Monday, February 13, 1984 PagaG Daily Nebraskan U 1 iJJJ (LOU WCiw Sports : Nebraska reserve middle guard Ken ny Shead gets free sneakers. He gets them from his "uncle" Darryl Jones, and Charles Edwards two ofd family friends. One problem: Jones and Edwards represent shoe companies. The sneak ers come from Kangaroos USA Inc. Among the 1 983-84 NCAA Manual 's hundreds of pages and dozens of rules invented to preserve student athletes' amateur status, there is a rule about sneakers. Shead may or may not be pressing that rule. It's a "gray area." More gray areas further complicate the Shead sneaker story. Jones said he's been giving Shead presents since the boy was born. Jones said he didn't know the NCAA had a rule about sneakers. Edwards said Shead tested the sneakers for Kangaroos. He said he didn't want to get Shead in any trouble. Jones and Edwards were just giv ing sneakers and some T-shirts and maybe a couple of hats to their "adopted" nephew. And to Mike Rozier, Kenny's team mate just because Rozier liked Shead's sneakers and asked for some. There are a lot of gray areas in the NCAA manual. One gray area con cerns just what friends and relatives can give players where does gift giving stop, and pay for play begin? An NCAA legislative assistant, when confronted with a hypothetical scena rio similar to Shead's, said he wasn't sure if the sneaker rule applied. "It appears that normally there wouldn't be any circumstances where a student athlete could receive shoes directly from a manufacturer without damaging his amateur status," said John Leavens. "But there are lots of gray areas." Leavens said allegations are consi dered on a case-by-case basis. Every case could develop into a new rule. Leavens said his office receives 150 to 200 inquiries a day. That means 150 to 200 potential new rules. Observers think excessive ennvth cf the nils manuid could 1 2 hv.rllr - the NCAA system. Such growth does raise questions: How an J. why did the book gst so big? Is themsziusl's size creeling more problems than It's solving? How? Are improvements beir.3 ms.de? What is the future of the NCAA man ual? The NCAA manual contains the organi zation's rules and by-laws. In the last 25 years, the manual has nearly quad rupled in size. The casebook, which is supposed to clarify the rules and by laws, listed 1 54 cases in 1 972. Now, the casebook contains more than 400 cases. (See Table 1.) The rule book may have been thinner and simpler years ago, but concerns of university and athletic officials were the same . . . even about "gifts." Harvard professor William J. Bingham wrote in 1924: "If an athlete is dependent on his own resources to meet college expenses, he must account for every cent he earns. The motive behind every gift is questioned with suspicious apprehen sion. " So if the concerns behind NCAA rules have remained basically the same for more than 60 years, how and why has the book blossomed to its present state? Daily Nebraskan staff members con tacted athletic experts and NCAA offi cials by phone, last week to collect opinions on the growth, problems and future of the NCAA manual. Coaches were unavailable for comment because of absence during letter of intent week. Wayne Duke joined the NCAA staff originally in 1952 to edit the NCAA manual Now Big Ten commissioner and representative to the NCAA adminis trative committee, Duke is a member of both the Big Ten rules and NCAA long-range planning committees. Both groups met last week to discuss the burgeoning NCAA rule book. Duke said the book has grown to such mammoth size because people in athletics dont want to observe the spirit of the rules.. -to look for the exceptions. If they didn't ask for all the exceptions, the rule book wouldn't be so thick," Duke said. Generally, people looking for excep tions fall in two categories: those who intended to get around the rules and those who unintentionally pressed a rule usually because or ignorance. l IT -cry tfl yH, j via- Y X Vo ''J V One of the most blatant rule-benders in recent years was Oklahoma busi nessman and Oklahoma State alum nus Jim Treat. Treat told Sports Illustrated in 1978 that he was a "strong advocate of Ieal cheating." "I like to sit down with a player and say, 'Son, tell me about your situation. Tell me about your mama and your daddy, your brothers and sisters. How much money can your family send?' If the answer is none, then . . . Ill take care of the problem." The only problem with the way Treat hKed to do things, he admitted, was that Teop'e in college athletics are inclined it's "against every rule in the NCAA 4 .live: ;' T i i:; '. T v:';" ? 'i-v.rvtf. qfc-jj- X .'r V . . ,vr;.ti..'i. w .... , V . A- i- v. -i- . -Jl book." NCAA manual gray areas concern ing what alumni can and can't do hit a little closer to home earlier this month. Heisman Trophy winner Mike Rozier, now with the Pittsburgh Maulers, men tioned to the Pittsburgh Press that he had received outside help while at UNL Roziers subsequent clarifications indi cated that probably no rules were vio lated, but Coach Tom Osborne said he thought recruiting was hurt this year by the publicity. So next year, nnyt s the NCAA will adept another rule cr add another case to clarify aain what alumni can and can't do for athletes. More rules, more cases, more room for interpre tation and more gray areas. Catch-22. It's this ever-widening vicious circle of rules and gray areas that concerns many authorities in the sporting world. They think that circle is tightening into a bureaucratic strang lehold, hurting the NCAA, member . universities, coaches and players. William H. Baughn, Big Eight repre sentative to the NCAA administrative committee, said there were 162 rule changes proposed at the NCAA annual convention in January. "People have always been worried about the gray areas," Baughn said. "That's what causes the 162 proposals. We have to change what's been com plained about." Many complaints are about those elusive gray areas, areas leaving room for too much interpretation. Brian Boulac, assistant athletic director at Notre Dame, said people inside and outside sports find too many "escape rlansps." Escape clauses hurt the system. Knowing they exist can prove to be a mighty temptation to coaches and ath letes. Prentice Gautt, Big Eight assistant commissioner, set up atypical tempta tion scenario. ; Coach A approaches Joe pbyer. Coach A offers Joe just what the NCAA man ual allows room, board, tuition, fees. Ccr.tlnnd cn Pea 9 Table 1: Rule Booli Panes 1957 1 960 1955 1970 1971 1974 1977 1979 1983 . Stories by: Jeff Browne llona Z. Kcppeimsa Chris Welsch Artwork by Lou Anse Zacek 1 v . -'1.1 - :..::. .... .Cl'' ' r ' ' T : f .. ' "'' -. - . ,...J