• Loading stock data...
Monday, December 1, 2025

Mark Emmert Tried, And Failed, to Maintain the NCAA’s Status Quo

  • Emmert slowed down the NCAA’s modernization, rather than encouraging it.
  • On Wednesday, Charlie Baker will take the reins — and is expected to focus on lobbying.
ncaa-NIL-senate-hearing-mark-emmert-senator-moran
Robert Deutsch-USA TODAY Sports

During a decade-long tenure, Mark Emmert spent most of his time attempting to resist changes to college sports. Ultimately, though, he just delayed the inevitable.

Emmert led a national office that spent millions fighting in court to preserve an increasingly unpopular amateurism model, even when public opinion had clearly changed. He dragged his feet on gender equity, and refused to lead on issues like the pandemic.

Former Gov. of Massachusetts and new NCAA President Charlie Baker walking into tunnel during sporting event

Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker Is The Next NCAA President

The governing body tapped a political operative rather than a university president.
December 15, 2022

While his governing body has seen some court and NLRB victories over keeping athletes from being employees, he’ll hand off the reins just a few weeks after multiple federal judges questioned amateurism harshly in a hearing during an ongoing case.

  • In 2014, he lost in court (with O’Bannon v. NCAA) and in state legislatures on preventing athletes from gaining name, image, and likeness rights. 
  • The 2021 NCAA Division I men’s and women’s basketball tournaments — which took place in semi-bubbles due to the pandemic — put the NCAA’s structural inequities on the biggest stage. 
  • While he did eventually commission an in-depth gender equity review — which NCAA officials have begun to act upon — he only did so when forced. The review was commissioned 10 years after Emmert arrived at the NCAA, where structural problems existed without remedy. 
  • He then led the NCAA to the Supreme Court, where it lost 9-0 over whether the NCAA can limit athlete benefits in NCAA v. Alston. 

The latter half of Emmert’s tenure can also be characterized by his silence. 

During the gender equity fiasco, Emmert made excuse after excuse for the lack of marketing, promotion, and even gift bags and menu items that women’s basketball received — excuses he only offered after reporters cornered him in the halls of the men’s tournament. 

He allowed his underlings, including NCAA VP of Basketball Dan Gavitt and NCAA VP of Women’s Basketball Lynn Holzman, to take most of the heat.

It was a similar approach to how he handled the COVID-19 pandemic — offering few, if any, statements about how schools should handle athlete safety. 

And when the NCAA began to lose in court, he let his general counsel do the talking. 

He was, however, an excellent scapegoat for decisions endorsed by university presidents, conference commissioners, and athletic directors. For serving as college sports’ bogeyman, the NCAA paid Emmert about $29 million in total. 

As for what’s next, Emmert told Collegiate Sports Connect that he believes athlete employment status is the “absolutely the biggest issue” facing college sports today. 

On Wednesday, Charlie Baker will assume the role. While he has revealed little about his personal opinions on various issues in college sports, he’s made one thing clear: His top priority is getting Congress to intervene on the NCAA’s compensation conundrum.

Baker, the former Massachusetts governor, was chosen for his reputation of building bipartisan coalitions and leading companies to financial success in the private sector. With the help of his former chief of staff, he’ll turn the NCAA’s national office into more of a lobbying firm than it has ever been.

Baker won’t move to the NCAA headquarters in Indianapolis so he can have more freedom to spend time in Washington. He’ll be asking Congress to codify what’s left of amateurism.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

SEC Coaching Carousel Spins Fast: Five Schools Fill Jobs in 24 Hours

Six SEC teams ended up making head coaching changes this season.
Lane Kiffin

Lane Kiffin Exit to LSU Creating Chaos at Ole Miss

Kiffin’s choice had been hanging over the sport for weeks.
Nov 28, 2025; Starkville, Mississippi, USA; Mississippi Rebels running back Kewan Lacy (5) and head coach Lane Kiffin celebrate after defeating against the Mississippi State Bulldogs at Davis Wade Stadium at Scott Field.

Lane Kiffin Keeps Ole Miss and LSU Hanging

The Rebels scored a 38-19 victory over the Bulldogs.
Nov 22, 2025; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets running back Jamal Haynes (1) runs the ball against the Pittsburgh Panthers in the second quarter at Bobby Dodd Stadium at Hyundai Field

Why Georgia Tech Sold Its Biennial Georgia Home Game for $10M

The rivalry contest will be played at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

Featured Today

Big League Wiffle Ball

Celebrity-Backed Wiffle Ball Has Big-League Aspirations

Big League Wiffle Ball team owners include Kevin Costner and David Adelman.
November 24, 2025

How NBA Arena Experiences Went Ultra-Luxe

For the most connected guests, the game has become a secondary attraction.
Nov 23, 2025; Inglewood, California, USA; Los Angeles Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford (9) throws a pass against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers during the fourth quarter at SoFi Stadium.
November 24, 2025

Stafford, Rams Rise From the Pack to Super Bowl Contention

The NFL team now has the top odds to win Super Bowl LX.
Nov 16, 2025; Orlando, Florida, USA; NJ/NY Gotham FC celebrate after scoring during extra time against Orlando Pride at Inter&Co Stadium
November 22, 2025

The NWSL Is Growing at Breakneck Pace. Can It Keep Surging?

While the league surges, it also must survive two major challenges.

ACC’s Messy Title Game Tiebreaker May Keep It Out of CFP

Duke (8–5) beat out Miami (10–2) for a championship game bid.
Tennessee quarterback Joey Aguilar (6) holds off UAB safety Pierre Royster (7) during an NCAA college football game on September 20, 2025, in Knoxville, Tennessee
November 27, 2025

Tennessee and Vanderbilt QBs Form Rivalry Week’s Unlikely Alliance

Tennessee’s Joey Aguilar and Vanderbilt’s Diego Pavia are suing the NCAA together.
Nov 15, 2025; Columbus, Ohio, USA; Ohio State Buckeyes cornerback Lorenzo Styles Jr. (3) celebrates with his brother linebacker Sonny Styles (0) after his punt return for a touchdown during the third quarter against the UCLA Bruins at Ohio Stadium
November 27, 2025

Famed OSU–Michigan Rivalry Has More at Stake This Year

The Buckeyes are trying to avoid a fifth straight loss to their archrivals.
Sponsored

NFL QB Christian Ponder Is Preparing Athletes for Business

Former NFL quarterback Christian Ponder discusses the transition from field to boardroom.
November 27, 2025

LSU Agrees to Pay Brian Kelly Full $54M Buyout, Ending Lawsuit

The letter ends a monthlong saga following Kelly’s firing.
November 26, 2025

Texas Attorney General Moves to Block College Sports Enforcement Deal

Paxton’s opposition alone could be enough to kill the agreement altogether.
Nov 23, 2025; Durham, North Carolina, USA; Duke Blue Devils forward Nikolas Khamenia (14) lays the ball up in front of Howard Bison guard Bryce Harris (34) during the second half at Cameron Indoor Stadium.
November 25, 2025

Post-NFL College Hoops Is New Thanksgiving Trend for CBS and Fox

Two big basketball games will air after football action on Thursday.
Ohio State Buckeyes running back Bo Jackson (25) runs the ball against Rutgers Scarlet Knights defensive back Jett Elad (9) in the first half of the NCAA football game at Ohio Stadium on Saturday, Nov. 22, 2025 in Columbus, Ohio.
November 25, 2025

In Win for NCAA, Court Overturns Eligibility for Rutgers Player

An appeals court overturned an injunction that granted Rutgers’s Jett Elad eligibility.