Challenges await new NCAA president Charlie Baker as tenure begins

A new era is set to begin and the NCAA prez has a lot to do.

With the turn of the calendar from February to March, the NCAA officially entered a new era on Wednesday.  Charlie Baker took over as the NCAA Commissioner, replacing Mark Emmert whose final day was on Tuesday.

The former Governor of Massachusetts was named as Emmert’s successor back on December 15. He also finished his second term as Massachusetts governor in January.

Now as commissioner, Baker steps into an age of college athletics that has seen an ever-evolving landscape over the last decade but especially over the last five years with the introduction of NIL. The 66-year-old Baker also knows that more major changes are likely to come as well as he discussed in an interview with USA TODAY Sports, sports project reporter Steve Berkowitz earlier this week. 

“There’s a lot going on in the world of college sports,” Baker told Berkowitz in their interview. “There’s a ton of change. I certainly believe that change is necessary and required going forward.”

Some of those changes could include student-athletes being viewed more as employees of their universities than student-athletes. While Baker in the interview didn’t give a vote of approval of the idea, he did mention that issues such as additional benefits and compensation for student-athletes as an issue that could be looked at, “I think the question about additional benefits is certainly one of the conversations,” he told Berkowitz.

Baker and Berkowitz also discussed various other issues that will certainly be mainstay discussions during the beginning of his tenure as the NCAA president. Those issues included NIL, managing conference relationships, and the potential expansion of the NCAA basketball tournaments.

On top of those issues above, Baker will also have to navigate the challenges of being the president of the NCAA and fixing the reputation of the association. Whether fair or not, college athletic fans across the country lost confidence in the NCAA over the course of Mark Emmert’s nearly 12.5-year tenure as president, and its reputation because of that lost confidence also suffered.

While the NCAA’s control over college football at the FBS level continues to diminish more and more each year, it still has powerful control over almost every other sport in college athletics. With that, the strengthening of its reputation and regaining the public’s confidence in the association will be another crucial issue for Baker to tackle as his tenure gets underway.

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NCAA President Mark Emmert steps down from position, effective 2023

NCAA President Mark Emmert will step down from his position next year

NCAA President Mark Emmert will step down from his position next year.

The massive NCAA news was announced on Tuesday evening, with many expressing their thoughts on social media about the news. Emmert will officially remain in his role until June 30, 2023.

“Throughout my tenure I’ve emphasized the need to focus on the experience and priorities of student-athletes,” Emmert said in a statement. “I am extremely proud of the work of the Association over the last 12 years and especially pleased with the hard work and dedication of the national office staff here in Indianapolis.”

Click on the tweet below to read the complete release on Emmert’s decision to step down as President of the NCAA:

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USA TODAY Sports: NCAA path forward is ‘difficult’

The plan for a NCAA college football season is getting more grim by the day but is all hope lost? Maybe not.

Following announcements from each of the Power Five conferences in regards to the upcoming season’s schedules. The Big Ten, SEC and Pac-12 all going the conference only route while the Big 12 and ACC added one nonconference game. However, recently reports have put the entire NCAA college football season in real jeopardy.

Steve Berkowitz of USA TODAY Sports broke down the chances of a college football season in any capacity.

NCAA president Mark Emmert and the association’s chief medical officer, Brian Hainline, each made blunt assessments Friday night about schools’ ability to conduct fall sports amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

“This is going to be difficult, to say the least, going forward,” Emmert said.

Said Hainline: “I think we’re in a place that is exceptionally narrow. The boundaries are … there’s not a lot of places to move one way or the other. Almost everything would have to be perfectly aligned to continue moving forward.”

Their comments, during an interview on an NCAA Twitter site, came at the end of a tumultuous week for college sports. Among other developments, leaders of the association’s Division II and Division III schools canceled their groups’ NCAA fall sports championships. In addition, the NCAA Board of Governors, the association’s overall policy-making panel, implemented a series of requirements for schools that want to conduct fall sports.

But Emmert and Hainline did express hope that schools can find a way to comply with those mandates.

“We’re all really hopeful that can be done,” Emmert said. “Obviously, everybody wants to have kids back on campus. Everybody wants fall sports to return. But we can’t do it unless we can find a way to do it with minimized risk for these young people.”

The news isn’t something that is surprising but not what many want to hear across the country. Recently the MAC conference became the first FBS conference to cancel their upcoming football season according to USA TODAY Sports.

As for the University of Texas, Geoff Ketchum of Rivals states that it is a little different for the Longhorns.

That is some big news if it is indeed the case, it could be quite possible that the Big 12 Conference could be the only one operating come fall. It seems to be a bit farfetched but if there is any validity to it, there is hope.