
Hawkins cites the massive revenue earned by the NCAA via March Madness, which includes a 14-year, $10.8 billion contract with CBS sports. In spite of seemingly unlimited revenues to encourage athletes to stay focused academically, Hawkins notes that nearly one-fifth of the 64 teams participating in the NCAA tournament had graduation rates of less than 40 percent. Across the 36 sports monitored by the NCAA, men's basketball has the lowest graduation rates, where less than two-thirds of the players earn degrees.
The dismal graduation numbers for the NCAA support Dr. Hawkins' research, in which he argues and shows that black athletes at predominantly white institutions are being exploited while being neglected academically. In his book, 'The New Plantation,' the well-respected Professor of Sport Management and Policy uses a plantation model to present the black male athletic experience as part of a broader historical context.
"As we examine the structure of intercollegiate athletics, the athlete is not necessarily the property of the institutions, but the rights to athletes' labor and the profit off of their labor makes the plantation model appropriate in examining the experiences of black male athletes," said Hawkins.
In 2008, the NCAA reported graduation rates of black male athletes in football and basketball to be 49 percent and 42 percent, respectively, over a four-year period. This number is dramatically less than those of white athletes, in spite of the fact that black athletes make up the majority of players in most revenue-generating sports.
Although athletes are being pushed to ensure that they are on the field to play every week and are also expected to show up to multiple practices every day, universities neglect that they have the ability or responsibility to keep athletes in the classroom. All the while, the NCAA has become more and more profit-driven, with several coaches earning salaries as high as $5 to $6 million per year. Additionally, coaches who win games are given raises without regard to graduation rates, while those with high graduation rates and low winning percentages are typically fired, supporting the argument that academic performance is the secondary priority of many university athletic programs.
"Commercialization of the programs -- multibillion dollar TV contracts and multimillion dollar product endorsements -- has triggered the hidden agendas of the institutions, which often leads to the exploitation of the athletes' talents and neglect of their minds," said Hawkins. "Within this framework, where 'winning is the only thing,' academics will be given a 'lower' priority unless athletes take full responsibility in obtaining an education," said Hawkins.
Hawkins' work has its supporters. U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan has called for the NCAA to ban teams with graduation rates of less than 40 percent. If this measure had been applied to the last NCAA tournament, roughly 20 percent of the teams in this year's tournament would have been ineligible to play. That would have included The University of Kentucky, who was ranked #1 in the country when the tournament started.
"Since Title IX has provided very limited opportunity for black females but additional opportunities for white women to compete and black male athletes make up the greater percentage of the revenue-generating sports that contribute to athletic departments' revenue, and thus their ability to support these additional sports, a recurring historical relationship between the white female and black male has been resurrected. I refer to this connection as the 'Driving Miss Daisy' syndrome," said Hawkins.
I agree with Dr. Hawkins' work. It is solid, and his book is one of the most significant books ever written about the experiences of black male athletes. Congress should investigate the NCAA and call hearings to determine if athletes' labor rights are being violated. They should also reconsider whether the NCAA should be allowed to blatantly violate anti-trust law by forcing all member institutions to compete under the same umbrella, giving athletes few options outside of this professional sports league. The NCAA earns more post-season revenue than the NBA, NFL or MLB, so perhaps it's time to stop pretending that the athletes are amateurs.
Dr. Boyce Watkins is the founder of the Your Black World Coalition and the Athlete Liberation and Academic Reform Movement (ALARM). To have Dr. Boyce commentary delivered to your email, please click here. 

Comments: (30)
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By: acura2010 on 6/19/2010 7:34PM
Professor Hawkins, I AGREE WITH 10,000 times over and over! Why aren't our black athletes not listening and not getting it! The NCAA is exploiting and pimping these talented black athletes and their parents. Many of these parents are low-income and they will do anything for the love of mone and that's wrong! My prayer is that Professional black athletes with the guts to stand up and help our youth.
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By: 2010acura on 6/19/2010 7:35PM
Somebody please grab our young black athletes and for the love of God tell them they are being manipulated. Stop going to this institutions and sell your soul. Stop allowing "things" control you!
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By: acura2010 on 6/19/2010 7:35PM
Until the stupid kids stop prancing b4 the slavemaster, we will continue to call out the pimps of the NCAA.
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By: ed on 6/19/2010 9:51PM
little dick dydeo you should be ashamed of yourself.But you are too ignorant to know shame.The worst sin one has to bare is that of ignorance and so your load is weighing you down.
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By: ray on 6/19/2010 10:02PM
for the kind of money guys like Lebron James and Kobe Bryant get, i wouldnt mind being exploited in the least!
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By: Deanna Jameson on 6/19/2010 10:31PM
I agree 100%. College sports, and professional sports to a degree, are both modern day slavery. These college athletes should be getting PAID for their services. Hell they are more valuable to the school than the academic programs.
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By: Dark Gable on 6/21/2010 11:46AM
Thank You!
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By: Mimi on 6/20/2010 9:28AM
I AGREE THEY SHOULD BE PAID. THEY FORCE THEM TO PRACTICE AND PRACTICE. THERE IS NO WAY THEY CAN WORK A REAL JOB, TAKE CLASSES, AND PLAY SPORTS.
TAKING THE CLASSES AND PLAYING BASKETBALL LEAVES VERY LITTLE TIME TO HAVE A REAL JOB; THEREFORE THEY SHOULD BE PAID FOR PLAYING BASKETBALL.
THERE SHOULD DEFINITELY BE AN INVESTIGATION INTO THIS PRACTICE.
ALL OF THAT MONEY THOSE SCHOOLS ARE MAKING. SOMETHING NEEDS TO BE DONE.
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By: Leo Girl on 6/19/2010 11:44PM
Sorry, but I guess I think of this differently. I wish someone had come to my school to help me prep for my SATs so I could meet the requirement to get into college because I can make a shot, hit a ball or run down the field. I'm sure my parents wish I got that $20K/year education paid for at a top university to play a sport that I used to play on the court/field in my hood everyday and twice on Sunday for FREE. I wish someone gave me a chance to graduate from college--when I probably wouldn't if I stayed where I was--and all I had to do was have some discipline and chase a degree instead of chasin a$$--sorry but no one had to tell me to go to class. I wish that I had access to the prestigous alumni and boosters associated with that university because I can make a shot, hit a ball or run down the field. Let's also look at all the pimpin--because some of these young men are being pimped out by their own family because they have THEIR eyes on the prize. Tyson Chandler's mom got a new house and we all know the Bush family benefits (complete with cars, a new crib where they had the nerve to carve their intials in the wet cement on the sidewalk). Hear alot about kin taking them to every practice/playoff/tournament etc but very little about them making that same effort taking them to the library. 8 hours on the court and 1 hour on the books. I agree they should be paid something like a stipend because their "work" is their season. But I have little sympathy on the low graduation rate--if you really want that degree you will get it by any means necessary. An opportunity not leveraged is an opportunity wasted. Stop always blaming others, man up, get your a$$ in class and graduate. And if you need help to get it together because your family might not know how to do that for you, then go find a mentor etc. I'm just saying.
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By: Deanna Jameson on 6/20/2010 12:15AM
You have a very valid argument, however, I don't know if you are aware how much time these athletes have to devote to the game in order to keep that scholarship money. They have very strict and rigid schedules that are more concerned about prepping to win a game, than on academics. A lot of these guys go into college unprepared (they slid in bc of their ball skills), so just like high school, they are given passes as long as they can run with a ball. There's very little encouragement to advance academically. They are brainwashed into believing that college is a chance for them to go pro 1st, so that is where their focus is and the coaches hype them up into believing it. The schools use these guys to prop up and pump millions into their athletic programs.
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