I graduated from the University of Kentucky. Most of my black classmates from the 1990s have a scar on their heart from the racism experienced on that campus and the broken promises that the university made. In the early 1990s, the president made a series of public commitments about increasing the presence of black faculty, with almost none of those promises being kept nearly 20 years later.
Apparently, breaking promises is also something that they do on the basketball court, where black men are used up like dishrags and spit out in to the street.
An episode of ESPN "Outside the Lines" is due to air this week, featuring the massive roster changes of the University of Kentucky basketball team after the arrival of their coach, John Calipari. Mind you, the NCAA is the first to tell you that they are all about education, yet Kentucky pays John Calipari millions in spite of the fact that his graduation rates have been abysmal. Additionally, Calipari has been found guilty of a long list of NCAA violations, which consistently jeopardize the academic futures of the athletes with whom he works.
This is what the University of Kentucky appears to be all about.
Here are some quotes from individuals involved in the ESPN episode, set to air this week. In the conversation, former players describe how Calipari brought them in to his office and pressured them in to leaving the university:
"It hurt because I abided by the rules. I did everything I was supposed to. ... Kept up a good GPA, went to class every day, didn't fail any tests. .... I feel like just for following my part of the contract, they should follow theirs." - Matt Pilgrim, forward, on feeling pressured to leave the UK.
"He was very clear and very honest that (some) may not fit this dribble-drive approach. ... It's a decision that they jointly made, that they might find more playing time elsewhere." - Dr. Lee Todd Jr., president of the University of Kentucky, on what Calipari told players who eventually left.
Amazing, so even the president of the university is justifying a warped decision to convince a student to switch colleges because of the basketball team?
"If you talk to the average scholarship athlete, they believe they're on a four-year scholarship or maybe a five-year scholarship. .... But the reality is, there's no such thing as a four- or- five-year scholarship. There's only a one-year renewable." - Ramogi Huma, head of an advocacy group that lobbies the NCAA and government on behalf of athletes.
Here's the deal: The NCAA doesn't care about it's athletes, and neither does the University of Kentucky. Athletes in revenue-generating sports (most of them black) are used on the field, have their labor rights stripped from them and are then left with a mediocre education that comes from being asked to spend more time on the basketball court than in the classroom. This incident with Calipari is yet another example of the massive contradiction inherent in NCAA sports. It's time to have a congressional hearing.
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: (115)
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By: kinser24w on 1/08/2010 3:48PM
mr huff if he is so clean then why did he run from every school hes coached and what happend to memphis season last year. the guy is scum enjoy it now uk two to three years he will leave you high and dry also.
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By: roger stevens on 1/08/2010 3:51PM
This article is so off base and factually incorrect. Kentucky just hired a black football coach, they had a black basketball coach for 12 years. John Calipari has never been in trouble with the NCAA, he had a player at UMass that took money from an agent, at Memphis a player was cleared by the NCAA clearing house to play then later it was suspected he had someone else take his SAT. All scholarships are on a one year basis, and it is up to the coach to be honest with the players, if they can play more at another school they should go, and oh by the way white players also left. There is no racial element in this at all. But if blacks ever lose their victim status, they might have to be responsible for their own actions.
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By: C.B. on 1/08/2010 4:10PM
That's right, all of you good Kentucky soldiers, go out and defend your coach's honor like he is the second coming of Gandhi. You don't believe he is as shady as they come? Go ask Memphis or UMass about the messes left in the wake of his departure. Just because something didn't stick on Cal doesn't make him innocent. If he had no clue about what was happening in his own program, then he is a total nimrod. We all know that isn't the case with Calipari.
Other coaches- one that just won a national title- came into a VERY high pressured, high fan expectation environment and did not pressure the guys left on the roster from the predecessor to transfer. I know the rosters are small in basketball, but then a few of the guys that are on your team now won't be there in 2011, either. You'll get screwed by Cal, too, when the house catches on fire. I guess the wins you get in the meantime will make all of that palatable, right? Amoebas have more character than he has along with his very dark and shady friend William Wesley. We already know the idea of 20 win seasons or better make the negatives acceptable to most of you in UK world.
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By: marfen on 1/08/2010 4:17PM
Tell me again just how many basketball players capable of playing at KY's level are in school for an education.
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By: Dan on 1/08/2010 4:21PM
On the subject of athletes being "encouraged" by their coach to leave school or seek another program that better matches the athlete's skills, that happens at every college and university in the country, and the practice certainly isn't limited to the black student/athlete. It happens almost with impunity whenever there's a coaching change; the new coach wants to fill the roster with their own recruits leaving the existing kids to try and find another program to call home. In some cases the behavior on the part of the coach is so overt as to be shameful. I personally went to college in the early 70's on a full football scholarship. The coach who first recruited me was fired after an 0 - 11 season. The incoming coach "encouraged" virtually the entire roster to start looking at their "options". I found another school (one that had also recruited me out of high school) that wanted me and gave me a scholarship. That program tanked the following year after my redshirt season, the coaches were all dismissed, and I was again told to try and find another program. Being that by now I was running out of options having been out of sight for a full season while redshirting I chose to stay at the second school. While I played infrequently during the balance of my time there (the incoming coach's son played the same position as I) at least this coach had the decency to keep those of us who had nowhere else to go on scholarship through our senior year. Although I don't have a solution to propose, there is a huge inequity in the way coaches are afforded the opportunity to change institutions almost at will, while the athletes they recruited often get left behind and in the lurch, scrambling to take care of themselves and trying to find somewhere else to go to school. And please spare me the comments about how lucky the student-athlete is to be attending college for free. College sports, and especially football, are no walk in the park when it comes to the physical challenges and the time management required for the majority of kids who are serious about maximizing their college education. Dedication as a description of what it takes to be a successful college athlete doesn't come close to what it takes to succeed. It's far tougher today than it was in the 70's, most kids really never go home once they go off to college, their sport becomes a year-round commitment. For me the bottom line is, the athlete usually gives at least as much as they get, without the same protection their coaches are afforded. At least the coaches can afford attorneys to help protect their contract.
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By: Rem on 1/08/2010 4:22PM
Hey hypocrite. How about all those black basketball players who were offered free educations just because they were 6'5 and could dribble a basketall? What about all those that forego their junior or senior years and try to make it professionally???
This article is absurd. You are nothing but a racist yourself.
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By: BOB on 1/11/2010 4:25PM
FINALLY. THE NCAA HAS BENN A FRAUD FOR YEARS. WITH THE RECORD THAT HAS BEEN APPARENT FOR MANY MANY YEARS THERE IS NO WAY THEY CAN CONTINUE TO MAKE THE CLAIM THEY ARE FOR THE STUDENT ATHLETE. TIME FOR A COMPLETE INVESTIGATION AND A CLEANING UP OF THIS ORGANIZATION
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By: yankeei on 1/08/2010 4:23PM
This has always been a sore spot for me. There should be some NCAA rule that prohibits a student athlete from leaving school before a degree is earned. I know college sports is just a brief layover for some before they're recruited for professional teams. It's such a disservice to these kids whose only ticket to a better life through education is their athletic ability. For a good number of them, they're an injury away from being back where they started.
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By: LAWSIUTCOMING on 1/08/2010 9:04PM
You should be very careful in saying that Calipari has be found guilty of any violations. HE HAS NOT. Do you call yourself a journalist?????????? You are a HACK. A journalist would have done some research. You can not like Calipari, lots of people don't. But to flat out make false accusations is irresponsible and very amateur like. Dozens of times a year, new coaches take over a program and players leave. It is a common occurrence. Yet because some misinformed hack watches an ESPN piece we are supposed to be up in arms over it? The players in question werent required to switch colleges. They chose to so they either could continue playing basketball or continue getting free schooling or both. Academic scholarships are on a semester renewal basis. If you don't cut it, scholarship get yanked. These basketball players no longer cut it. Bye. See ya. An athelete should have a lifetime scholarship because they play sports???????? I don't know what type of doctor you are but you should write articles with a little more integrity. HACK, HACK, HACK
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By: JS on 1/08/2010 4:25PM
Your article sounds like sour grapes. Get off the racism whine. You will never go forward if you keep living in the past.
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