Emmert: Court ruling reinforces NCAA athletes not employees

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MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — NCAA President Mark Emmert says a judge’s recent ruling in a federal antitrust lawsuit
again reinforced that college athletes should be treated as students not employees.
Emmert spoke to The Associated Press on Wednesday at U.S. Bank Stadium, the site of the men’s basketball
Final Four, making his first public comments since last month’s decision in the so-called Alston.
Judge Claudia Wilken ruled the NCAA did violate antitrust laws and cannot prohibit schools from providing
more benefits to athletes as long as they are tethered to education.
"There were also components of that ruling that reinforced what a number of judges and
administrative court proceedings have reinforced and that is that college sports is about
student-athletes playing student-athletes not employees playing employees," Emmert said. "And
the fact that, once again, another federal decision has come down reinforcing the fundamentals of what
college sport is about, we’re very pleased with that. And the way that she wrote what could and could
not be prohibited by the NCAA is not in any way fundamentally inconsistent with what we’ve been doing
for about a decade now."
In recent years, NCAA member schools have passed legislation permitting an increase in the value of an
athletic scholarship by as much as several thousand dollars to include the federal cost of attendance.
Also, schools are now allowed to provide athletes with unlimited meals and guaranteed four-year
scholarships.
The plaintiffs argued in the Alston case that implementation of cost-of-attendance stipends and other
rewards to players for participation such as bowl gifts and championship rings prove paying athletes
even more would not hurt college sports.
Plaintiffs in the Alston case had sought to have all NCAA rules capping compensation struck down. They
wanted conferences to set standards for compensation in the hope of creating a market in which schools
compete for talent at the highest levels of football and men’s and women’s basketball.
Even though Wilken’s ruling fell well short of that, plaintiffs’ attorneys have celebrated it. They
called it another step toward unraveling the NCAA’s definition of amateurism, which they consider unjust
and arbitrary. In 2014, Wilken ruled against the NCAA in an antitrust lawsuit brought by former UCLA
basketball star Ed O’Bannon. He claimed the NCAA and conferences inappropriately used the names, images
and likenesses of college athletes without compensation.
Much like the Alston case, the NCAA came away from O’Bannon with its model of amateurism basically
intact.
And as it did in O’Bannon, the NCAA is appealing Wilken’s latest ruling to the Ninth Circuit Court.
"We don’t like the notion that we’re in violation of antitrust laws," Emmert said.
Emmert added the association does not believe the courts should decide what qualifies as a benefit
tethered to education.
"We just find that an unworkable proposal that anytime you want to have a discussion over whether or
not something is or isn’t tethered education we have to go back to a judge and have that debate and
discussion. That just seems inherently inappropriate and not an appropriate role for the judiciary, but
one that does fit the role of the NCAA," Emmert said.
Wilken cited things such as computers, scientific equipment and musical instrument as benefits tethered
to education. Emmert said it is already within NCAA rules for schools to provide the "vast
majority" of the items to college athletes.
"We provide around $100 million a year to schools to support student-athletes through
student-support fund programs for precisely that purpose," he said.
Wilken also cited post-graduate scholarships as benefits that should be permissible.
As with the introduction of any new benefit, there is concern among NCAA membership for potential
corruption.
"You know we have schools competing now on who can do the best gold-plated locker room? You know,
who can do the best recreational facilities?" Emmert said. "Having them compete over who can
provide the best educational experience … is an inherently good thing, not a bad thing from my point
of view."
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