Athlete turned professor creates myPlaybook to help clarify NCAA drug guidelines
By Pete Iacobelli, APFriday, July 24, 2009
NCAA turns to myPlaybook to clarify drug policies
COLUMBIA, S.C. — David Wyrick sat through the “Just Say No” lectures about the dangers of drug use during his college basketball days at Elon. Yet, when it came to NCAA drug guidelines and testing, Wyrick knew he didn’t have a clue.
“I didn’t know what we were getting tested for,” he said last week in a phone interview. “I didn’t know why I was peeing in this cup.”
That’s why Wyrick, now a researcher and professor at UNC Greensboro, has helped create myPlaybook, a Web-based information system designed to demystify NCAA policy for college athletes.
The program outlines drug testing requirements, details substances banned by the NCAA and provides outreach for athletes in the struggle to make good choices. A pilot program took place in about 60 Division II schools last fall. The results were so promising that the 12 Southern Conference members will be the first in Division I to test myPlaybook.
The NCAA greenlighted the Division I study.
“It’s really the only program out there that is targeted to NCAA athletes (and) was created with NCAA policy in mind,” said Mary Wilfert, the NCAA’s associate director for health and safety. “So I think that’s one of the reasons we’re feeling pretty good about this resource for our student athletes.”
If Wyrick had his wish, college athletes could have access to myPlaybook and gotten information he never had at Elon. He remembers shuffling off to a gym bathroom for postgame drug tests and leaving with questions. What was his sample screened for? How were tests processed? What were the consequences for those who failed?
The NCAA requires athletes to sign a testing consent form which says they’ve learned what’s allowed and what’s forbidden. “Almost across the board, the only education going on about those banned substances was giving them a list, which doesn’t tell them anything,” Wyrick said.
Wyrick brought his concerns into his research. “I always knew I wanted to do something specific for athletes,” he said.
He and research partner, Melodie Fearnow-Kenney, created a course tailored for athletes suddenly dropped into the frenzied world of college classes and NCAA regulations.
Participants log in to an online, hour-long course. There’s a video about NCAA banned substances, drug education and testing.
A series of exercises follow. An athlete is quizzed on the differences between drug classes such as diuretics and urine manipulators, street drugs or steroids. They are given real-life scenarios they may face as a new student, like reacting to peer pressure from older athletes on using drugs or alcohol.
They get instant feedback about their choices and recommendations to learn more. There’s a recap of the course and other resources they can use for follow-up questions or research.
In the Division II study, more than 2,800 mostly first-year student athletes took part. The results, published in March, showed that student-athlete knowledge on drug use and how it affected their sports’ career increased, as did awareness of NCAA banned substances.
The simplicity, anonymity and early effectiveness of myPlaybook won over Southern Conference administrators and coaches, league commissioner John Iamarino said.
The athletes will voluntarily participate and finish at their pace. It is not, he said, a backdoor attempt to undercover drug cheats.
“They sign up, but it’s kind of at their will which I think is a good way to learn,” Iamarino said. “It’s Internet based so you can kind of be a little bit more anonymous.”
Athletes can also be updated through booster programs using social networks. “We can have access to them for a longer time,” Wyrick said. “With the technology, you can stay in touch with these student-athletes throughout their whole college experience.”
The NCAA says more pilot studies are ahead before a mass rollout of myPlaybook. Wyrick said the NCAA plans to offer 40 $2,000 grants for schools interested in using myPlaybook. “They’re going to get bombarded,” he predicted.
myPlaybook likely won’t replace expert lecturers or one-on-one talks with school counselors in advancing the NCAA’s anti-drug message. Wilfert says Wyrick’s program brings the informational fight to popular social media networks young athletes have mastered.
“We don’t want to put it out there as the only means of addressing those issues,” she said. “But we think it does provide that standardized, foundational information NCAA student athletes need to have.”
Tags: Athlete Health, College Sports, Columbia, Doping, Doping Regulations, Education, North America, S.c., School Athletics, South Carolina, United States