Knowledge (XXG)

Walter Byers

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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
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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" 417: 702: 178:
camouflage for monopoly practice. . . , 'operat an air-tight racket of supplying cheap athletic labor.'"
174: 32:(March 13, 1922 – May 26, 2015) was an American sports executive and sportswriter. He was the first 592: 371: 150: 335: 640: 609: 846: 841: 662: 660: 658: 656: 654: 108: 433: 156: 144: 279: 130: 96: 80: 73: 57: 33: 112: 668: 712: 123: 781: 835: 813: 139: 773: 765: 69: 805: 789: 104: 49: 21: 142:
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.
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in college games after Langer had played for Team United States at the
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The Final Report of the President's Commission on Olympic Sports
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Walter Byers, Ex-N.C.A.A. Leader Who Rued Corruption, Dies at 93
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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).
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National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame inductees
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Unsportsmanlike Conduct: Exploiting College Athletes
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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 728: 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" 8: 92:United States Basketball Writers Association 735: 721: 713: 87:, a job that did not have a description. 232:"Walter Byers, first NCAA director, dies" 673:. USA: The University of Michigan Press. 515: 513: 511: 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 249: 247: 245: 226: 224: 204: 641:"NCAA World Evolving But Toward What?" 292: 290: 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 27: 829: 828: 695:– Taylor Branch, 599:. April 20, 1970. 340:Los Angeles Times 302:Chicago Sun-Times 122:basketball coach 874: 817: 809: 801: 793: 785: 777: 769: 761: 746: 737: 730: 723: 714: 675: 674: 664: 649: 648: 645:Sports Economist 636: 630: 619: 613: 607: 601: 600: 589: 583: 582: 573: 567: 566: 554: 548: 547: 535: 529: 528: 517: 506: 505: 493: 487: 486: 475: 469: 468:, June 25, 2002. 463: 457: 448: 442: 441: 430: 424: 415: 409: 403: 397: 386: 380: 379: 378:. 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Index


executive director
National Collegiate Athletic Association
Kansas City
Westport High School
University of Iowa
United Press
Big Ten Conference
executive director
National Collegiate Athletic Association
United States Basketball Writers Association
U.S. Supreme Court
Jack Langer
1969 Maccabiah Games
Kingman Brewster
University of Nevada-Las Vegas
Jerry Tarkanian
The New York Times
WFAN
Mike Francesa
The Harvard Crimson
The Chicago Sun-Times
The Washington Post
Congress
College Football Association
Walter Byers Scholarship
Walter Byers, Ex-N.C.A.A. Leader Who Rued Corruption, Dies at 93


"Walter Byers, first NCAA director, dies"

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