When will the NCAA get sued for selective enforcement?

Mike-D

Heisman
Jul 14, 2001
49,510
72,031
113
When is somebody going to step up to the plate and say enough is enough? Your opinions are welcomed.
 

wall2rondo

All-Conference
Jun 3, 2010
117,414
2,961
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High school,grades in question but can't orove. Ineligible


Fake college classes and fake college grades. Not ncaa jurisdiction


That sums it up
 

KWilt43atbuzz

All-American
Nov 18, 2012
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Selective Enforcement is as old as the hills and wide spread throughout this country and the world.
Sadly, it is not going away.
 

Xception

Heisman
Apr 17, 2007
26,407
22,344
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It will have to be a major school , any low level school doesn't care if they get victimized as long as they get money . They don't want the collective bargaining to dry up , profits are the goal for all involved . A fans notion that sports is about fair play and equal treatment is a complete illusion .

When end schools like UNC position their people in strategic places like the NCAA or within the judicial system it is to ensure the largest cut of the profits as possible . Creating a mirage helps sell an image that they in turn profit from . The fox is in the hen house on college sports , it's a financial institution at the core .
 

Rockford

Heisman
Jun 28, 2001
22,828
48,272
83
Originally posted by bereaboy:
Who is going to sue? NCAA is made up of its member institutions.

My understanding is that when you join NCAA you agree to accept their rules, regulations, punishments, etc. and not to sue them.
Sweet deal.
 

Glenn's Take

Heisman
May 20, 2012
12,624
14,809
113
Originally posted by Rockford:


Originally posted by bereaboy:
Who is going to sue? NCAA is made up of its member institutions.

My understanding is that when you join NCAA you agree to accept their rules, regulations, punishments, etc. and not to sue them.
Sweet deal.
I hear this argument a lot but it reminds me of a fight I got into with a business law teacher in college where he was saying a sports team can't be sued if a ball goes into the stands and hurts someone because they have something printed on the ticket relieving them from liability. That may be real according to the law but in the real world, if you are at a Columbus Blue Jackets game and your 12 year old daughter gets hit in the head with the puck, the parents get about $20,000,000 when she dies. There is a big difference between the law and real world sometimes.
 

DDS62

Redshirt
Dec 30, 2002
3,536
16
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A law suite is not the path to go down anyway. No court would ever rule that the organization must be shut down, and it is equally as unlikely that any individual or member school be awarded money for being wronged. The correct proceedure would be for a President of a member school to convene a forum of other Presidents for the purpose of restructuring the headquarters in Indianapolis starting with the firing of Emmert and all of the current Directors, replacing them with tempory Administrative officer to carry out business untill the member schools can restructure the organization. Based on that scenario The OP asks a valid question - one that has been asked before and still remains unanswered.
 

Midway Cat

All-Conference
Feb 7, 2004
16,206
2,603
113
This topic has been discussed many times.

The NCAA is a voluntary organization. In other words, the member institutions have to agree to abide by the organization's rules, including its authority to make enforcement and punishment decisions unilaterally, if they want to be participate.

As a result, the only remedy that the schools have is to withdraw from the organization. Lawsuits requesting equitable relief won't work.
 

CatsRWild

All-Conference
Feb 27, 2010
4,017
1,482
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Penn St sued and won...Got the Wins reinstated...

To be clear PSU didn't sue the NCAA directly...they had others outside the program do it for them in the state.

If I'm SMU and nothing happens to UNC...this is how I would handle it.. A representative, powerful booster sues basically on the schools behalf to undo any sanctions.