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Monday, March 30, 2020

NCAA Reduces Distribution to Division I Schools to $225 Million Down From $600 Million

NCAA basketball

The National Collegiate Athletic Association has announced that the Board of Governors has voted unanimously to distribute $225 million in June to Division I member schools to specifically focus on supporting the college athletes. The previous revenue distribution for 2020 was budgeted at about $600 million scheduled to be released in April. Due to all remaining winter and upcoming spring athletic events being canceled and/or postponed because of the coronavirus pandemic, plans were altered.

“We are living in unprecedented times not only for higher education, but for the entire nation and around the globe as we face the COVID-19 public health crisis,” said Michael V. Drake, chair of the board and president of The Ohio State University in a written statement. “As an Association, we must acknowledge the uncertainties of our financial situation and continue to make thoughtful and prudent decisions on how we can assist conferences and campuses in supporting student-athletes now and into the future.”

In the decision for the reduction of funds, the Board of Governors stressed the importance of using the distributions to aid college athletes during the uncertainty of the current environment, as well as the importance of planning carefully with less revenue. The decision also allows the membership to engage in planning while the NCAA continues to work with its contractual partners.

The NCAA stated that of the $225 million distribution planned for the schools, $50 million will come from NCAA reserves. The NCAA also has a cancellation insurance policy that is worth $270 million and the proceeds when received will be used to pay off a line of credit that will cover the remaining distribution within 12 months.

“The Association has prepared for a financial catastrophic event like the one we face now,” Drake said. “While we certainly have challenges ahead, we would be in a far worse position had it not been for this long-standing, forward-focused planning.”

For this year’s Division I distribution, $53.6 million will go through the Equal Conference Fund, which is split equally among the Division I basketball-playing conferences that meet the athletic and academic standards to participate in the men’s basketball tournament. The rest will be proportionally distributed through the remainder of all other available funds. The funds will be unrestricted to provide latitude to conferences.

“Our priority is to ensure that we are able to support student-athletes and continue to provide opportunity as broadly as possible,” said Division I board chair Eli Capilouto, president at Kentucky.



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Former NBA Player Stephon Marbury to Deliver 10 Million Masks from China for New Yorkers

Stephon Marbury

Giving back is essential in this dire time of need and New York Knicks legend Stephon Marbury is coming through in a big way!

According to the New York Post, the former point guard has arranged a deal that will sell 10 million face masks to New Yorkers for $2.75 each from a mask supplier in China. That price is almost a third of the $7.50 price that other retailers have been quoting for the N95 masks.

The former New Jersey Nets and New York Knicks player is now a coach for the Chinese Basketball Association’s Royal Fighters and still has family in Coney Island, Brooklyn, where he grew up. “At the end of the day, I am from Brooklyn,” Marbury told the New York Post in a phone call from his Beijing home. “This is something that is close and dear to my heart as far as being able to help New York.”

“I have family there in Coney Island, a lot of family … who are affected by this, so I know how important it is for people to have masks during this time.”

The Brooklyn native revealed that he got the idea last week after learning about New York’s low supply of masks and the extremely high price New York is paying for them and the state’s lack of protective gear. He decided to reach out to Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams, who has backed Marbury’s local charities in the past, to let him know he wants to assist in getting the masks for the state.

Since China’s coronavirus pandemic has steadily gone down, the need for masks isn’t what it used to be during the peak of the outbreak over there. The connection that Marbury has in China has more N95s than that country presently needs, according to Brooklyn Borough Hall. The gear would be delivered 2 million at a time over five weeks.

Marbury, who was picked fourth overall in the 1996 NBA draft, played for 13 seasons with the New York Knicks, New Jersey (Now, Brooklyn) Nets, Minnesota Timberwolves, Phoenix Suns, and Boston Celtics before moving to China in 2009 and winning three Chinese Basketball Association titles with the Beijing Ducks. 



from Black Enterprise https://ift.tt/3bGm5wD

Former NBA Player Stephon Marbury to Deliver 10 Million Masks from China for New Yorkers

Stephon Marbury

Giving back is essential in this dire time of need and New York Knicks legend Stephon Marbury is coming through in a big way!

According to the New York Post, the former point guard has arranged a deal that will sell 10 million face masks to New Yorkers for $2.75 each from a mask supplier in China. That price is almost a third of the $7.50 price that other retailers have been quoting for the N95 masks.

The former New Jersey Nets and New York Knicks player is now a coach for the Chinese Basketball Association’s Royal Fighters and still has family in Coney Island, Brooklyn, where he grew up. “At the end of the day, I am from Brooklyn,” Marbury told the New York Post in a phone call from his Beijing home. “This is something that is close and dear to my heart as far as being able to help New York.”

“I have family there in Coney Island, a lot of family … who are affected by this, so I know how important it is for people to have masks during this time.”

The Brooklyn native revealed that he got the idea last week after learning about New York’s low supply of masks and the extremely high price New York is paying for them and the state’s lack of protective gear. He decided to reach out to Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams, who has backed Marbury’s local charities in the past, to let him know he wants to assist in getting the masks for the state.

Since China’s coronavirus pandemic has steadily gone down, the need for masks isn’t what it used to be during the peak of the outbreak over there. The connection that Marbury has in China has more N95s than that country presently needs, according to Brooklyn Borough Hall. The gear would be delivered 2 million at a time over five weeks.

Marbury, who was picked fourth overall in the 1996 NBA draft, played for 13 seasons with the New York Knicks, New Jersey (Now, Brooklyn) Nets, Minnesota Timberwolves, Phoenix Suns, and Boston Celtics before moving to China in 2009 and winning three Chinese Basketball Association titles with the Beijing Ducks. 



from Black Enterprise https://ift.tt/3bGm5wD

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