
MIAMI, Fla. – William C. Friday, the founding chair of the Knight Foundation Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics who led the charge to preserve the integrity of college sports, is stepping down from the post after 15 years. Dr. Thomas K. Hearn Jr., president of Wake Forest University and an original member of the Commission, will become chair March 1, while R. Gerald Turner, president of Southern Methodist University, Clifton Wharton, former CEO and chairman of TIAA-CREF, will both assume the newly created position of vice chair.
Joining the Knight Commission at a meeting today here were 10 members of the original commission that issued its groundbreaking report in 1991 – Keeping Faith with the Student-Athlete: A New Model for Intercollegiate Athletics.
The Rev. Theodore Hesburgh, former co-chair of the commission with Friday, joined the group via telephone conference. The current and former commissioners met together to consider the Knight Commission’s future and to offer their support for the commission’s new leadership.
The commission heard a report from Walter Harrison, president of the University of Hartford and chair of the NCAA Committee on Academic Performance, concerning the recently adopted NCAA academic performance program. The program will require Division I teams to stay on track to graduate at least 50 percent of their athletes to avoid the risk of losing scholarships beginning with the upcoming academic year. In its 2001 report, A Call to Action: Reconnecting College Sports and Higher Education, the commission recommended that eligibility for postseason competition be reserved for teams that graduate at least 50 percent of their players.
Harrison noted that teams will be ineligible for postseason competition and even harsher sanctions under the new program if they chronically underperform academically. Harrison also provided NCAA data that show that if the standards were currently in effect, more than half of all Division I institutions would have at least one sports team subject to penalty. The majority of those teams at risk of failing to meet the new standards are football, baseball or men’s basketball squads.
The commission reaffirmed its commitment to continue its work to improve the collegiate experience and academic success of athletes, working closely with the NCAA. The commission commended NCAA President Myles Brand and the NCAA’s presidential leadership for the recently adopted academic reforms. “The current NCAA governance structure, which allows university presidents to set the agenda and institute change such as the recent academic reform measures, is far better than what was in place 15 years ago when Bill Friday’s vision and leadership led the Knight Commission to recommend significant change,†said Dr. Hearn. “We look forward to a continued partnership with the NCAA leadership to achieve an environment where athletics are in balance with the academic missions of our institutions.â€
During Friday’s tenure, a significant number of the commission’s recommendations, issued through a series of reports, were ultimately enacted by the NCAA. Among the specific recommendations accepted was a new model for governing intercollegiate athletics – shifting control from athletic administrators to college presidents working to ensure academic integrity, financial integrity and independent certification.
“Bill Friday has been the heart and driving force of the Knight Commission,†said Hodding Carter III, Knight’s president and CEO, and an ex-officio member of the commission. “He has done this group proud and the world of college athletics proud. Under Tom Hearn’s leadership, we will continue Bill’s fine work to ensure that both sports and academics at our nation’s universities thrive and prosper.â€
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