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NCAA rules allow agents to meet with college athletes but forbid those students from entering into contracts -- including oral agreements -- with agents or accepting meals, gifts, transportation and other incentives as a hook to sign contracts later.
For Florida sports agent Darren Heitner, nothing short of a national regulatory body will cure the ills of agent excesses. He has little hope that the recent "summit" involving Saban, Goodell, Florida's Urban Meyer, Ohio State's Jim Tressel and others will result in meaningful change.
"I can guarantee you that there are still players calling agents every day asking for money," he said. "Just because a few coaches have a meeting doesn't change the reality."
The issue caught the attention of several NCAA committees even before the recent spate of reports involving Alabama, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina.
The Division I Amateurism Cabinet discussed agent oversight at its June meeting and plans to do so again in September and February 2011, said Division I vice president David Berst. So will the division's Leadership Council, a group of campus presidents, athletic directors and other school leaders.
Any possible changes that arise from those conversations likely wouldn't occur until at least 2012, Berst said. The committees report their findings to schools and conferences. And since the NCAA is a membership-driven organization, those members are the ones responsible for proposing policy changes.
"This just can't be a reaction to a news story," he said. "Any change needs to be based on values and a philosophy of how this should work for the student-athlete."
[Associated Press;
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