Sports Culture

Values to Last a Lifetime

For all his love of philosophy and his focus on Academics First, Myles Brand was a sports fan through and through. He grew up playing basketball and running track, which he fondly recalled as some of his best memories of high school. And more than anything, he loved how athletics was a place for student-athletes to grow, learn, and find their own community of like-minded friends.

Brand often spoke about the underlying values of college sports. As he saw it, the role of athletics in education was to enrich the college experience while teaching essential life skills that could only be learned outside the classroom. Sports gave student-athletes the opportunity to gain experience growing as a person and learning values like leadership, teamwork, sportsmanship, and diligence.

Because of his love of sports, Brand was all the more determined to ensure that intercollegiate athletics stayed as fair, fun, and free of commercialism as possible. He believed that the values of college sports were at the core of the NCAA’s mission, and he wanted to protect the student-athletes’ ability to participate in athletics without sacrificing their education. After all, most student-athletes would not become professional athletes—and Brand believed it was foolish to pretend differently. But every student-athlete had the right to learn and grow through sports, like so many had before them.

Brand’s excitement for athletics was not always obvious in his formal speeches, but his genuine enthusiasm for the game is more than evident in his podcast episodes, where he often spoke passionately about the joy and beauty of sports.

Sports Culture

WISH-TV Broadcast of Mondays with Myles – “Myles Says Thanks”

March 16, 2009


WISH-TV Broadcast of Mondays with Myles – “2009 Final Four in Detroit”

March 30, 2009


“Diversity Hiring Is Right, Smart,” Huffington Post

April 10, 2009


“What Happens in Detroit, Stays in Detroit,” Huffington Post

May 1, 2009


“APR: Mission Accomplished,” Champion Magazine

July 1, 2009


“To Rooney or Not to Rooney,” Huffington Post

July 6, 2009


“Maybe Two Is More Than Twice as Good as One,” Huffington Post

September 16, 2009


ESPN Richard Lapchick Tribute

September 17, 2009


NCAA Tribute at Conseco Fieldhouse, Indianapolis, IN, hosted by Jim Nantz with soprano Sylvia McNair, poet Garrett Hongo, and Indiana rock legend John Mellencamp

October 28, 2009


Essays on “The Legacy of Myles Brand,” NCAA Tribute Book

October 28, 2009