If a sports broadcaster cannot hype betting expectations that can be exploited by Big Gaming, can he really be said to be doing his job?
The fiduciary responsibility of the director of the NCAA appears increasingly to be to find everything legal that is in anyone’s self interest except the players.
The NCAA increasingly appears to honor this maxim: where there’s smoke, there’s revenue.
Has John Calipari ever heard of an alumni infraction he knew about?
An NBA commissioner appears to be to college basketball what Nosferatu would be to Bryn Mawr.
Without the media-gaming complex, college basketball would suffer the hardships of unpredictable winning margins, more players attending class, more players graduating, referees calling fouls symmetrically, star players being kicked out of games for cheap shotting, plus coaches that would get to see their wives more. It would be intolerable.
A Division 1 head coach will always draw the line at hiring an OAD’s AAU coach...to replace himself.
Mike Krzewski appears to have developed the cheap shot to such an extent that it should now be called a solid gold shot.
Correlation may not be the same as causation in no calls and point spreads in the last ten minutes of an NCAA tournament game, but I would want some points to bet on it.
Just as a ref cannot call fouls, if everyone is fouling all the time, an NCAA director cannot give the death penalty, if everyone is committing death penalty violations all the time.
Arguing that a PetroShoeCo-Agent complex is not influencing where players go, because we cannot yet explain how and why it is done, is like arguing that the sun is not attracting planets, because we cannot yet explain gravity.
The NCAA tournament has become as suspect as an electronic voting machine in a poor neighborhood in a battle ground state, when it is a republican’s turn to be selected unitary President.
Today, amateurism appears necessary largely for the abuse of amateurism.
(Note: all satiric fiction. No malice.)