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Meanwhile, former players are pushing a class-action lawsuit threatening the organization's antitrust status and seeking back pay for the use of their names and images on jerseys and video games. Congress, too, is expressing interest in NCAA's inconsistent and sometimes-inexplicable decisions in meting out punishment, as well as its refusal to follow due process in some disciplinary matters. More troubling still could be the conference realignment that continues to alter the college sports landscape; in those moves to bigger, even more powerful conferences, some observers see the outlines of a system controlled so thoroughly by the conferences that they might one day be emboldened enough to cut the NCAA out of the postseason basketball tournament, much the same way the Bowl Championship Series pushed the organization out of the postseason football picture.
And now, the players themselves are threatening to organize and demand their share of the ever-increasing TV deals rolling in.
"We're on the right side of this debate, No doubt about it," said Huma, who has been invited to make the case for the 7,000 or so members the NCPA represents at a roundtable discussion in Washington, D.C., next week organized by Illinois Rep. Bobby Rush.
Huma paused for a moment, then told a story about a teammate of his at UCLA who said on a radio show one day that he didn't have enough money left that week to buy food. When the player returned home, he found a bag of groceries on his doorstep, took them in and wound up being slapped with a one-game suspension for receiving improper benefits.
"We were the No. 5 team in the nation at the time, his jersey was on sale in shops all over the place and he didn't have enough to go down to the corner and buy a sandwich," Huma recalled. "Everybody agrees the system is broken, they've known it for years. I don't think players resent other people making money from college sports, but if the underlying mission is supposed to be the education it provides, making sure the players get that -- at the very least -- doesn't seem like too much to ask for."
[Associated Press;
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