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University of Nike podcast

From Daniel Libit’s excellent college sports muckraking blog, UNMFishBowl.com.

THE NMFISHBOWL PODCAST: JOSHUA HUNT

By Daniel Libit

For 45 years, college basketball featured two famous arenas dubbed, “The Pit,” one in Albuquerque, the other in Eugene, Oregon.

In 2010, the University of New Mexico renovated its version of The Pit, University Arena, plowing $60 million into the home of Lobo basketball, thanks largely to the generosity of state taxpayers. Lobo fans were duly proud. The next year, the University of Oregon ditched its version of “The Pit”, MacArthur Court, and moved into the brand-new, quarter-billion-dollar Matthew Knight Arena, built thanks to the largesse of its namesake’s father, Nike founder Phil Knight. That’s the difference between the haves and have-nots in Division I college sports.

Over the course of the last 25 years, Knight has given (if that’s the right word) nearly a billion dollars to Oregon, his alma mater, with nearly half of that going to athletic department construction projects. Because of him, the Ducks have been transformed from a middling Pac 10 (now 12) athletic department into the intercollegiate envy of the nation. (That photo above is of Oregon football’s $138 million Hatfield-Dowlin Complex, completed in 2013 and named for Knight’s mother and mother-in-law.)

9781612196916And yet, to read Joshua Hunt’s eye-opening new book, University of Nike: How Corporate Cash Bought American Higher Education, one finds strange commonalities between the plights of a have-not like UNM and a have like UO — and theirs are indeed both plights. Knight’s money hasn’t stopped Oregon from raising student fees to pay for athletics; it hasn’t freed its school presidents from obsessing over the fate of football and men’s basketball; and it certainly hasn’t made for a better or more sensibly administered university. Quite the contrary, as Hunt describes.

In the latest episode of The NMFishbowl Podcast, Hunt and I talk about how the pursuit of college sports tends to vitiate public universities, regardless of how much or little private money is brought to bear. You can listen to our conversation by clicking below (or download it on iTunes here):

Among other things, Hunt addresses the pushback he’s received from the family of former Oregon President David Frohnmayer; the galling obstructionism undertaken by UO’s media relations staff; and his arduous journey in trying to obtain public records from a university.

Here are some additional reading materials and useful links…

5 Comments

  1. Dog 11/30/2018

    Having done some time in some capacity at UNM, it strikes me
    as a rather good comparison that illuminates the kind of unnecessary gap that does exist in the real world.

    Also, UNM fans are nuts, more so than duck fans …

    likely because timber wolves well, they are not ducks …

  2. Jesus 11/30/2018

    And again I say unto you, It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God.

  3. Marla Rae 11/30/2018

    Bill, you really should add the link to the Register Guard for Lynn’s op ed in which she points out Hunt’s multiple mistakes and his exploitation of her family for his self-promotion.

    Did you ever go to the President’s Office on the FIFTH floor of Johnson Hall? Good grief. He can’t even get that right.

    You both are shameless.

    And yes, I am a Frohnmayer loyalist.

  4. uofograd 11/30/2018

    Sorry to say this but the Frohnmayer family has more than several million reasons to dislike what Hunt has written.

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