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TNT NBA analyst Kenny Smith sounds off on NCAA: If it were anything other than sports, people would have been locked up

Scott Davis   

TNT NBA analyst Kenny Smith sounds off on NCAA: If it were anything other than sports, people would have been locked up
Sports2 min read

kenny smith

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Kenny Smith

  • College basketball has been rocked by an FBI investigation into corruption.
  • On Tuesday, TNT analyst and former NBA star Kenny Smith said the NCAA needs to fix what's become a "predatorial" system.
  • Smith said one of the biggest issues is that players don't have any representation, which pits the rules against them.

The college basketball world has been rocked by an FBI investigation into corruption and shady recruiting tactics.

The probe, which remains ongoing, has shone a light on underground payments made to prospects and their families to go to schools and sign with agents, as well as other businesses.

On Tuesday, speaking from the NCAA Tournament media day, TNT analyst and former NBA star Kenny Smith said the college basketball system has become "predatorial" and needs fixing.

"NCAA is looking at how to do a better job enforcing their rules instead of looking at why the predatorial environment is created," Smith said. "There's a predatorial environment that their rules have created, which makes people feel undervalued."

Smith harped on the reported recruiting tactics of coaches, agents, and businessmen, saying that 50-year-olds are targeting 17-year-old high-school prospects. He said if the same practices were going on in another industry, the justice system would have acted quicker.

"The rules are creating the predatorial environment," he said, adding, "If that was anything other than sport, if it was, people would have been locked up. But because it's sport, it took them, it's taking longer. If it was anything other than sport, where 50-year-old men were preying on 17-year-olds - come on."

Smith said the system could improve by giving players "representation," thus allowing both sides to have negotiations about the system.

"It's basically taxation without representation," Smith said, "because they're making rules for a 17-year-old coming in and he's not represented there by anyone."

Smith said players should have lawyers on their sides negotiating the rules with the NCAA to come up with a better system.

"There's no representation. That's why the NBA Players Association was formed, players unions were formed. That's why those unions were formed - to have representation before you make rules for me that I have to abide by. How can I participate and how can it be fair if there's no representation? So whatever rules, I think they said there's 4,600 rules in the NCAA guideline book, and none of them were represented by those kids."

In light of the scandals in college basketball, many critics have spoken up potential ways to try to fix the system. The NBA is reportedly considering changing the league's age limit and finding a way for high-school players to bypass college and join the league. LeBron James suggested creating a farm system, which, coincidentally, the NBA may already have in place with the G League.

The NCAA Tournament begins on March 13.

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