Classifieds | Home Delivery | Advertise With Us
Steve Walentik
•  Basketball Blog: Courtside View

Dave Matter
•  Football Blog: Behind the Stripes

Rus Baer
•  Prep Sports Blog: Prep Repartee

Mississippi St. coach blasts new NCAA academic rules

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - Mississippi State baseball Coach Ron Polk blasted new rules designed to promote academics and questioned NCAA officials who said yesterday that college baseball players weren’t performing at the same level academically as college basketball and football players.

"Duh, how dumb of a statement is that?" Polk said the day before the start of the College World Series. "When our kids are on a book scholarship, or 10 percent or 15 percent, and they have to pay the balance of the fee to go, and all football and basketball and girls’ sports are on full scholarships and they can go to summer school - how stupid of a statement is that?"

NCAA officials said earlier yesterday that baseball players were found to be academically ineligible in the fall at a rate three times higher than their counterparts in other sports.

"They’re coming into colleges with an academic profile that says they ought to be doing a lot better than their academic performance in college," said Kevin Lennon, NCAA vice president for membership services. "These are young men who are bringing in good high school grade-point averages, solid test scores, particularly when you compare them with other sports."

The problem isn’t necessarily grades but that many players are taking too few credits, said Todd Petr, NCAA managing director of research.

The most contentious rule change guarantees that any scholarship player would receive no less than one-third of a full ride. Also, no more than 27 players can receive any portion of a scholarship.

Many college baseball coaches say they already have trouble recruiting top-caliber talent with a limit of 11.7 scholarships per team.

Polk said the NCAA officials shouldn’t have held a new conference about college baseball issues without inviting at least one of the eight College World Series coaches.

"I can go back and naysay those statements down the line in regard to what the state of baseball is," Polk said. "I know I’ve got the support of all the baseball coaches, all the kids in this country and parents and friends that what the NCAA does to college baseball is criminal."

Dennis Poppe, NCAA managing director of football and baseball, said the rule changes are an effort to improve academic performance and graduation rates.

"I don’t know how that’s criminal," Poppe said.


Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Advertisement

 

 

Copyright © 2007 The Columbia Daily Tribune. All Rights Reserved.

Columbia Daily Tribune

The Columbia Daily Tribune
101 North 4th Street, Columbia, MO 65201

Contact Us | Search | Subscribe