We have a very unusual situation occurring in the world of big-time athletics. Commissioner Greg Sankey and the Southeastern Conference are attempting to carry the ethical banner in a disagreement with the now-cowardly NCAA.
The formerly autocratic group has caved on many issues in recent times, including not fighting a court decision that allowed junior college athletes not to count those two JC seasons in their Division I college football eligibility.
This is what allowed Diego Pavia, Jerry Kill’s adopted quarterback, to spend two seasons at New Mexico Military (a JC), two seasons with Kill at New Mexico State, and what was presumed to be a final season at Vanderbilt in 2024. That was a package deal, with Kill quitting the job in Las Cruces, N.M., and moving to Vandy.
It was a fine season for the QB and Commodores coach Clark Lea’s new special offensive consultant, Kill, including a victory over Alabama. And most everyone figured that was it, except a legal mind (was it our old pal, Country Jer?) said, “Why not sue ‘em to void those JC seasons?”
Which someone did along with Pavia, so now he’s a sixth-year quarterback, and Vandy is in the top 10 in the country this weekend.
The NCAA also was forced to capitulate earlier on its ban on paying athletes, bringing NIL (Name, Image and Likeness) into our familiar sports abbreviations. That’s the one that sent the legislative body cowering into the corner, all the way to the announcement this fall:
The NCAA has approved that athletes and administrators can bet on pro sports.
What problem could that lead to? OK, maybe the valuable left tackle decides to bet on his favorite NFL team — say, the Vikings to cover the point spread last week in Los Angeles — in order to get even with Bruno Sports Gaming.