By Perry Green, AFRO Sports Editor, pgreen@afro.com
The NCAA has been under fire lately as several high profile figure and celebrities have criticized the association for making billions in revenue off of college athletes, while restricting the actual players from profiting from their talents. Even NBA megastar LeBron James spoke out bashing the NCAA, calling it flat out โcorrupt.โ
Kylia Carter, mother of Duke freshman star Wendell Carter, is the latest to speak out against the NCAA, comparing it to slavery.

Kylia Carter, mother of Duke freshman star Wendell Carter (pictured), is the latest to speak out against the NCAA, comparing it to slavery. (Courtesy photo)
โWhen you remove all the bling and the bells and the sneakers and all thatโฆyouโve paid for a child to come to your school to do what you wanted them to do for you, for free, and you made a lot of money when he did that, and youโve got all these rules in place that say he cannot share in any of that. The only other time when labor does not get paid but yet someone else gets profits and the labor is black and the profit is white, is in slavery,โ Carter said during a panel discussion at an Knight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics forum Monday in Washington, D.C., according to ESPN.
Carter, who once was an NCAA student athlete herself as a member of Ole Missโ womenโs basketball team during the 1980s, was very emotional when she began to talk, coming to tears as she detailed how her mother and grandmother both picked cotton during her childhood years growing up in Mississippi. Carter went on to explain how she felt the NCAA canโt be trusted.
โShould the NCAA be removed? Yes, because I donโt trust it,โ Carter said, per ESPNโs report. โYouโre not to be trusted because your intentions are clear. Letโs call this group in the middle, letโs call it something else. Letโs put some real reform in there and call it something different and get rid of the current status quo because itโs based on indentured servitude.โ
The forum was mainly attended by โWhite high-ranking university and NCAA officials,โ according to ESPN, causing Carter to hold back on her opinion of the NCAA. But she told reporters later in the hallway after the meeting that it felt like the NCAA intentionally built its league to turn student athletes into modern day slaves.
โThis would be even harder to say in the crowd, but I can say it here,โ Carter told ESPN. โIt feels intentional. It feels like it was built this way intentionally. I canโt move that from my thoughts.โ

