Charles Barkley and the NCAA are missing the point when it comes to the big problem with NIL deals

The thing is only one of them is being willfully obtuse

This is the online version of our daily newsletter, The Morning WinSubscribe to get irreverent and incisive sports stories, delivered to your mailbox every morning. Here’s Mike Sykes. 

The name, image and likeness space in the NCAA is absolutely the wild, wild west.

Sure, it’s been fun. And some of the deals we’ve seen have been cool. But there’s lots of money being thrown around with no parameters behind it.

There’s no security with these deals. A player can receive a deal today and it could be gone tomorrow, just like Jaden Rashada, who reportedly had a $13 million NIL deal from the Gator Collective just fall through.

That’s why it’s hard to say that NCAA President Charlie Baker is off with this call for regulation in the NIL marketplace.

He joined Greg Gumbel and Clark Kellog during the NCAA Tournament’s in-studio pregame show to talk about these issues and he called on “the folks in Washington” to help with developing “consumer protections” for the NIL landscape.

“I would love to create some accountability and trasnparency around that so the families know what they’re getting into. And I would really like to see some sort of uniform standard contract, so that when somebody signs it they know they’re signing the same kind of agreement everybody else is signing.”

These are some good, positive ideas. But if the NCAA is calling on the federal government to help with it, something like this could take a while.

That’s why Charles Barkley called him out for it. He doesn’t want politicians to help — he wants the NCAA to create its own committee for this stuff and solve its own problems. And that’s a good idea, too.

But, uh, aren’t we galaxy-braining this entire thing?

It’s great that players are finally able to profit off of their own names as the NCAA has been doing for decades with student-athletes at this point. But this still does not solve the core problem here, which is that players are still not being compensated at all for their labor.

Only the most famous faces you know are making the big bucks. Everyone else is still making pennies on the dollar for the same work. There are massive gender pay gaps and racial disparities in the NIL landscape, too.

Charlie Baker, I know you’re new around here. But do you want to know the real way to solve these issues? Pay the players.

The NCAA is trying to have its cake and eat it, too.  All this NIL business is is the NCAA allowing others to do the work that it should be doing in paying its workforce. OK, fine. But now you want to regulate it, too? How does that work? You can’t do both without any pushback. This is the NCAA telling others how to do the job that it should be doing.

Washington regulators can get involved as much as they want. But thinking that more regulation will ultimately solve what was already an imbalanced marketplace is a fool’s errand.

Whatever they manage to come up with will likely only be a stopgap measure before some booster-based organization finds another way to curtail the new rules, just as they’ve always done. The game is the game, man. It’s been this way for years — even before NIL deals were ever a thing.

The way to solve this problem is ultimately the same as its always ever been. Paying the players what they are owed. Until the NCAA chooses to do that, its problems won’t go away.

Quick Hits: Mick Cronin’s hilarious impatience…The coolest alley-oop ever…and more

(AP Photo/John Locher)

— Mick Cronin has to be the most unintentionally funny coach in the world. The guy was so mad he had to wait 33 minutes for his postgame press conference after UCLA’s loss to Gonzaga.

— Markquis Nowell is forever a college basketball legend after Thursday night. He faked an argument with his coach while throwing an alley-oop in the most spectacular fashion. It was glorious.

— Tom Brady is beginning his retired life by purchasing stake in the Las Vegas Aces. Looks like that conversation with Kelsey Plum paid off.

The NCAA tournament just proved — once again — that chaos is the best thing about March Madness

The team to root for in this year’s NCAA Tournament is chaos.

This is the online version of our daily newsletter, The Morning WinSubscribe to get irreverent and incisive sports stories, delivered to your mailbox every morning. Here’s Michael Sykes. 

I have two non-negotiable rules for March Madness every year.

First: one bracket per tournament. I can’t do the whole multiples thing — for one thing, I just don’t have the bandwidth to keep up. I also mix up my picks, which is never a good look.

Second: Just…pick whomever. Matter of fact, maybe let the dog pick? She probably has just as good a chance of picking an excellent bracket as I would if I toiled over my picks for hours and hours.

Anyway, my bracket is already busted. I had Arizona going to the championship game and, well, we see how that went. I also had Virginia in the Sweet 16 — that’s done. My champion is still intact with UCLA, but we’ll see how long that lasts.

Joe Biden and I are in the same boat right now in that our brackets are complete garbage. And there’s plenty more where that came from considering there are more games coming Friday and the women’s tournament is tipping off too. The bracket challenge is already over for most of us.

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But, you know what? Good. Honestly, I’m thankful.

You know what a busted bracket is? It’s freedom. Sure, we’ve failed. We won’t win the long-shot cash prizes that everyone hopes to just stumble into. But now we get to root for the greatest March Madness team of all-time.

Chaos.

It doesn’t matter who wins or loses. Nobody is here looking for good — or particularly skilled — basketball. We can worry about that when we get to the later rounds in the tournament. Right now? It’s just about watching Cinderella set the world ablaze after trading in her glass slippers for some red bottoms and strutting to that pumpkin carriage.

We want the upsets. We want the stories. We want the one shining moment to be the moment no one thought was possible. And the only thing that’s going to give us that is Team Chaos.

So, join me, folks. Burn that bracket down. You weren’t winning that cash prize anyway.

Quick Hits: UMBC remains the pettiest…The Lakers are out on Kyrie Irving…defending the WBC…and more

Tony Bennett with a shocked expression and arms extended during a Virginia 2023 March Madness game.
Mandatory Credit: Bob Donnan-USA TODAY Sports

— UMBC’s Twitter account has trolled UVA since upsetting the Cavaliers in 2018. Now, here we are again, and UMBC is rubbing it in.

— The Lakers say they’re out on Kyrie Irving this summer but we absolutely do not believe them.

— Edwin Diaz’s knee injury has sparked debate about the World Baseball Classic, but Mike Trout and Mookie Betts aren’t here for it.

— A Survivor Vibe Check from Blake Schuster and Bryan Kalbrosky.

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Russell Westbrook still has a lot of healing to do with the Clippers, but there’s not a lot of time to do it

It’s so hard to watch Russell Westbrook right now

This is the online version of our daily newsletter, The Morning WinSubscribe to get irreverent and incisive sports stories, delivered to your mailbox every morning. Here’s Mike Sykes. 

There are lots of criticisms that you could throw down on Russell Westbrook in critiquing the way he has played throughout his entire NBA career, but Westbrook lacking confidence has never been one of them.

After all, this is the same dude who, once upon a time, said that Steph Curry is “nothing I haven’t seen” while the Warriors point guard was in the midst of putting together an MVP season we literally had never seen before. He’s always played with conviction and confidence.

Until now.

There’s something wrong with Westbrook and I didn’t actually realize it until Draymond Green was playing 20 feet off of him in the Clippers’ Thursday night game against the Warriors.

If Westbrook had the ball, Green was back in the paint and at the rim. If he didn’t, then Green would just step out a bit past the free throw line — and that’s only because he wanted to avoid the 3-second violation, with all due respect to Jarett Allen and the Cavaliers.

This isn’t a defense Westbrook hasn’t seen before. Folks have guarded him like this in the past because, obviously, he’s not a shooter. Never has been. Never will be.

But what he could do is eat up that space. He could attack. Instead of any of that,  he didn’t really do…anything.

And, look. Maybe that’s the right play, considering that he finished the night 0-8 on jump shots. But, man. That’s not the Westbrook play. Former point guard Isaiah Thomas put it perfectly in this tweet.

“OKC Russ is firing that even if he 1/10. Mindset and confidence is everything.” 

Mindset and confidence are everything. Thomas is right. And that confidence is something Westbrook doesn’t seem to have right now.

He’s broken. Being with the Lakers actually seems to have broken him. And, you know what? Who could blame him? Anyone would lose confidence after being demoted and benched in big moments. You’re kicked out the door and called out of your name shortly afterward. All the while, you place high expectations on yourself that you just can’t seem to meet.

Yeah, it’s OK to be a little shaken after all of that. Getting back over that hurdle mentally is going to be tougher than anything Westbrook has had to do physically.

What’s more, time is actually running out to do it. There are only a few weeks left in the NBA season and the Clippers are going the wrong way in the standings after losing 4 straight — all with Westbrook starting at point guard.

It’s sad to see. It sucks to watch. But it’s sink or swim time, and the Clippers would prefer to do the latter.

Russell Westbrook can’t be the weight that holds LA down.

Quick Hits: NHL trade deadline deals…the fastest strikeout ever…and more

Mandatory Credit: David Kirouac-USA TODAY Sports

— Here’s our Mary Clark breaking down all of the latest news as it comes from the NHL Trade Deadline. She’s a beast.

— Wandy Peralta threw a strikeout in about 20 seconds and I’m pretty sure that’s an MLB record. It has to be. Right? RIGHT??

— Our Christian D’Andrea and Robert Zeglinski are all over the NFL combine, including the latest on the extremely fast DTs in the draft.

— Is it over for Trey Lance in San Francisco? A Seinfeld body language test from our guy, Charles Curtis, might just indicate that.

Enjoy the weekend, folks.

Orioles fans — and fans of every other rebuilding team — need to embrace ‘The Process’

Don’t get mad when your team takes the right approach … by losing.

This is the online version of our daily newsletter, The Morning WinSubscribe to get irreverent and incisive sports stories, delivered to your mailbox every morning. Chris Korman is filling in for Andy Nesbitt.

Some Baltimore Orioles fans were upset this week when general manager Mike Elias traded away key members of the surprisingly resurgent team. The O’s are 27-14 since June 7 and sit 1.5 games out of the final Wild Card in the American League.

But Elias, hired in 2018, has long preached a slow, steady rebuild that relies on compiling young talent — and he’s sticking to it. Dealing Trey Mancini, who homered in his first at bat with the Astros, and Jorge Lopez, who got the save in his Twins debut, returned pitching depth the Orioles system lacked and the organization will be better for it.

Elias has had to do damage control, both in the clubhouse and with the public.

Obviously players want to win now. There’s no other mindset to have as an athlete. But fans, at this point, should know better. The angst is understandable: The Orioles haven’t had a winning season since 2016, and fans endured a long post-season drought from 1998 to 2011, as well.

Elias, though, has the right plan. He’s building around catcher Adley Rutschman:

Pitchers Grayson Rodriguez (the No. 3 overall prospect in baseball, according to mlb.com) and DL Hall (No. 64) are nearing their time to make the show. Infielder Gunnar Henderson (No. 4), too. The O’s farm is stacked — including recent No. 1 overall pick Jackson Holliday.

We’ve seen fans (and leagues) recoil at the systematic tearing down and rebuilding of sports franchises, most notably The Process-Era Sixers. But this is the way. There are slight varieties in approach, depending on the sport and the CBA, but in general our major sports leagues are built now to favor franchises that compile young, cheap talent.

We know this much, too, about drafting: It involves so much luck that the only way to truly be *good* at it is to do it often. Smart general managers know this and stack picks. Most of them won’t hit. Some will. If you end up with too many to accommodate (the Orioles may find themselves in that position) you trade them.

The Chicago Blackhawks were widely criticized for beginning their own aggressive rebuild this offseason, and fans there are bracing for a rough few years. But GM Kyle Davidson — who, at 34, is four years younger than Elias — understands all this, too.

Yes, it sucks that fans are asked to sit through the down times. To spend on tickets and merchandise through the down times. We’re all taught in whatever youth sports we pursue that giving your all is all that’s expected of you. Now, as fans, we’re supposed to watch our teams essentially throw games to get better?

The answer, because of the systems put in place that govern how teams can be built, is yes. So be happy if your team is bold enough to go down that path. The ones that don’t are simply stuck, and that’s a much worse place to be.

Quick hits: Aaron Rodgers is, well, Aaron Rodgers… NFL hype rankings! … Padres trade paying off… and more!

Dan Powers-USA TODAY Sports

— What even is there to say about Aaron Rodgers at this point? It’s an adventure every time he speaks.

Let’s cut through the NFL hype, if we can.

A new Padres player hit a GRAND SLAM in his first game. No, not that one. Or that one.

10 college coaches facing the most pressure entering a new season.

The NFL’s first-ever virtual draft is going to be a chaotic mess

The NFL’s test run for the draft reportedly had some serious hiccups in a no-pressure situation. Thursday is going to be wild.

This is the online version of our daily newsletter, The Morning WinSubscribe to get irreverent and incisive sports stories, delivered to your mailbox every morning.

The NFL is just days away from its first-ever virtual NFL Draft on Thursday night, and by all accounts, it’s going to be a wild evening. If you’ve been on a Zoom call for work in the last few weeks, you know that technical glitches are inevitable in any massive online meeting, and the NFL’s dry test run for the first round reportedly went sideways in a hurry.

On Monday, NFL GMs around the league gathered for a mock draft to prepare themselves for the real thing, but the Bengals ran into a technical issue with the very first pick. According to ESPN’s Diana Russini, some teams suffered from “bandwidth” issues, which may or may not re-occur on draft night. Russini reported that one head coach lost internet mid-draft because his kids were all using iPads while he was trying to direct the future of his organization.

Broncos president and GM John Elway said that things went smoothly later in the round, but admitted that it’s going to be much more difficult during the real draft. For the practice run, so as not to tip their picks, teams selected former players and had to spend zero time debating a given pick. The situation will be very different on Thursday, when teams will be juggling players on the board while also devising and fielding trade opportunities, all without the convenience of being able to speak to your co-workers in person. The NFL has stated that it will stop the clock if a team runs into a technical issue, which you can guarantee will happen at least once in the first round.

Tuesday’s Big Winners: Kenny Mayne and Linda Cohn

If you were watching “The Last Dance” on Sunday, you may have been fooled by a brilliant State Farm commercial that looked like it could have been a SportsCenter clip used in the documentary. “It’s gonna be lit. You don’t even know what that means yet!”

Quick hits: Scottie Pippen, Danica Patrick, Dave Gettleman

— The second episode of “The Last Dance” focused largely on Scottie Pippen, who grew frustrated during the Bulls’ second three-peat over his very ill-advised contract signed in 1991. Pippen was wildly underpaid for much of his career, but his wife Larsa Pippen reminded everyone on Twitter that he would go on to make more than $100 million in NBA salary.

— Monday was the 12-year anniversary of Danica Patrick’s historic IndyCar win at Twin Ring Motegi Superspeedway in Japan. Patrick became the first woman to ever win an IndyCar race, and it would end up being the only victory of her career. She reflected on the win with our own Michelle Martinelli.

— NFL coaches and GMs will have to work the 2020 Draft from home, and the war room setups we’ve seen so far range from very high-tech (San Francisco’s John Lynch), to staggeringly retro. New York’s Dave Gettleman, who famously is not very computer-literate, appears to be planning to operate with just a single small laptop and a massive binder. Good luck, Giants fans.

Special editions of The Morning Win

The 2020 NFL Draft begins this Thursday, and we’ll be recapping and reacting to all three rounds this weekend on For The Win. On Saturday and Sunday, we’ll be rolling out special weekend editions of The Morning Win to cover all of the biggest news from the NFL’s first virtual draft.