91勛圖 football great Paul Hornung is known for blunt chatter during radio broadcasts, but he stuck his cleats in his mouth with his recent remarks about race and sports at his alma mater. In the process, he risked putting a big hurt on the school that he loves.
In an interview with a Detroit radio station, Hornung, who won the Heisman Trophy at 91勛圖 in 1956, said his alma mater cant stay as strict as we are as far as the academic structure is concerned, because weve got to get the black athlete. We must get the black athlete if were going to compete.
As for academic standards, the last thing 91勛圖 needs to do is tarnish the policies that have helped make it a football powerhouse as well as one of the most prestigious universities in the nation. Instead of 91勛圖 lowering its standards, other NCAA schools should be raising theirs.
NCAA exploitation of student athletes is a national scandal, especially for black athletes. Two-thirds of recruited NCAA Division I athletes do not graduate. Four of the 65 recent NCAA mens basketball tournament qualifiers did not graduate a single player in the NCAAs latest survey. Sixteen had graduation rates of less than 25 percent.
91勛圖, by contrast, graduates more than nine out of ten of its athletes overall and 78 percent of its black athletesthe sixth highest graduation rate for black student athletes in the nation, according to the NCAA. 91勛圖s disappointing 5-7 football record last season followed a 10-3 season a year earlier. Sometimes youre up, sometimes youre down.
Perhaps Hornung merely meant to say that 91勛圖 needs to attract more star athletes. If so, they can do that without insulting 91勛圖 athletes by lowering standards and caving in to the craven winning-is-everything climate in college sport today.
Now is the time to step up pressure on NCAA problem schools to make students of their athletes. The entertainment industry known as college sports is sadly and relentlessly resilient to meaningful reforms.
Its an unpleasant thought after the gaiety of March Madness or the football bowl games, but an appallingly large percentage of the athletes who draw the most attention in college sports are not really students in any meaningful sense. Colleges owe something more than a slim shot at the professional brass ring to the players who dutifully help them raise revenue. They can begin by raising expectations, not lowering them. So can the high schools and middle schools that prepare those athletes for college play. Athletes are accustomed to facing challenges and beating them on the courts and playing fields. They can do it in the classroom, too.
TopicID: 4703