Title | Division I Men's Basketball Championship First & Second Rounds |
Creator (LCNAF) |
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Publisher | National Collegiate Athletic Association |
Date | March 15, 1990 - March 17, 1990 |
Subject.Topical (LCSH) |
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Subject.Name (LCNAF) |
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Subject.Geographic (TGN) |
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Genre (AAT) |
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Language | English |
Type (DCMI) |
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Original Item Location | ID 2009-006, Box 7, Folder 7 |
Original Collection | Athletics Department Records |
Digital Collection | University of Houston Sports Championship Publications |
Digital Collection URL | http://digital.lib.uh.edu/collection/champ |
Repository | Special Collections, University of Houston Libraries |
Repository URL | http://info.lib.uh.edu/about/campus-libraries-collections/special-collections |
Use and Reproduction | Educational use only, no other permissions given. Copyright to this resource is held by the content creator, author, artist or other entity, and is provided here for educational purposes only. It may not be reproduced or distributed in any format without written permission of the copyright owner. For more information please see UH Digital Library Fair Use policy on the UH Digital Library About page. |
File Name | index.cpd |
Title | Page 93 |
Format (IMT) |
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File Name | champ_201306_035_088.jpg |
Transcript | NCAA Executive Director Dick Schultz has urged the membership to "conceive new and creative ways to distribute" additional championship dollars. mitments to all student-athletes, not just basketball or not just football," the SEC's Kramer said. "I think in the area of commitment to academic integrity that you are talking students' success, and if (whether or not) you want to call that graduation rate. "And certainly in the area of compliance and the area of integrity of operating your program, a commitment to the principles of the NCAA (needs to be made). I think those are some of the areas we would try and take a look at. But it may be difficult to put that formula together. We may have to modify it and may have to do some things on a more general basis. But I would hope we would take a look at those kind of areas." Keating said the NCAA could take some of the championship receipts and give them to the schools directly to fund compliance programs. "I think it would help if the NCAA had a way similar to the conference grant program of providing institutions support for a person who was a full-time, high-ranking administrator on each staff to be a compliance person," Keating said. "We do it now in the conference." Holland, also chair of the Division I Women's Basketball Committee, said she had tried to steer the women's championship away from financial rewards. "Our money went up as well as the men's, obviously not as much," Holland said. "I felt strongly that our committee needed to deal with a model that was different from how the men got started, so that if we ever got to the point where we did have more money, we weren't in the same boat, the $500,000 free throw. I think that's wrong." "Let's eliminate the comment about the $300,000 free throw." Richard D. Schultz NCAA Executive Director In any event, the decision the NCAA membership makes in the next few months will go a long way in creating an image for college athletics in the 1990s. "We need to use the money to send out the right messages," said Big Ten Conference Commissioner Jim Delany, also the chair of the Division I Men's Basketball Committee. "We can either piddle the money away and use it for paying people for winning, or we can play for the trophy and use the money to encourage sport reform and things we would like to see occur the next five to 10 years." $ 90 |