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Ken Honeywell

Ken Honeywell
Location
Indianapolis, Indiana, USA
Birthday
March 20
Title
Partner
Company
Well Done Marketing
Bio
I'm in love with my wife; a writer and producer living in Indianapolis; partner at Well Done Marketing; founder of Tonic Ball, a benefit concert that's become one of the city's favorite annual events; co-founder of Second Story, a creative writing program for kids; a vegetarian; lead singer of Yoko Moment; a life-long New York Mets fan; a sucker for waltz time; crazy about Pernice Brothers; etc.

MY RECENT POSTS

JUNE 28, 2011 8:21AM

Dear NCAA: Please "Hypothetically" Clean Up College Sports

Rate: 5 Flag

This morning on the way to work, I was listening to Mikes Golic and Greenberg, hosts of ESPN Radio’s Mike and Mike Show, chatting with former NFL player and coach Herman Edwards about Miami Dolphins linebacker Channing Crowder and the “stupid” thing he said on this radio show. Crowder said he “hypothetically” sold his game jerseys  while at college to “some Jacksonville businessmen that really hypothetically liked my play.”

Edwards was so flabbergasted he almost couldn’t speak; when he found the words, he practically called Crowder a traitor to his school. At one point, the phrase “two wrongs don’t make a right” dribbled out of this mouth. He told listeners about what he does when one of his kids claims the other is hitting her. “I tell her, ‘don’t be a tattletale,’” Edwards said. Golic piled on. Even Greenberg, who believes college athletes should be compensated for the work they do, was appalled.

Channing Crowder, tattletale.

Crowder’s remark raised the question of an NCAA investigation of Florida, since Crowder was there just five years ago. And the biggest travesty, according to our trio of chatterers, was that there were no consequences for Channing Crowder. His slip of the lip was going to punish a lot of kids who weren’t even there when he broke the rules.

Excuse me?

This is exactly the sort of crazy sports BS that drives me mad. The same guys who express shock and disgust at Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens for take steroids are outraged that a football player reveals he broke NCAA rules. Edward fumbled all over himself talking about how there were always going to be wealthy boosters who wanted to cheat–and that didn’t make it okay, but these guys did give their football programs lots of money, so, you know…wink, wink. For someone to come out and admit what everyone knows is going on in all these big-time college football programs is a betrayal of the brotherhood.

Exactly. That’s what it is. You go along. You shut up. Everybody knows it’s happening. Just don’t get caught, and everything will be fine. The good old boy network will take care of you. The rules don’t apply to Jock Culture.

Hogwash. It’s time for the NCAA to step up and do the right thing. Either stop looking the other way and police your sports, or do something different. Clean up the corruption and the wrongdoing and enforce your rules–or change them in a way that makes things more equitable for the indentured servants you call “student athletes.”

But don’t allow this perversion to persist. You can no longer claim to be a force for good and turn your head from the reality that the rules you swear by are being broken every day, all across the country. You know it. We all know it. You make liars and hypocrites of all of us who just want to enjoy college sports.

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Comments

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One reason I can't get too juiced about college sports: at least the real reason for sports is obvious with professional gladiators (the male oldest profession?).
Joisey: I miss them, too.

Pilgrim: Exactly. I wish I could like college sports better. I can't.
I hope they paid in hypothetical cash, like Monopoly money.

My solution: Go back to semi-pro teams, like the Phillips 66'ers, a hotshot basketball team of the 50's and 60's (maybe earlier) that paid its players. They were as good as a top college team, but not NBA quality. If a kid isn't going to get much out of college and needs money, why not let him move between college and semi-pro freely and make a little money.
College sports is now all about the money. Even more so that when I was in college (I remember having to get an OK to play baseball because I had been a paid Little League umpire but that was 40 years ago) and even more so than when my step-son went to college on basketball scholarship (coaches sitting in my living room and lying). One of the comments I liked recently (but I forgot who said it) was that basketball players are, indeed, already paid. They get tuition, room and board which comes up to a minimum of about $20K per year even at a modestly priced school and up to nearly $80-$100K at an exclusive, private school.
But it's all about TV money. It all starts at the JrHi and High School levels and extends to college. Maybe there needs to be a re-look at academic standards and eligibility and a whole host of other things.
And bottom line--my step-son eventually got a degree, played a season of pro-ball in Ireland, played part of a season in the CBA and then graduated to...being a successful insurance agent in small town and raising 2 kids. It don't get any better than that. But, for a variety of reasons it was a huge pain in the butt to get him there.
Con: Back in the day, the National Industrial League was a great alternative to the NBA. It provided more job stability for lots of talented players coming out of college--among them Bobby Plump of Milan, Indiana/Hoosiers fame, who played for the 66ers.
Clyde Lovelette, who went on to play for my NBA Champion St. Louis Hawks, also played for the 66'ers.
My Grandad, a college baskeball fan from, literally, the beginning of the sport, would have no use for these shenanigans. He liked college hoops because there was more teamwork and love of the game. This type of thing . . . not so much . . .