Courtesy of University of Maryland Eastern Shore
Maryland-Eastern Shore Vice President of Athletics Tara Owens has seen many changes in her years as a college coach and administrator.
However, the recent House settlement allowing NCAA institutions to pay their players is a new challenge.
She is happy to take on the task as UMES announced earlier this spring that they would be opting into the House settlement (paying college athletes $2.8 billion over a 10-year period for missed NIL opportunities) and paying menâs and womenâs basketball athletes.
âIt is quite the experience, being a coach and now an athletic director and VP, you see how things have changed so dramatically, and weâre just trying to keep up with it,â Owens told HBCU Sports. âAlso, we stand on our true values and giving our student-athletes the best opportunities academically and athletically.â
UMESâ decision to opt came with input from athletic and academic administration, deciding that giving players a chance to make money was the best path to follow.
âIf we donât get on board with whatâs happening throughout the country, weâll be left behind. We donât want that to happen, we want to remain competitive while being ethical,â Owens said. âWe wanted to invest in the athletes for what theyâll be doing for us and to try and keep up with whatâs going on across the landscape.â
Owens says the NIL and transfer portal have changed not just the way an athletics program runs but also the people in it.
âItâs a double-edged sword. For schools like UMES, it gives student-athletes more freedom and more power, which I support,â she says. âBut as someone who has mentored and coached young people, I want whatâs best for them but on the other hand, weâve become a feeder system for larger schools because as soon as we get a great athlete, weâll have them for one year and theyâre gone.â
To counter that, Owens says UMESâ mission remains education and athletic experiences that benefit the students and âcreating a championship culture.â
âI try to look at it from a very positive standpoint. It signals that weâre evolving; weâre a part of this huge process thatâs taking place. We are committed to doing this with integrity. We donât want to be the school trying to keep up by not doing it the right way,â she added. âWe have a greater impact on the total student, the human being side of things. Weâll stick to those things while giving financial support. Our menâs team kept three student-athletes and brought in 12, so weâre accepting that and understanding where we are. This is a great opportunity for us to get student-athletes that we may not have gotten otherwise.â
Owens also explained that UMES will be tuned into everything going on around them because risking the universityâs future for athletics is not in the administrationâs plans.
âWe have to stay mission-focused and do the things we can do because weâre not trying to keep up with the Joneses and do what Maryland is doing,â she said. âThere may be decisions that come down to us that make dramatic adjustments that we donât know of just yet. Weâre making sure weâre in line with Title IX and gender equity, so weâre only doing this for menâs and womenâs basketball. Since we donât have football, that puts us in a better position. I think weâll be fine because we wonât make decisions that jeopardize the institution.â