NCAA prez is open to Trump's idea of commission

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  • Andrea AdelsonMay 12, 2025, 05:18 PM ET

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    • ACC reporter.
    • Joined ESPN.com in 2010.
    • Graduate of the University of Florida.

AMELIA ISLAND, Fla. -- NCAA president Charlie Baker said Monday he was "up for anything" when asked about a President Trump-proposed commission on collegiate athletics.

Reports surfaced last week that President Trump was going to create the commission.

While his conversations at ACC meetings with league football coaches, men's and women's basketball coaches, athletic directors and other school officials focused on governance and the pending House settlement, Baker was asked during an informal press availability for his thoughts on the presidential commission.

"I think the fact that there's an interest on the executive side on this, I think it speaks to the fact that everybody is paying a lot of attention right now to what's going on in college sports," Baker said.

"I'm up for anything that can help us get somewhere."

Baker noted the NCAA has already spent time in Washington asking for Congressional help, focused on three big issues. Among the biggest: A patchwork of state laws that relate to how collegiate athletics work in individual states; and whether student-athletes should be considered employees.

"I think they can help us. I really do," ACC commissioner Jim Phillips said during an interview with ACC Network. "We have been very bold in the desire for a national standard when it comes to name, image and likeness. We need to make sure that we have something that comes out of Washington that connects all 50 of the states because we've had a piecemeal project and it's really undermined college sports. It's been a race to the bottom. So that's one. Two is we need some legal protection. We cannot sustain one legal case after another legal case after another legal case. A reaffirmation that these are student-athletes. Those three things to me will be very important to see if that can come out of the commission."

Baker said, "People in our office have talked to folks who are working on this, but I don't think they've decided the framework around who they want to put on."

When asked whether he felt the creation of a commission would enhance the NCAA's chances at legislative relief, Baker said, "I don't have a crystal ball on that one. I don't know. I do think, though, that it's quite clear at this point that there are a lot of people interested in college sports, and we do need some help at some point to create some clarity around some of these issues in Washington. Creating clarity one lawsuit at a time is just a really bad way to try to move forward."

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