Schwartz: Ten Sentences – Where’s The NCAA? Edition

There is no surprise. The NCAA is good about making the NCAA look good. They give lip service on standards. The NCAA should have given KU, Baylor, and PSU death penalties and severely punish OSU, Duke, and NC. Iowa, should have had some punishment as well as MSU.

This will render the NCAA powerless effectively. The inaction will hasten the shrinking of college sport popularity.

This may help the KF type program to move up a notch as they become more white and work ethic dominated and the big programs load up. In the end few people will care about sports.

Iowa BB will remain about the same as a mediocre coach continues to try and find rough diamonds. The Garza stories are rare.

We have hunger games to look forward to.

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Schwartz doesn’t seem to know how college sports (football in particular) work in the context of the NCAA’s relationship with schools and teams.

His columns about the sports world are a little like when Dennis Miller or Tony Kornheiser were in the booth for MNF. Technically they could call themselves football commentators just because of their job description, but in reality they didn’t know their heads from their asses.
 
NCAA chief medical examiner has spoken.
When the law suits start in the Acc, sec and B12 (and they will) the NCAA will be clean and actually what they have said will be used by the plaintiff against whatever school and conference.
 
NCAA chief medical examiner has spoken.
When the law suits start in the Acc, sec and B12 (and they will) the NCAA will be clean and actually what they have said will be used by the plaintiff against whatever school and conference.

That helps the defense as well because assumption of risk is a defense to a tort claim. Causation is going to be a huge hurdle in those cases as well. The plaintiff has to prove they got it from some football related activity. Good luck with that.
 
That helps the defense as well because assumption of risk is a defense to a tort claim. Causation is going to be a huge hurdle in those cases as well. The plaintiff has to prove they got it from some football related activity. Good luck with that.
It won't be that difficult. When the percentage of players far exceeds the percentage of any other group. Not to mention when they all test negative, to a different school to play and then test positive right after they get back. There is enough testing required that it won't be hard to track.
 
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