Sorta OT: Justine Hartman Testifies in Oakland Trial Against NCAA Scholarship Limits

2,349 Views | 2 Replies | Last: 5 yr ago by wifeisafurd
GameDay
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Student Athletes Say NCAA 'Exploited' Them in Antitrust Trial

September 7, 2018 HELEN CHRISTOPHI

OAKLAND, Calif. (CN) A former UC Berkeley basketball player on Friday accused the National Collegiate Athletic Association of "exploiting" her by so severely limiting the scholarship money she received playing sports she often went hungry, in a federal bench trial in Oakland challenging the association's caps on compensation to student athletes.

Justine Hartman said she sometimes skipped classes because she was too hungry and tired to concentrate following daily six-hour basketball practices.

Her athletic scholarship set by the NCAA didn't cover her expenses at the University of California, Berkeley, she said, forcing her to pay rent with money earmarked for food.

"We don't have the means to excel at the highest level academically," Hartman said. "We go without a lot. There are many with similar experiences, where they're hungry and too tired" to focus on academics.
Three classes of 53,000 current and former Division I football and men's and women's basketball players are trying to convince U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken to eliminate the NCAA's restrictions on student athlete compensation.

They reason the association's individual conferences will enact their own compensation caps to preserve amateurism in college sports, which is valued by many fans and believed to be a significant revenue driver.
But the NCAA says there is no guarantee the conferences would enact them. More likely, it says, wealthier schools would begin offering potential team members "millions of dollars" to play for them in the absence of pay limits, essentially turning those players into professional athletes.

Revenues from college sports would shrink, the association argues, because fans who value amateurism would stop buying tickets to games and television networks would pay conferences less money to broadcast the games.

The case stretches back to 2014, when former Clemson University football player Martin Jenkins sued the NCAA and its conferences for anti-competitive conduct and an injunction eliminating caps on compensation and benefits.

The following year, the Ninth Circuit held in a similar case O'Bannon v. NCAA that member schools need not compensate athletes above the cost of attendance.

In response, the NCAA relaxed its rules to allow schools to compensate athletes up to the cost of attendance.
Many athletes already receiving federal Pell Grants and student assistance funds were compensated above the cost of attendance once the change took effect, according to the parties.

Under the new rules, current student athletes would presumably get more financial aid than plaintiffs like Hartman, who played for UC Berkeley before the pay caps were relaxed.

Challenging Hartman's narrative Friday, Pac-12 Conference attorney Bart Williams of Proskauer Rose said "there were many occasions when you were in school when you did not go to class because you chose not to go to class."

Williams presented emails sent by Hartman's instructors at UC Berkeley. One said Harman hadn't attended a single lecture or discussion for an interdisciplinary studies course, or turned in a single assignment. Another said she missed two months of a Swahili course, held in the off-season when she had no games scheduled and fewer team commitments.

"You were not prevented from attending class for two months," Williams told Hartman.
"After practice I wouldn't want to go to class hungry and unshowered," Hartman replied.

Discussing food next, Williams said Hartman's scholarship covered the cost of meals.
Hartman, however, said she spent that money on rent during the two years she lived off-campus.

Student athletes who live off-campus are given checks for room and board comparable to the cost of room and board on-campus. However, neither UC Berkeley nor the NCAA monitors how the funds are spent.
"If I had a little more money, I'd be less worried about food," Hartman said on direct examination. "I'd probably be performing better in class because I'm not tired and hungry."

Earlier in the day, former West Virginia University football player Shawne Alston testified his scholarship only covered 10 months of rent when school was in session, despite the requirement football players be on campus year-round.

But Williams, noting Alston was also getting a federal Pell Grant raising his compensation above the cost of attendance, said Alston's financial aid was meant to cover the cost of off-campus rent. He suggested money was tight because Alston regularly sent about half his financial aid home to his mother.

"Sending it made it harder for you to do the things you wanted to do in college," Williams said.
Alston denied the statement.

Playing for West Virginia, Alston said he was regularly injured and hungry. Finding time for academics was difficult, because football commitments usurped most of his time. Football players, he said, also made money for the school.

For those reasons, he said, student athletes should be paid a salary.
"So we wouldn't be hungry," he said. "Something to compensate us walking around hurt all day."
Testimony resumes Sept. 17 and runs through Sept. 25
ClayK
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As I've said too often, the NCAA could care less about students -- it only cares about athletes that generate income for the corrupt, inefficient and often cruel organization, and then only when they are competing. They don't care about academics (witness the case with UNC when classes were simply made up out of thin air and the NCAA just shrugged) and they don't care about young people (Want to move home because your first college choice was a bad one? Sit out for a year and pay for your own college).

And the colleges themselves, and the administrators who benefit from the system (much more so than the young people they are supposed to be helping), have no motivation to step forward -- and so, in what I consider truly cowardly fashion, they don't.

smh
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always suspected a Full Ride isn't. it's like athletes going to school manage two full time jobs, or don't.

imo uni should be tuition free, like before Reagan.
muting ~250 handles, turnaround is fair play
wifeisafurd
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GameDay said:

Student Athletes Say NCAA 'Exploited' Them in Antitrust Trial

September 7, 2018 HELEN CHRISTOPHI

OAKLAND, Calif. (CN) A former UC Berkeley basketball player on Friday accused the National Collegiate Athletic Association of "exploiting" her by so severely limiting the scholarship money she received playing sports she often went hungry, in a federal bench trial in Oakland challenging the association's caps on compensation to student athletes.

Justine Hartman said she sometimes skipped classes because she was too hungry and tired to concentrate following daily six-hour basketball practices.

Her athletic scholarship set by the NCAA didn't cover her expenses at the University of California, Berkeley, she said, forcing her to pay rent with money earmarked for food.

"We don't have the means to excel at the highest level academically," Hartman said. "We go without a lot. There are many with similar experiences, where they're hungry and too tired" to focus on academics.
Three classes of 53,000 current and former Division I football and men's and women's basketball players are trying to convince U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken to eliminate the NCAA's restrictions on student athlete compensation.

They reason the association's individual conferences will enact their own compensation caps to preserve amateurism in college sports, which is valued by many fans and believed to be a significant revenue driver.
But the NCAA says there is no guarantee the conferences would enact them. More likely, it says, wealthier schools would begin offering potential team members "millions of dollars" to play for them in the absence of pay limits, essentially turning those players into professional athletes.

Revenues from college sports would shrink, the association argues, because fans who value amateurism would stop buying tickets to games and television networks would pay conferences less money to broadcast the games.

The case stretches back to 2014, when former Clemson University football player Martin Jenkins sued the NCAA and its conferences for anti-competitive conduct and an injunction eliminating caps on compensation and benefits.

The following year, the Ninth Circuit held in a similar case O'Bannon v. NCAA that member schools need not compensate athletes above the cost of attendance.

In response, the NCAA relaxed its rules to allow schools to compensate athletes up to the cost of attendance.
Many athletes already receiving federal Pell Grants and student assistance funds were compensated above the cost of attendance once the change took effect, according to the parties.

Under the new rules, current student athletes would presumably get more financial aid than plaintiffs like Hartman, who played for UC Berkeley before the pay caps were relaxed.

Challenging Hartman's narrative Friday, Pac-12 Conference attorney Bart Williams of Proskauer Rose said "there were many occasions when you were in school when you did not go to class because you chose not to go to class."

Williams presented emails sent by Hartman's instructors at UC Berkeley. One said Harman hadn't attended a single lecture or discussion for an interdisciplinary studies course, or turned in a single assignment. Another said she missed two months of a Swahili course, held in the off-season when she had no games scheduled and fewer team commitments.

"You were not prevented from attending class for two months," Williams told Hartman.
"After practice I wouldn't want to go to class hungry and unshowered," Hartman replied.

Discussing food next, Williams said Hartman's scholarship covered the cost of meals.
Hartman, however, said she spent that money on rent during the two years she lived off-campus.

Student athletes who live off-campus are given checks for room and board comparable to the cost of room and board on-campus. However, neither UC Berkeley nor the NCAA monitors how the funds are spent.
"If I had a little more money, I'd be less worried about food," Hartman said on direct examination. "I'd probably be performing better in class because I'm not tired and hungry."

Earlier in the day, former West Virginia University football player Shawne Alston testified his scholarship only covered 10 months of rent when school was in session, despite the requirement football players be on campus year-round.

But Williams, noting Alston was also getting a federal Pell Grant raising his compensation above the cost of attendance, said Alston's financial aid was meant to cover the cost of off-campus rent. He suggested money was tight because Alston regularly sent about half his financial aid home to his mother.

"Sending it made it harder for you to do the things you wanted to do in college," Williams said.
Alston denied the statement.

Playing for West Virginia, Alston said he was regularly injured and hungry. Finding time for academics was difficult, because football commitments usurped most of his time. Football players, he said, also made money for the school.

For those reasons, he said, student athletes should be paid a salary.
"So we wouldn't be hungry," he said. "Something to compensate us walking around hurt all day."
Testimony resumes Sept. 17 and runs through Sept. 25

Good summary. If you want to be a student athlete at Cal where the cost of living is high and the academics demanding, you need work at it (we now have that lovely phrase "earn it") unless you come from a higher income family (which many do when you look at non-revenue sports). I like that Cal and other D1 schools do provide stipends. Not sure when they began, and why Hartman had didn't have the advantage of student housing (don't athletes get priority?). Moreover, not going to class for months is not about the lack of financial aid, and should be shamed when you have Cal students today who are homeless, but somehow make it to class.

You could go into the commentary that Cal and other schools owe the Hartman's of the world for raising money for the school, but she played women's basketball which at Cal is a necessary financial drain.

I found the commentary by Alston more damaging and disturbing. The colleges IMO should have an obligation to take good care of their injured athletes and to make allowances to help them. I know Furd is all over that with a hospital on campus (players typically have their own doctor who has them in enrolled in various medical research programs). Hopefully Cal is the same way. I'm editing how I want to say this (Clay has more inflammatory language), but athletes, especially those who are in programs that provide money to schools, are used, especially by major programs. Its weird that they would pick someone from Cal, where the main recruiting attraction is you get a good education, and the athlete fails to take advantage of that benefit.
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