Reggie Bush was wrong about what he did, of course. But look deeper at some of the leadership in college athletics that is corrupt. One point that Whitlock makes that is important is that the responsibility should be in the hands of those with power. I don't think for a minute that "coaches" like John Calipari, Nick Saban, Tim Floyd, Lane Kiffen, Pete Carroll and others "care" about their players beyond their "eligibility." They say they care, but I don't believe them. The graduation rates in many major college athletic programs are a joke. You rarely hear fans complaining about graduation rates because fans usually just care about winning and tailgating.
I don't think the goals of higher education and major college athletics match up that well. Because there is a premium on winning, not integrity, many coaches, who should be the moral compass, are skirting the rules. Not all coaches cheat, of course, but many do. Because coaches must win, many selectively ignore obvious violations. If a coach was truly scrupulous, he would not recruit a kid that he knew would not have an interest in completing his degree. That is why John Calipari is a joke, and the guy got keeps getting better jobs. Look at what Calipari got away with, and he pleaded ignorance in the whole Derrick Rose ordeal! Coaches like Pete Carroll are more at fault than a guy like Reggie Bush, and Pete Carroll could get a college job tomorrow. Oh, but Carroll didn't know about Bush's violations! Wink, wink!
I also give the quotes of the former president of the NCAA some credibility. Did you notice "how long" that guy was in office?
Title IX was mentioned in Whitlock's article, if you read this portion of the article:
"The NCAA takes most of the money generated by football and men’s basketball and invests it in welfare sports that don’t generate a dollar and are played mostly by kids who have nothing in common with the football and basketball players who produced the revenue."