We have been covering the move of the Northwestern University football team to unionize.

During arguments, a quarterback’s alleged that the school’s program places athletics over academics. The school countered:

Northwestern University officials on Thursday countered a quarterback’s allegations that the program places athletics over academics, urging a federal agency to deny a bid by the school’s football players to form the first college athletes’ union in U.S. history.

Witnesses for the school challenged union lawyers’ assertions Northwestern football is highly profitable. And they denied accusations by the union’s star witness, outgoing senior quarterback Kain Colter, that classroom performance is given far less weight than on-the-field success.

The testimony came in a third day of hearings on whether the National Labor Relations Board should approve the Wildcats’ players request to unionize. The first-of-its kind effort is being closely watched by other schools and college athletes nationwide.

Janna Blais, deputy director of athletics for student-athlete welfare, said Northwestern officials are focused on making sure football never undermines players’ studies.

“The basis of everything we do is … academics,” she said. “It is absolutely in our fabric.”

To buttress that point, she said the latest cumulative GPA of the football team was just over 3.0 on a scale of 1 to 4 — a B average. She also said 97 percent of football players get their degrees, which Northwestern says is the highest rate in country.

During testimony earlier this week, Colter suggested that the school’s approach seems to be, “You fulfill the football requirement and, if you can, you fit in academics.”

The athletic official insisted academics trumps football at the school. Blais cited an instance where most of the players traveled to an away game against Iowa, but another bus was held back and left later, so several players could finish tests.

She also challenged testimony from Colter that he was unable to enter pre-med because of intense time demands of football. She said there were multiple examples of Northwestern football players who did go on to medical or law school.

But a union attorney, Gary Kohlman, later sought to illustrate that despite Blais’ testimony even potential football recruits to Northwestern were treated differently than recruits from other, lower-profile sports.

Under questioning from Kohlman, Blais said she recalled one football recruit seriously considered for admission who had a high school GPA of just 2.78. She knew of no recruit from other sports considered with a GPA that low.

And, Kohlman asked, would a non-football playing twin brother of the football player with a 2.78 GPA have any chance at all of getting into Northwestern?

“I don’t know,” Blais answered.


 
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