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Ban This, Ban That

Well, the big news of the day is the freshly minted NCAA ban on coaches text-messaging potential student athletes.  I first heard about it at NCAA Hoops Blog at Cincinnati.com , but Aaron's UK Blog was also in on it early.  ESPN has comprehensive coverage of the ban here, here and here.  The Minneapolis Star-Tribune also covers the story.

One thing I don't like about regulatory bodies like the NCAA is that they are quick to ban new technologies, and slow to adapt to them.  Text messaging, or SMS (Short Message Service) showed up on the telecom scene in the mid-1990's and by 2000 had become tech noir, particularly among teen and adolescent cell phone users.  By 2003, SMS had become the method of choice among many, especially in Asia and then Europe, and now is rapidly replacing telephone calls as the preferred method of communication for people 25 and under.  It is that huge.

Comes now the NCAA not to regulate this service, but to bury it's use in recruiting.  That is where the NCAA and I part ways.  Banning a communications method is always a reflexive action usually done because the regulating body can't figure out how to, well, regulate it.  That's the real trouble with SMS from the standpoint of the NCAA -- it evades their grasp, so they just place it off limits as a recruiting tool.

The NCAA claims to be responding to the concerns of the student athlete and their parents.  Some claim that messages are sent and received in the middle of school classes and past bedtime, and the recruits feel compelled to respond.  

Another concern is economic.  The other day, I linked an article by Luke Winn at SI.com  that indicated Patrick Patterson's mother had received a $500+ telephone bill that was due to excessive text messaging.  I'd say that's a problem, especially for athletes who's parents are mired in the lower economic strata.  

But if parents can regulate the use of messaging by their kids, they can surely do so for coaches by asking them to limit the use of the service.  I have no doubt the coaches would comply.

Frankly, I think the NCAA claiming to ban text messaging on behalf of the interests of student athletes is a complete dissimulation.  They are banning it because they can't get their Luddite-infected brains around how to regulate it, which could be as simple as assigning certain hours during the day for messaging or opt-in style rules that require a recruit's permission before text messaging him.  I guess they figure that might be too much work.

And what about potential abuse of the ban?  Suppose an unscrupulous NCAA coaching staff or other third party with outside interests in a recruit decided to forge "illegal" messages from a rival coach or staff?  Maybe this is far-fetched, but stranger things have happened.

The NCAA has promised to revisit this ban as early as next year, so I suppose we should give credit where credit is due.  And there is is no doubt that the service is being abused by some coaches, and that guidelines and rules for appropriate use are needed.  But I guess the NCAA is just plain too lazy or too technologically challenged to worry about that right now.

Whatever.  But banning it is not a fix, and we should expect more from such allegedly intelligent people.

Update [2007-4-27 9:24:10 by Truzenzuzex]: Dennis at Pitt Blather has a similar take.

Update [2007-4-27 13:50:11 by Truzenzuzex]: Bret Dawson of the Courier-Journal has a blog entry on the subject.

Update [2007-4-29 14:19:37 by Truzenzuzex]:   Mike DeCourcy has a different take .

0 recs  |  Comment 7 comments

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Don't even get me started...
on my feelings about the NCAA!  An organization originally formed to help the student-athletes has, over time, become far too important in their own minds.  I'm not a Bobby Knight fan by any means, but he made an excellent point when he compared the NCAA rules manual (over 400 pages and probably weighing several pounds) to the United States constitution (2 pages?).  

That "little" 2 page document has been serving millions of people quite well for over 200 years, yet the NCAA cannot see the forest for the trees.  I've gone to their website and read some of their regulations.  Quantum physics is an easier read.

Without question, they need some SERIOUS shakeup in the ranks, and adding some youth to their governing body would be a huge help.  I suppose nobody has complained yet about sending messages to recruits via MySpace?

Go Big Blue!

by ForeverBigBlue on Apr 27, 2007 8:41 AM EDT reply actions   0 recs

To be fair ...
the MySpace thing is completely controlled by the recruit, so complaints about interruptions in class and economic catastrophe are not valid with that medium.  The NCAA hasn't complained so much about the contact itself as the intrusiveness and cost of them.

So from that standpoint, ignoring MySpace is consistent with their professed concerns.  Still, they didn't ban "push" email, which is another technology that is starting to make inroads.  It has the same potential for "abuse".  Also, AFAIK, they haven't banned IM contact (although I could be wrong about that).  Same deal.

by Truzenzuzex on Apr 27, 2007 8:48 AM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

Constittution
I am not sure the Constitution is such a great example to use. If you include all of the amendments it's longer than two pages and I also think you should include all of the legislation that has been passed under the constitution. I am sure the NCAA probably started with a short document that was similar but now the manual includes all of the rules that have been passed since the NCAA's inception. Therefore I think you have to include all the legislation congress has passed over the years.

Anyway,

 I am wondering how this is going to affect? effect? (i always get those two confused) BCG. He averaged 8,000-10,000 texts per month. Can you imagine that phone bill. He better have a plan with unlimited texting.

by davw83 on Apr 27, 2007 9:45 AM EDT reply actions   0 recs

Doesn't prevent email
The new rule only affects text messages but not email, even though there are some current guidelines about email in the NCAA. But virtually all cell phones can accept emails. I would assume enterprising coaches like BCG would just start sending emails to their recruit's cells and they come up much like text messages do. And the student is still permitted to text back.

This new rule will be changed in a year or so. They will get too much push back, be too hard to enforce and quickly proven ineffective. The recruits will be text-ing to the coaches proving that they prefer to use text messages since that is their preferred method of communication. Silly rule from an organization that I try to give the benefit of a doubt to but too often disappoints me.

by PapaKat on Apr 27, 2007 10:30 AM EDT reply actions   0 recs

Textual analysis
This seems like yet another band-aid from the NCAA on a much bigger wound, which is the open-ended recruitment from AAU and "guardian" sources.

As Gillispie joked to the CJ, if you're recruiting 9th graders, you're already behind.

The texting was out of control, but hardly any more than showing up at AAU games for 14-year-olds. I'm sure that'll get banned when the NCAA stops making money from shoe companies.

The Online home of Big Blue Nation ...

by JL Blue on Apr 27, 2007 11:28 AM EDT reply actions   0 recs

minnesota
"The Minneapolis Star-Tribune also covers the story."
ummm should I or should'nt I ???
yea i should
the above will not affect orlando smith since he
is still using telegram and FAX(when he can find it)
someone mentioned to him about a MAC
he thought they were talking about a BIG MAC

by UKCATZFAN on Apr 27, 2007 11:46 AM EDT reply actions   0 recs

That's actually kind of funny ...
everybody knows Smith was a technophobe of sorts.  I know a lot of others, so he isn't alone.

by Truzenzuzex on Apr 27, 2007 12:37 PM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

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