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No. 1 Seeds Lag Academically
By TRAVIS REED


North Carolina was the only school among the four No. 1 seeds in the NCAA men's tournament to graduate at least 50 percent of its players.

A report released Monday found 86 percent of Tar Heels men's players earned diplomas during a six-year period. The other top seeds were far worse: 45 percent at Kansas and 40 percent at UCLA and Memphis.

The study was conducted by Richard Lapchick, head of the University of Central Florida's Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport. It evaluated four different freshman classes for a period beginning in 1997-98 and ending with 2000-01. Though the players evaluated are no longer on campus, the report intends to provide a snapshot of academic trends.

Lapchick's primary concern was the disparity between black and white players. Thirty-three schools graduated at least 70 percent of their white men's basketball players; only 19 graduated that many black players. At least 50 percent of white players earned degrees at 45 schools, but black athletes had that much success at only 36 schools.

But the study found that the achievement gap was shrinking. At 34 percent of tournament-bound teams there was a 30-point or greater difference in graduation success between black and white players, down from 49 percent last year. Black players continued to succeed in higher rates than black nonathletes.

"Higher education's greatest failure is the persistent gap between African-American and white basketball student-athletes in particular, and students in general," Lapchick wrote. "The good news there is that the gaps are narrowing slightly."

According to NCAA data, graduation rates for black men's basketball players have improved 14 percent overall since 1984.

"We've seen some real improvement over time," NCAA spokesman Erik Christianson said. "There's always room for more improvement, but we're pleased with the progress."

The NCAA tournament field is 65 teams, but not all could be included in the analysis. Cornell, like other Ivy League schools, doesn't report graduation rates. Gonzaga had no black players and 10 schools had no white athletes.

Two of the No. 2 seeds, Tennessee and Texas, graduated only 33 percent of their players for the period studied. The other second seeds, Georgetown and Duke, had success rates of 82 percent and 67 percent, respectively.

If the Final Four were determined academically, it would be Western Kentucky (100 percent graduation success), Butler (92 percent), Notre Dame (91 percent) and Purdue (91 percent). Xavier, a No. 3 seed, was close behind with a 90 percent success rate.
 

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what percentage of students end up graduating anyway? Not 100% that is for sure.

I do remember something about Maryland graduating 0% of their basketball players over a span of a number of years recently however.
 

Rx. Senior
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My time in college has been worth about as much as LeBron James' time in college. If anything, turning these people through the institution in under four years should be seen as a good thing
 

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its pointless to stay if you can go pro and make money. memphis has 4-5 pros on that team, so of course the grad rate will be low.
 

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It Takes Alot Of Memphis Players 5 Yrs To Get Out Of High School, No Way They Would Get Out Of College In Less Than 8 Years.
 

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actually alot of pro hoops prospects go through accelerated high school programs that can get them out in 3, 3.5 years.
 

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"Black players continued to succeed in higher rates than black nonathletes. "

This statement seems to have gotten run over. Pretty sad statement on the success rate of Blacks in general, when the average grad rate is below that of black players.
 

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maybe 10-15 years ago underdog i wouldve agreed with you. a college degree these days is basically pointless. i would recommend kids to learn a trade and go to vocational/technical school. learn to be a truck driver, carpentry, networking, etc. these kids that blow 150k on a english degree alot of times cant even get jobs.
 

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maybe 10-15 years ago underdog i wouldve agreed with you. a college degree these days is basically pointless. i would recommend kids to learn a trade and go to vocational/technical school. learn to be a truck driver, carpentry, networking, etc. these kids that blow 150k on a english degree alot of times cant even get jobs.

Don't agree with you, but also don't disagree with you ( I know what a stupid statement), but I understand where you are coming from.

Unless you are studying to be an engineer or some sort of speciality, most degrees are barely worth the paper they are printed on.

Unless you are going IVY, Stanford, DUke, Gtown type of school, you are much better served going to a state school and attempting to curtail costs as much as possible.
 

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