — a mistake, it turns out. The NCAA, however, did appeal, arguing as it has so many times in the past — before both federal courts and the court of public opinion — that the essence of college sports was ‘amateurism’ and that any move to pay the players would destroy it. That fact meant that the courts should judge its actions ‘under an extremely deferential standard,’ as Justice Neil Gorsuch put it in his decision.

Why would the NCAA take such a stance? Because for more than half a century, it had convinced the country – and itself – that amateurism was a force for good and that players who took money were cheaters who should be deprived of their athletic eligibility. But as the world changed — as money poured into college sports, enriching coaches and athletic directors and conference commissioners — so did the conventional wisdom about paying players. What didn’t change with the times was the NCAA’s hardline stance. It came to the Supreme Court armed with arguments that had lost their potency.

In his decision, Gorsuch used the explicit language of antitrust to describe the NCAA. ‘Put simply,’ he wrote, ‘this suit involved admitted horizontal price fixing in a market where the defendants exercise monopoly control.’ For decades, the NCAA has relied on a 1984 Supreme Court decision — a decision it lost — as a legal justification for not paying college players. Gorsuch mocked that rationale. He went down the list of the NCAA’s arguments, one after another, and left them in shreds. He concluded, as both Judge Wilken and the 9th Circuit did, that the NCAA’s compensation rules, at least as they apply to education, violate antitrust laws. This has been true, of course, since the 1950s, but hey, better late than never.

So where does that leave us? First, more than a dozen states have passed laws allowing college athletes to cash in on their names, images and likenesses. The NCAA’s effort to control the process has thankfully failed; it tried to come up with its own NIL rules but got nowhere. An attempt to pass a bill in Congress that would preempt the state laws has also stalled. In all likelihood, every state will pass an NIL bill by the time football season starts. (Heaven forbid they lose prized recruits to another state because they don’t have an NIL bill.) The NCAA will have no choice but to go along. So that’s one form of compensation.

A second form of compensation will be the education-related benefits the Supreme Court just upheld. But that is hardly going to be the end of it. In his decision, Gorsuch mentioned several times that the court was only being asked to rule on the validity of the educational benefits Judge Wilken had ordered. His implication was that if the players had appealed — and had asked that all compensation limits be ruled illegal — they might well have prevailed.

In a concurring opinion, Justice Brett Kavanaugh practically pleaded for someone to bring another antitrust suit against the NCAA so the court could rule against amateurism once and for all. ‘I add this concurring opinion to underscore that the NCAA’s remaining compensation rules also raise serious questions under the antitrust laws,’ he wrote. His last paragraph could have been lifted directly from a speech by Sonny Vaccaro, Jay Bilas or Taylor Branch – any of the early critics of the NCAA’s amateurism rules. I quote it in full:

‘To be sure, the NCAA and its member colleges maintain important traditions that have become part of the fabric of America — game days in Tuscaloosa and South Bend; the packed gyms in Storrs and Durham; the women’s and men’s lacrosse championships on Memorial Day weekend; track and field meets in Eugene; the spring softball and baseball World Series in Oklahoma City and Omaha; the list goes on. But those traditions alone cannot justify the NCAA’s decision to build a massive money-raising enterprise on the backs of student athletes who are not fairly compensated. Nowhere else in America can businesses get away with agreeing not to pay their workers a fair market rate on the theory that their product is defined by not paying their workers a fair market rate. And under ordinary principles of antitrust law, it is not evident why college sports should be any different. The NCAA is not above the law.’

I’ve seen a few tweets noting that if both Kavanaugh and Sonia Sotomayor oppose your arguments, maybe you need a new approach. But I think of this decision in a somewhat different way. The NCAA’s refusal to allow the players to be paid has always been a blatant antitrust violation, one that should have been easy to spot by liberals and conservatives alike.

But for too long, we allowed ourselves to be blinded by the NCAA’s rhetoric. What the court’s 9-0 decision shows is that we are finally looking at the NCAA with eyes wide open.

Joe Nocera is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering business.

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Erie Times E-Edition Article-CWS debacle could be new normal

Posted by M. C. on June 27, 2021

A disaster? This is baseball we are talking about. The only disaster will be to NC State’s and sports writers bottom line.

If a free person chooses not to be a guinea pig the largest medical experiment in history, I say more power to them. The NCAA can write any rules they want. If that includes mandating chemical injections in order to play, acquiescence is up to the athlete’s discretion.

Once past the high school level big time sports is all about big time money. Sports is just another branch of the entertainment industry. If unvaxxed NC State players are banned from participation this is likely a blessing in disguise. They can concentrate on, get this, getting an education and doing something constructive.

https://erietimes-pa-app.newsmemory.com/?publink=0fc571549_1345de7

Dan Wolken

Columnist USA TODAY There is nothing satisfying about a baseball team’s season ending via a vague press release just after 2 a.m. on the day they were supposed to be playing Vanderbilt for a spot in the College World Series championship.

But in our still fraught world of COVID-19 and its intersection with sports, it cannot be too surprising that NC State found itself in such a horrible position Saturday, having been tested and contact traced to the point where the NCAA was forced to remove them from the tournament.

This situation is particularly ominous right now, at a time when a large number of college and professional athletes are still refusing to be vaccinated, risking not just their own and other people’s health but putting teammates in position to suffer the kind of consequences that cost the Wolfpack a chance to win a national championship.

Regardless of how you feel about the vaccine, the protocols that local governments have put in place, the NCAA, any professional league, the CDC, Dr. Fauci or whatever politician of your choosing, this is how it’s going to go for the foreseeable future. Don’t want to get vaccinated? Your choice. But understand what you’re risking: A positive test that, at any time, could ensnare others and wreck historic seasons.

Maybe NC State’s unvaccinated players who triggered this situation – two of them tested positive, according to a report from d1baseball.com – were well aware of that risk the entire time. But it sure didn’t seem like vaccination was a big priority or talking point for coach Elliott Avent, who said in a news conference Friday that encouraging players to get the vaccine wasn’t in his job description.

He also told a reporter who asked whether he was vaccinated that he didn’t want to talk politics, which shows you how off the rails this entire thing has gotten when a life-saving vaccine is now assumed to be part of the political polarization discourse.

‘My job is to teach them baseball and make sure they get an education and keep them on the right track but I don’t try to indoctrinate my kids with my values or my opinions,’ Avent said. ‘We talk about a lot of things but these are young men that can make their own decisions.’

Indoctrination? C’mon, coach. Not only is that disingenuous on its face – Which college coach has ever said it’s not part of their job to teach life lessons and impart good values? – it’s just plain dumb.

And it’s going to get dumber as the year goes on because, at least anecdotally, there are still a lot of football teams both at the college and NFL levels struggling to get most of their players vaccinated. In fact, according to some college administrators I’ve spoken with, there are a significant number of teams haven’t even hit 50% – which means they’re entering the season with a competitive disadvantage.

The biggest takeaway from the College World Series should be that NC State isn’t a fluke event. It’s the canary in the coal mine for what we’re likely to see this fall as football teams with low vaccination rates see positive tests pop up, sidelining unvaccinated and perhaps some vaccinated players who did the responsible thing and still got unlucky.

And yes, there are plenty of examples so far of vaccinated athletes testing positive because the science tells us that vaccinated people could indeed have a small amount of the virus in their system and not get sick from it.

We’ve seen that with multiple New York Yankees testing positive early in the season, Phoenix Suns guard Chris Paul missing playoff games despite being vaccinated and now reportedly four NC State players who were vaccinated.

But the key thing to remember as we go forward is that vaccinated players at the College World Series weren’t being regularly tested until the unvaccinated players started testing positive.

For the next several months and potentially longer than that, there isn’t going to be any other way to conduct team sports. If you’re vaccinated, you don’t have to be tested if you’re not feeling sick. If you’re unvaccinated, you’re going to be tested all the time because you could be at significantly more risk of getting sick yourself or spreading the virus.

That’s the deal we’re going to have to make to get back to normal. It’s a pretty reasonable one, particularly within the context of a team that is sharing locker rooms, traveling together, eating together and practicing in close proximity.

Nobody wants a repeat of the 2020 season when a lot of teams, particularly in college, had so many positive cases that they fell below the threshold to conduct practices or safely play in games. The schedule was pure chaos, and some teams could never get on track because of the lack of bodies.

Amazingly, we have a way out of that: A vaccine that is safe and widely available. And yet, a certain percentage of athletes – many of whom take all kinds of supplements and powders to enhance their performance, no questions asked – are going to make the conscious choice not to take it.

We’ve now seen the consequences when that choice is applied to a team concept. It’s not just the unvaccinated players that pay the price, but the vaccinated players, too.

The awful situation with NC State this weekend didn’t have to happen. But it seems almost certain it’s going to happen again and again.

North Carolina State players, including Sam Highfill, right, wait in and around the dugout during a delay due to COVID-19 safety protocols before playing against Vanderbilt on Friday. Rebecca S. Gratz/AP

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Cracks widen in NCAA’s transparent pretense of amateurism

Posted by M. C. on November 17, 2019

The only amateurs in amateur sports are the amateurs that think amateur sports are amateur.

Even as a dumb 60’s kid I thought it odd the money making World Cup skiers were the same supposed amateurs that compete in the Olympics.

Amateur college athletics, NBA players in the Olympics, it is all a very thinly veiled facade.

I wonder how (Olympic) sports (track and field in particular) would be viewed by the millennial snowflakes if they knew these were originally war “games”. I wonder how many participants know.

The NCAA, the Inspector Clouseau of virtue enforcement, might ponder the lament of a few University of Louisville students and alumni:
http://erietimes.pa.newsmemory.com/?publink=1ddee104b

George Will

Another college basketball season has begun, as has a new chapter in a debate that is more wholesome than its subject: the academiasports complex. Between now and March Madness – the NCAA basketball tournament whose broadcast rights reap about $1 billion a year – millions of people will be entertained by vertically unusual “student-athletes.” Some of them are accurately described as such, but all are so described because of prudence in the service of cupidity.

As college athletes generate billions for others, the debate concerns the policy whereby the recipients of the revenue refuse to allow the players even a modest trickle of the torrent of money. The refusers say that their determination to hoard the wealth is altruism in defense of virtue. Really.

“Student-athletes” is a denotation concocted to insulate institutions of higher education from the potentially costly conclusion that their remunerative, but essentially unremunerated, athletes are university employees eligible for workers’ compensation when injured, and for other rights and benefits. Now, however, there is a serpent in the NCAA’s garden, where the head gardener is nicely compensated: In 2017, NCAA President Mark Emmert’s net pay was $2.9 million. He is paid to keep pristine the amateur status of young athletes who, like all athletes, have a small window for earning from their perishable talents.

The serpent is a California law, which 14 other states are already thinking about emulating. It forbids schools to prohibit their athletes from earning money from endorsements and some other services. In response, the NCAA has rushed to stall – allowing athletes to profit from their names and images, details to follow. This is a small but widening fissure in the NCAA’s crumbling wall of resistance to allowing athletes to be among those who profit from their talents.

A horrified Sen. Richard Burr from basketball-mad North Carolina – Burr is a Republican – has proposed a punitive tax on the scholarships of athletes who try to take such advantage of the free market. Evidently profiting from young people’s talents is only for older adults, such as the 39 football and basketball coaches who are the highest paid public employees in their states. Including in Burr’s state, where UNC’s basketball coach is projected to make $4.1 million this year, a tad more than its football coach.

Two years ago, the NCAA shrugged when a sevenyear investigation – the Warren Commission’s investigation of President John F. Kennedy’s assassination took fewer than 10 months – found that for almost two decades UNC administered a “shadow curriculum” of 188 fake classes, about half of them taken by athletes. The NCAA essentially said: Not our problem, the fraud was academic, not athletic, because some nonathletes took the courses.

Ohio State defensive end Chase Young might still win the Heisman Trophy as 2019’s premier college football player, which would have a significant cash value when he heads for the NFL. But his chances of winning it were damaged when he was suspended for two games. (He will return in time for Midwest Armageddon, aka the Nov. 30 Michigan game.) Young’s sin? Perhaps having a less-than-affluent family. He borrowed money from a “family friend” to pay living expenses and repaid the loan last summer. The NCAA’s more than 400 pages of arcane rules – they are compounds of complexity and vagueness – suggest that this loan might be an infraction. If Young’s family were affluent enough to support him, or if he were paid for the services he renders in the 102,780seat OSU stadium (three other college stadiums seat more), he would not have landed in hot water.

The NCAA, the Inspector Clouseau of virtueenforcement, might ponder the lament of a few University of Louisville students and alumni: A court recently said, sensibly, that they cannot sue the prostitute who wrote a book about her “services” for the school’s basketball players and prospective recruits. The litigious students and alumni say her book has exposed them to public ridicule when they wear Louisville’s logo.

A multibillion-dollar entertainment industry insinuated into higher education is a permanent invitation to ridicule. And paying players money commensurate with their value-added would open a Pandora’s box of new mischiefs, from recruiting to assigning value to the anonymous left tackle who protects the glittering quarterback, and saving crumbs for the volleyball teams. But what exists is a cafeteria of embarrassments.

When March Madness’ winning players cut down the nets, they will do so atop (The Bulwark’s Tim Miller reports) a Werner ladder using Fiskars scissors. These are two products from “corporate champions and sponsors” of the NCAA, the stern guardian of amateurism.

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Sponsors: How Far Will They Go?

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