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should enact a "comprehensive
College Athletes' Bill of Rights." He said that "the federal government should require deregulation of a monopoly business operated by not-for-profit institutions contracting together to achieve maximum financial returns... Collegiate amateurism is... an economic
126:, with whom he was very much at odds, and said "Tark’s black players play a fast city-lot basketball without much style. Grab ball and run like hell, not lots of passing to set up the shots.” He described U.N.L.V.’s style as “ghetto run-and-shoot basketball” with little concern for defense.
172:
Byers turned against the NCAA. He said it developed the term "student-athlete" in order to insulate the colleges from having to provide long-term disability payments to players injured while playing their sport (and making money for their university and the NCAA). Byers said that
102:
In 1970 the NCAA -- in a decision in which Byers was involved -- banned Yale from participating in all NCAA sports for two years. The decision was made in reaction to Yale -- against the wishes of Byers and the NCAA -- playing its Jewish center
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in 1956. Byers helped expand the NCAA men's basketball tournament in from 8 to 16 teams. Byers negotiated TV contracts that preempted individual colleges' rights on the way to building a billion-dollar business, leading to a 1984
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In 1951 Byers was a 29-year-old former Big Ten assistant sports-information director who had never headed anything. That year, Byers was appointed the first
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said that Byers was sometimes known as "That power-mad Walter Byers," and described him as "secretive, despotic, stubborn and ruthless."
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reporter. He left wire service journalism to take a job as an assistant sports information director with the
498:"RULING TO EXTEND TO ALL ELI SPORTS; Penalty Stems From Yale's Unwavering Stand to Use an Ineligible Player"
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camouflage for monopoly practice. . . , 'operat an air-tight racket of supplying cheap athletic labor.'"
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32:(March 13, 1922 – May 26, 2015) was an American sports executive and sportswriter. He was the first
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referred to him as an "Oz-like" figure who ran the NCAA with ultimate control.
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described him as "power-mad." Byers was also described as a "petty tyrant."
135:
256:"NCAA's first director built it into a hypocritical, self-serving monster"
797:
623:"NCAA lost its teeth in court in 1984, and no one’s been in charge since"
522:"Jerry Tarkanian and Walter Byers: Adversaries Who Left Mark on N.C.A.A."
408:
Volumes 43–46, p. 7, Amateur
Athletic Union of the United States, 1972.
353:
107:
in college games after Langer had played for Team United States at the
418:"Yale Junior Caught In NCAA Feud, After Playing In Maccabiah Games,"
275:"Walter Byers, Ex-N.C.A.A. Leader Who Rued Corruption, Dies at 93"
20:
453:
The Final Report of the
President's Commission on Olympic Sports
212:
Walter Byers, Ex-N.C.A.A. Leader Who Rued
Corruption, Dies at 93
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56:. He never played athletics, and though he took classes at the
705:- By Nathan Kalman-Lamb, Jay M. Smith, and Stephen T. Casper,
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ruling that freed the colleges to negotiate on their own.
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He served from 1951 to 1988. He urged the creation of the
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Bennett H. Beach and John L. Powers (January 17, 1970).
857:
National
Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame inductees
670:
Unsportsmanlike
Conduct: Exploiting College Athletes
170:
Unsportsmanlike
Conduct: Exploiting College Athletes
466:“Rationale for the Student-Athletes Bill of Rights”
298:"The tainted legacy of NCAA president Walter Byers"
450:President's Commission on Olympic Sports (1977).
154:described his "reign" as "near-dictatorial," and
396:. (September 26, 2011). Retrieved on 2018-01-11.
852:National Collegiate Athletic Association people
111:in Israel with the approval of Yale President
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610:"Remarks of AAU President John B. Kelly, Jr."
372:"Are NCAA Athletes being exploited? timeline"
336:"Byers Speaks Seldom but Carries a Big Stick"
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92:United States Basketball Writers Association
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87:, a job that did not have a description.
232:"Walter Byers, first NCAA director, dies"
673:. USA: The University of Michigan Press.
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496:Gordon S. White Jr. (January 16, 1970).
218:(May 27, 2015). Retrieved on 2018-01-11.
85:National Collegiate Athletic Association
38:National Collegiate Athletic Association
16:American basketball player and executive
745:NCAA executive directors and presidents
703:‘Student-Athlete’ Has Always Been a Lie
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641:"NCAA World Evolving But Toward What?"
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160:likewise described him as a dictator.
390:"The NCAA: A High House of Hypocrisy"
354:"U.S. Basketball Writers Association"
7:
822:# denotes interim executive director
538:Lipsyte, Robert (January 24, 1970).
479:"YALE STORM CENTER QUITS BASKETBALL"
334:Grimsley, Will (December 24, 1986).
317:"IN THE KINGDOM OF THE SOLITARY MAN"
60:, he did not graduate from college.
862:Writers from Kansas City, Missouri
593:"19TH HOLE: THE READERS TAKE OVER"
456:, U.S. Government Printing Office.
14:
707:The Chronicle of Higher Education
520:Nocera, Joe (December 25, 2015).
254:Thomasson, Dan (June 4, 2015).
120:University of Nevada-Las Vegas
1:
639:Brian Goff (April 26, 2020).
273:Weber, Bruce (May 28, 2015).
188:College Football Association
68:Byers began his career as a
693:The Shame of College Sports
883:
423:. February 6, 1970, p. 16.
867:Journalists from Missouri
752:
581:. AAU Publications. 1972.
193:Walter Byers Scholarship
118:Byers famously disliked
688:SI.com article on Byers
260:Las Vegas Sun Newspaper
667:Byers, Walter (1995).
559:"Soaking up the Press"
26:
358:www.sportswriters.net
151:The Chicago Sun-Times
24:
109:1969 Maccabiah Games
54:Westport High School
52:. He graduated from
25:Walter Byers in 1951
699:, September 7, 2011
627:The Washington Post
612:, November 1, 1972.
563:The Harvard Crimson
440:. January 15, 2009.
421:Rhode Island Herald
376:Timetoast timelines
157:The Washington Post
145:The Harvard Crimson
709:, December 6, 2021
597:Sports Illustrated
544:The New York Times
525:The New York Times
502:The New York Times
485:. October 9, 1970.
483:The New York Times
321:Sports Illustrated
280:The New York Times
216:The New York Times
131:The New York Times
97:U.S. Supreme Court
81:executive director
74:Big Ten Conference
58:University of Iowa
48:Byers was born in
34:executive director
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695:– Taylor Branch,
599:. April 20, 1970.
340:Los Angeles Times
302:Chicago Sun-Times
122:basketball coach
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774:Judith Sweet
766:Dick Schultz
758:Walter Byers
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697:The Atlantic
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70:United Press
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30:Walter Byers
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18:
847:2015 deaths
842:1922 births
808:(2010–2023)
806:Mark Emmert
792:(2003–2009)
790:Myles Brand
784:(1994–2002)
776:(1991–1993)
768:(1988–1993)
760:(1951–1988)
406:"AAU News,"
105:Jack Langer
50:Kansas City
836:Categories
540:"The Plot"
199:References
44:Early life
816:(2023– )
798:Jim Isch
578:AAU News
182:See also
175:Congress
83:of the
36:of the
64:Career
164:Book
136:WFAN
838::
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