It’s time for the NCAA to take a stand for fiscal responsibility and the 
 
rightful place of intercollegiate athletics in American higher education and 
put a stop to the arms race by rejecting all reforms related to enhancing an 
already premier and first-class experience for student-athletes. 
Three aspects of the NCAA reforms do make sense and should take 
precedence over all other issues. First, improved medical monitoring 
and changes in some rules on the field can avoid the serious aftereffects 
of concussion injuries. Second, student-athletes deserve the opportunity 
to come back after their playing days and finish their education at the 
university’s expense. Finally, there must be rules about how to protect 
a student from loss of an athletic scholarship because of a career-ending 
injury.
 
In the end, it’s about getting our priorities straight and focusing on the real 
student-athlete issues, not those fabricated by the elite few with ulterior 
motives. 
 
The NCAA cannot fall prey to phony arguments about student welfare when 
the real goal of some of these so-called reformers is to create a plutocracy 
of athletic programs that serves no useful purpose in American higher 
education.