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The number of registered agents ranged from one in North Dakota to 400 in California, but state figures were so sketchy that a complete national picture could not be put together. The four top pro U.S. sports leagues -- the NFL, Major League Baseball, NBA and NHL -- have about 1,600 registered agents in all.
Under the laws, agents are typically required to register where they live, as well as where they do business. Many agents know they can ignore the registration requirements, said Kenneth Shropshire, a University of Pennsylvania sports law attorney and former agent.
"If you've got bank robbers and rapists, white-collar crime -- how many agent issues should be raised to the top of some prosecutor's desk?" said Shropshire, director of the Wharton Sports Business Initiative at Penn's business school.
On the federal level, the Sports Agent Responsibility and Trust Act was approved in 2004 to serve as a "backstop" for states without their own laws, said Nebraska athletic director Tom Osborne, who coached the Cornhuskers to three national titles and was a lead sponsor of the measure while serving in Congress.
The law spells out civil penalties of up to $11,000 for violations, but an FTC spokesman said the agency has had "very, very few" complaints and taken no enforcement actions.
One of the few examples of a state enforcing the law with some consistency is Texas, which has taken disciplinary action against 31 agents in the past two years, levying a total of $17,250 in fines. That number will likely increase because several cases are pending.
In Alabama, a man who allegedly tried to solicit a Crimson Tide player hospitalized after a 2005 injury faces felony charges for failing to register with the state. So does the agent for whom the man reportedly worked as a "runner."
From the athletes' perspective, dealing with the crush of agents wanting to make a deal is "definitely an issue," said Atlanta Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan, a Boston College standout and the third pick in the 2008 NFL draft.
"Heading into my last year at BC, my dad helped me out a bunch in terms of staying in contact with them. The biggest thing that I didn't want in my last year was any kind of distractions. I had made that clear to agents in meeting with them before the season and let them know ... 'The only time I talk to you is after we finish our season.'"
Ryan believes it should be up to the individual player to handle the pressure of being a draft choice -- he sees it as a sign of maturity -- but others want a crackdown.
Last week, Alabama coach Nick Saban organized a conference call with Florida's Urban Meyer, Ohio State's Jim Tressel, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, the NCAA and others to address the problem. The NCAA's Leadership Council also will address the issue in October.
"We're all trying to put our heads together to figure out what we can do to level the playing field so that everybody that's in the agent community -- which some of them are very professional -- have the same opportunity to recruit players and that the bootleggers out there are guys that get punished and penalized," Saban said.
Pittsburgh sports agent Ralph Cindrich sees his profession as a scapegoat.
He supports expanding agent oversight laws to others who have a stake in an athlete's success. "Include the coaches, include the boosters, include the financial runners, include the players," he said.
Others suggest the NCAA's rules need to be changed -- that forbidding players to sign with agents while in school is an illegal restriction on their fundamental right to legal counsel.
"How is retaining an agent to look after a player's best interest in the negotiation process detrimental to amateurism?" said Rick Karcher, who directs the Center for Law and Sports at Florida Coastal School of Law. "And why should states prosecute somebody criminally for something that isn't harming an individual player?"
"The only reason it's a problem is because the NCAA says it is."
[Associated Press;
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