The movement to implement the Commission on College Basketballβs recommendations could begin this week, when the Pac-12 and several other conferences hold annual meetings in Scottsdale.
As the athletic director overseeing one of college basketballβs marquee programs β and one of many involved in the federal investigation into the game β Arizonaβs Dave Heeke could be in the middle of it.
After a fan function outside McKale Center last week, Heeke said he supported the commissionβs recommendations, which largely paralleled those of the Pac-12βs own task force.
βI believe weβre at a point of time where we need to closely examine the sport of college basketball,β Heeke said. βThis is another step forward in addressing some really problematic issues in the sport.β
Hereβs where Heeke said he stands on some of the commissionβs key recommendations, in his own words:
- Heeke supports maintaining the NCAAβs amateurism guidelines, which prohibit athletes from being paid to play or for endorsements.
βIβm certainly very supportive of student athletes and providing them with the support necessary to meet their goals and be successful. But Iβm a huge college model proponent. Amateurism is important to me and there are tremendous benefits to being a student athlete that sometimes get swept under the rug to a degree. We forget the value of a college experience, of obtaining a college degree, of being immersed in a college lifestyle, growing up as a person and being on platforms that are incredible.
βLetβs not forget that the opportunity to play at great places like Arizona, to excel at your sport, is a great benefit. Thatβs something that elevates you to a level where you can do other things with that and that may be an ability to professionalize or monetize it. I get pretty passionate about that. Iβm a student-athlete experience person and I believe that β while looking for ways to improve those experiences β we should closely guard the college model.β
- He supports commission recommendations to allow players to receive advice from agents in high school and return to college if not taken in the NBA Draft β even if it means UA coach Sean Miller might have to hold open roster spots until the end of June.
βThe devilβs in the detail a little bit on those but I think we should allow athletes across the board the opportunity, like any student or any other person, to get all the advice necessary financially with advisors so they can make the very best decisions. And I think we can create some model that allows people to explore that option to go into the draft. If it doesnβt work out, why shouldnβt we accept them back?
βNow, there needs to be a commitment. Maybe you can only do that once in a three-year period or once you do it, you have to come back and commit that Iβll be there for X years. We need to work though that. But why not? Why wouldnβt we do that? Because all we do (now) is continue to kind of force these things underground and that causes stress and strain in the sport.β
- Heeke and the Pac-12βs own task force support a βbaseball-style ruleβ that would require players to remain in college for three years if they choose not to turn professional out of high school. The commission recommended against such a rule because players could be kept in school against their will and become βmagnetsβ for corruption.
βI get that but β¦ you make a commitment and again, this is combining an education, college experience and athletics. You go play for championships, you play for schools and you play for teams, you get to know your teammates and all those things that I think are important. Iβm not trying to control anyoneβs life but youβve gotta have something that you can hold the programs together with.β
- Heeke agrees with the commissionβs plea to the NBA and its players association to end the βone-and-doneβ rule that essentially mandates athletes spend a year in college β unless they play pro overseas or in the G League β because they canβt beΒ drafted until they turn 19 and are a year removed from graduation.
βI donβt like it because I think it holds the universities hostage to be a means to an end. Then we all have to work through that when we know these are very short term relationships. Weβre just not designed for it, thatβs all.β
- Heeke says his belief applies even though Arizona wouldnβt theoretically have fan-pleasing talents in the future such as Deandre Ayton, who arrived last season as a one-and-done and now could be the No. 1 pick in the June NBA Draft.
βItβs all relative. If the 10 or 15 best players move to the professional ranks there are other stars. There are other success points that are centered around the program that bring attention to it. Weβre still gonna have championship teams. You can still compete at the highest level. All of those things.β
- UA already has a program funding former athletes who want to complete their degree after theyβve finished playing for the Wildcats. The commission recommended all schools provide such funding forΒ athletes spend at least two years in school, then leave.
βWeβre committed to help people finish their degrees at Arizona no matter what. Itβs kind of a case-by-case but we have a program that we continue to fund. We work with donors for a degree completion program. Itβs not exclusive just to pro athletes or people who leave early. Itβs all of our athletes who leave for some reason and they donβt get a degree in that four or five year period.
βItβs always in our best interest to bring them back to get that degree. Thatβs ultimately our goal β¦ How we get that on a more national level? Thatβs hard for some schools that donβt have revenue streams like some of the power five. Even on the power-five level, thatβs a hard investment to make.β
- The commission recommended stricter allowable penalties for rule-breakers and said school presidents and ADs βcannot be permitted to turn a blind eyeβ to infractions, but Heeke said he already expects to be held accountable.
βI donβt know the details of that recommendation but they want to make sure that people are focused on βweβre all in this together,β that the coaches ands administrators make sure our programs have integrity, that theyβre held accountable. I think thatβs our job already. Weβre already responsible for that and accountable for the outcomes. We have the systems in place. And if we have the systems in place we can say we did everything we could to maintain the integrity of our athletics program.β