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View Full Version : Jeremy Bloom rips the NCAA a new one.


Jesse_Ewiak
08-27-2004, 02:01 PM
http://sports.yahoo.com/ncaaf/news?slug=educatingjeremy&prov=tsn&type=lgns

Last week, the NCAA rejected Colorado's request to restore wide receiver Jeremy Bloom's eligibility. Bloom, who also is a standout freestyle skier, has battled the NCAA for the past two years to allow him to play for the Buffaloes while also accepting endorsements to fund his ski training. Bloom left Colorado's camp earlier this month and currently is training with the U.S. Ski Team near Santiago, Chile, in hopes of making the 2006 Olympic Games in Turin, Italy. Colorado, which hoped to have Bloom aboard to add speed and needed experience at receiver, has appealed the decision.

I think I've been wrong about the caring folks at the NCAA all along. They have received way too much negative attention about their unwillingness to have an open mind concerning my unique athletic situation. As it turns out, their reasoning behind this decision has taught me some of the greatest lessons in my life.

I owe them an apology, and I hope that after reading this, you, too, will understand this was just a case of an immature and over-ambitious 20-year-old asking an organization to allow unacceptable and selfish circumstances.

Two years ago, I became a proud member of the 2002 Winter Olympics team and then won the World Cup overall title as a freestyle skier. Then, a few weeks later, the NCAA informed me that if it were to allow me to continue my financial means of paying for my trainer, nutritionist, physical therapist and agent for skiing, I would be endangering the core principle of amateurism as a college football player. Although at the time it seemed silly, looking back I believe they made the right call. It is true my relationship with those people would have been more damaging to the spirit of amateurism than, say, the University of Miami's relationship with star football recruit Willie Williams, who has been arrested 11 times since 1999.

So I took their advice and dropped all my legitimate ski-related sponsors and enrolled at the University of Colorado, where I became a proud member of the football program and the social science department.

Even though the NCAA denied multiple waivers to let me play football, at least it provided me with a lengthy and adequate response to why it felt the request was off-base. It read something like this: No.

That response helped me to understand the value of a simplistic and concise answer to a question. If my coach, Gary Barnett, would have taken this approach when asked if Katie Hnida was a good football player, he never would have put himself in a position of conflict and would likely not have been placed on administrative leave by university president Elizabeth Hoffman.

But that wasn't the end of my education by the NCAA. Before the first road trip of my collegiate career, Coach Barnett made it mandatory to wear a sport coat to the game. At the time I didn't own a sport coat, so I borrowed one from one of our trainers.

The following week, during my weekly phone call from our compliance office, someone informed me that, due to NCAA rules, I would be fined $35 for a "rental fee."

This is when I learned the NCAA holds a tight monopoly on the "rental business." In fact, it rents out college athletes every year. While I was in college, the NCAA rented me out to many different corporations and allowed me to play in endorsement-filled stadiums every week. The NCAA even allowed the university to sell a jersey with my school and my number on it in stores all over Colorado.

I didn't get any of the money that was generated by this service, but at least the NCAA paid for my schooling, right? Well, no. Actually, the NCAA didn't pay a penny of my scholarship, and the university only paid half. The other half came from my "personal scholarship donor," a private citizen who donates money to Colorado to fund student-athlete scholarships. Now that the NCAA is finished with me, it simply will dismiss me, just like it does with thousands of student-athletes every year. And why wouldn't it, when it has thousands of fresh-faced, new student-athletes every year who are eager to join the cycle?

While I was in college, the NCAA made more intelligent decisions than not. However, there was one decision that impacted someone else's life that is hard to forgive. Aaron Adair was a young man who battled brain cancer for a long portion of his life. He not only had enough heart to become part of the select few in the country to overcome the unthinkable disease, but he also possessed enough to make the University of Oklahoma's varsity baseball team.

Aaron wrote his own book while he was in college, intending to give other cancer patients hope they too could win their battles with the disease. After his book was published, the compassionate and understanding folks at the NCAA ended Aaron's dream of playing baseball because his name was attached to a "corporate product."

But life rolls on in the wonderful world of amateur athletics because the NCAA doesn't have to justify its decisions to anyone. They are the all-powerful people who make decisions that will have a positive impact on the "student-athlete."

All of the lessons I learned from this organization will make me a rich man. Eventually, I think I'll start my own amateur business. I not only will provide housing and a positive working environment, I also will teach my employees the benefits of working as a team. And though I'll be making millions running this business, I will sympathetically tell my employees that paying them would corrupt the purity of my business and their learning experience. If they try to support themselves in other ways I find inappropriate, I'll dismiss them.

And I'll laugh as I pull away in my Mercedes, because they're at my mercy, and I won't have to answer to anyone.

Comey
08-27-2004, 02:10 PM
You could hear the tear here in PA.

Noop
08-27-2004, 02:12 PM
*claps* Fuck the NCAA

Poli
08-27-2004, 02:21 PM
I've been waiting for TroyF to break this story for a while now. :)

clintl
08-27-2004, 02:26 PM
Aaron wrote his own book while he was in college, intending to give other cancer patients hope they too could win their battles with the disease. After his book was published, the compassionate and understanding folks at the NCAA ended Aaron's dream of playing baseball because his name was attached to a "corporate product."[/b]


You can lose your eligibility for writing a book and getting it published? What a complete fraud the NCAA is, if that's one of their rules. How can an organization promoting the ideals of the "student-athlete" justify punishing someone for not only writing, but writing well enough to be published?

Comey
08-27-2004, 02:29 PM
The "student" part is only a figure of speech.

Comey
08-27-2004, 02:29 PM
Also, the NCAA only wants players to learn something in the classroom, but not apply it on their watch.

NoMyths
08-27-2004, 02:30 PM
That is a beautiful letter.

*clapclapclap*

Ksyrup
08-27-2004, 02:36 PM
You can lose your eligibility for writing a book and getting it published? What a complete fraud the NCAA is, if that's one of their rules. How can an organization promoting the ideals of the "student-athlete" justify punishing someone for not only writing, but writing well enough to be published?
I could swear I remember an instance where one of FSU's football players was going to write a free weekly column for the local newspaper, but the NCAA said that would be a violation because he would be pimping the newspaper. I just don't remember the specifics.

k0ruptr
08-27-2004, 02:40 PM
nice... very nice.

Huckleberry
08-27-2004, 02:44 PM
Now that is beautiful.

Jeremy Bloom got absolutely screwed, as have many other kids, by the NCAA. I defend the NCAA's decision on the Mike Williams case only on a case-specific basis. 99.9% of the time, they're idiots.

clintl
08-27-2004, 02:45 PM
I could swear I remember an instance where one of FSU's football players was going to write a free weekly column for the local newspaper, but the NCAA said that would be a violation because he would be pimping the newspaper. I just don't remember the specifics.

Wow. Let's just blow up the NCAA now. I'm not sure it can be saved if that's the mindset the organization has.

k0ruptr
08-27-2004, 02:48 PM
come on, I've known for quite a long time the NCAA is a fucked up organization.

Crapshoot
08-27-2004, 02:51 PM
Wow. Absolutely brilliant- more power to him.

sabotai
08-27-2004, 02:58 PM
I know it's an overused term and most people are probably sick of seeing it, but it's very fitting for this.

Bloom just pwned the NCAA.

rkmsuf
08-27-2004, 03:03 PM
He's in full bloom?

har har har har har

Crapshoot
08-27-2004, 03:06 PM
I know it's an overused term and most people are probably sick of seeing it, but it's very fitting for this.

Bloom just pwned the NCAA.

Exactly. Now if this gets more publicity, all the better. The sooner the organization crashes and burns- the better.

korme
08-27-2004, 03:12 PM
Hell yea Bloom, that was beautiful.

rkmsuf
08-27-2004, 03:13 PM
Hell yea Bloom, that was beautiful.

Mad props?

Fonzie
08-27-2004, 03:17 PM
Mad props?

Huzzah?

korme
08-27-2004, 03:21 PM
word

rkmsuf
08-27-2004, 03:23 PM
Just call him butter cuz he's on a roll.

Noop
08-27-2004, 03:23 PM
http://www.turboninjas.com/rlf/hammer.gif

I am so happy right now... Fuck the NCAA and lets Hammer Time!!!

Franklinnoble
08-27-2004, 03:25 PM
http://www.turboninjas.com/rlf/hammer.gif

I am so happy right now... Fuck the NCAA and lets Hammer Time!!!
That's almost as mesmerizing as the fat girl falling through the hole in the floor.

Almost...

GrantDawg
08-27-2004, 03:28 PM
No, no. We must keep this monopoly together at all cost.

ISiddiqui
08-27-2004, 03:30 PM
What a great letter. Perfectly written with the right amount of biting sarcasm. It seems Mr. Bloom actually was a 'student' athlete, but of course he disgraces student athletics more than people who graduate with a degree in football who can hardly read.

TroyF
08-27-2004, 03:30 PM
There really isn't anything for me to say. By banning Bloom, the NCAA showed what it really is.

It's a pathetic, sorry excuse of an organization. They can all go to hell.

GrantDawg
08-27-2004, 03:34 PM
What a great letter. Perfectly written with the right amount of biting sarcasm. It seems Mr. Bloom actually was a 'student' athlete, but of course he disgraces student athletics more than people who graduate with a degree in football who can hardly read..


Yet we must still slam the players wanting to come out early and don't want to dance for free. SAVE THE MONOPOLY!!! The NFL needs the free player development. It is not like they are making any money or anything.

Comey
08-27-2004, 03:36 PM
I know it's an overused term and most people are probably sick of seeing it, but it's very fitting for this.

pwned.
It's overused, but won't be totally ridiculous until Regis Philbin uses it.

http://i.cnn.net/cnn/2004/SHOWBIZ/TV/02/19/super.millionaire.ap/vert.philbin.ap.jpg
"You're PWNED! PWNED I tell you!"

Ksyrup
08-27-2004, 03:41 PM
That's almost as mesmerizing as the fat girl falling through the hole in the floor.

Almost...
If you think about the financial hole Hammer fell through shortly after he did this dance, it's the EXACT same thing!

JeeberD
08-27-2004, 03:42 PM
I could swear I remember an instance where one of FSU's football players was going to write a free weekly column for the local newspaper, but the NCAA said that would be a violation because he would be pimping the newspaper. I just don't remember the specifics.


:confused:

The past couple of springs UTEP players have writen columns for the El Paso times documents their experiences during spring practice.

Maybe it has something to do with the fact that El Paso is a one newspaper town...

Buccaneer
08-27-2004, 03:42 PM
Yet most of you eagerly and willingly watch their games, buy their merchandise and promote their goods. We are all part of the same hypocricy.

Noop
08-27-2004, 03:45 PM
Yet most of you eagerly and willingly watch their games, buy their merchandise and promote their goods. We are all part of the same hypocricy.
How so? I am all for a player getting paid personally. I have a ton of Canes and Noles gear but I was under impression that went to the school. I own a Deion Sanders throwback and I doubt the NCAA gets their dirty hands on that cash. So please old(Just Playing) wise one enlighten me.

lynchjm24
08-27-2004, 05:04 PM
[QUOTE=Noop] I doubt the NCAA gets their dirty hands on that cash. QUOTE]

Well you'd be 100% wrong.

Crapshoot
08-27-2004, 05:35 PM
[QUOTE=Noop] I doubt the NCAA gets their dirty hands on that cash. QUOTE]

Well you'd be 100% wrong.

$6 billion over 11 years for March Madness alone..

Noop
08-27-2004, 05:40 PM
I doubt the NCAA gets their dirty hands on that cash.
Well you'd be 100% wrong.
Ok I said doubt.... meaning i wasnt sure. Anything else you want to add?

judicial clerk
08-27-2004, 06:12 PM
I can see the NCAA not wanting to allow its student athletes to write books for payment. Next thing you know, the next Brian Bosworth will write a children's book that Oklahoma's biggest booster will decide to "publish" and pay a $100K advance. The NCAA is in the impossible position of trying to close every loophole a booster would use to get payments to the student athletes. Of course, the more fundamental question is why doesn't the NCAA want these kids to get paid more than just the value of their scholarship?? Why does everybody but the kids get paid.

ahbrady
08-27-2004, 07:51 PM
I can see the NCAA not wanting to allow its student athletes to write books for payment. Next thing you know, the next Brian Bosworth will write a children's book that Oklahoma's biggest booster will decide to "publish" and pay a $100K advance. The NCAA is in the impossible position of trying to close every loophole a booster would use to get payments to the student athletes. Of course, the more fundamental question is why doesn't the NCAA want these kids to get paid more than just the value of their scholarship?? Why does everybody but the kids get paid.

I understand that there needs to be some sort of rules in place to prevent such an instance as the example that you presented, but is it impossible to grant exceptions in certain instances? There is no reason the kid that wrote the book on Oklahoma's baseball team should have been dismissed from his amateur status. I think it is ridiculous that the NCAA couldn't compromise in Bloom's situation either. I know it is a little different, but people can play professional baseball and then come back to school and play another sport, but Bloom can't take endorsement money for skiing and play football. That just doesn't make sense.

There was one good, rational decision that I can remember the NCAA making that was shocking to me at the time and is probably more surprising to me now. Sunday Adebayo played for the Razorback basketball team but was declared ineligble for the last several games of the 1995-96 season because of transcript problems from his junior college. He transferred to Memphis and played a season there. The NCAA realized they had made a mistake and allowed him to return to Arkansas and gain an extra semester of eligibility. I believe he had already signed with an agent as well, because it was assumed that his collegiate career was over. It seems that the NCAA made an exception in his case, I don't see why it can't in some other cases.

kingfc22
08-27-2004, 08:09 PM
That was AWESOME!!!!!!!

The NCAA can just go bend over in a prison cell for all I care.

kingfc22
08-27-2004, 08:13 PM
dola

Of course you don't see this letter on ESPN's website anywhere.

SunDancer
08-27-2004, 08:32 PM
How so? I am all for a player getting paid personally. I have a ton of Canes and Noles gear but I was under impression that went to the school. I own a Deion Sanders throwback and I doubt the NCAA gets their dirty hands on that cash. So please old(Just Playing) wise one enlighten me.

Florida State and Miami (FL) allow the NCAA to do such things. I don't see them stepping up to boycott/threaten/leave the NCAA and standing up for its athletes.

Noop
08-27-2004, 08:36 PM
Florida State and Miami (FL) allow the NCAA to do such things. I don't see them stepping up to boycott/threaten/leave the NCAA and standing up for its athletes.
How did I know you would say something about my post when I opened this thread up...:rolleyes:

clintl
08-27-2004, 09:09 PM
I can see the NCAA not wanting to allow its student athletes to write books for payment. Next thing you know, the next Brian Bosworth will write a children's book that Oklahoma's biggest booster will decide to "publish" and pay a $100K advance. The NCAA is in the impossible position of trying to close every loophole a booster would use to get payments to the student athletes. Of course, the more fundamental question is why doesn't the NCAA want these kids to get paid more than just the value of their scholarship?? Why does everybody but the kids get paid.

If the NCAA can't figure out the difference between legitimate and illegitmate book deals, then the NCAA really is being run by idiots. It is not something that's all that difficult to figure out.

ScottVib
08-27-2004, 09:10 PM
FWIW, the NCAA's side of the story is that not all of his endorsements can be called strictly "skiing endorsements". (Example they used: one of Bloom's endorsements was for a health club)

Secondly they felt this would open a precident that would essentially kill off the endorsement rule, which they note is something that none of the members made any attempt to get an ammendment or exception to the rule to take into account a "Bloom" type situation.

They also said in the case of pro-baseball players (i.e. Chris Weinke, Ricky Williams, Scott Burrell etc.) who retained their eligibility that they would have lost it had they been doing endorsements at the same time. Their basic defense is they aren't in the business of trying to determine which endorsements were only gotten through the athletes ability in the non-NCAA sport, and those that may have been enhanced or even earned through the players status as an athlete in the other sport.

While I'm still not sure that I agree with the NCAA's decision on Bloom (I whole-heartedly agree they actually got the Williams situation right); if that's the reasoning they are using behind it I can understand it a little better. That said Bloom's response to it is great.

SunDancer
08-27-2004, 10:21 PM
How did I know you would say something about my post when I opened this thread up...:rolleyes:

If someone else said it, would of responded exactly the same way.

Suicane75
08-27-2004, 10:46 PM
Yet most of you eagerly and willingly watch their games, buy their merchandise and promote their goods. We are all part of the same hypocricy.


I have a man crush on you.

Noop
08-28-2004, 07:13 AM
If someone else said it, would of responded exactly the same way.
Yeah right.

Young Drachma
08-28-2004, 07:35 AM
This was a reply from May about a congressman wanting (http://www.ncaa.org/releases/miscellaneous/2004/2004052102ms.htm) to resolve the issue.

Sharpieman
08-28-2004, 07:37 AM
Bravo Bloom

CHEMICAL SOLDIER
08-28-2004, 09:59 AM
Good job old chap.

SunDancer
08-28-2004, 11:59 AM
Yeah right.

Oh please.... :rolleyes:

Anyways, I think that over the next few years, we could see some major changes. Could a more "friendlier" NCAA promotes high school hoop stars to come to college, and keep top-level college prospects in football longer?

Pumpy Tudors
08-28-2004, 01:45 PM
I don't follow college football terribly closely. I attend Tulane games and check out the weekly rankings, but I don't really keep up much besides that. I ask for everyone to excuse any apparent ignorance on my part here.

So my question is: What good does this letter do? Jeremy Bloom, by most accounts, gets screwed by the NCAA. Then he writes a message in which he bashes the NCAA for the way it operates. I think it's great that he's able to put out such a clear message and get it circulated, but what now? Isn't he really preaching to the choir here?

sabotai
08-28-2004, 03:42 PM
So my question is: What good does this letter do? Jeremy Bloom, by most accounts, gets screwed by the NCAA. Then he writes a message in which he bashes the NCAA for the way it operates. I think it's great that he's able to put out such a clear message and get it circulated, but what now? Isn't he really preaching to the choir here?

I'm not so sure. There are probably a lot of people who are on the fence concearning the NCAA. His letter might convince some of those people that the NCAA is getting out of hand.

SunDancer
08-28-2004, 11:35 PM
Now, the NCAA is like the NFL, that its an actual "business" entity? The teams and conferences are its "franchises"? I want to know what the NCAA is exactly legally?