Ben Simmons has joined a long list of people who do not like the NCAA.

The Philadelphia 76ers rookie and No. 1 overall pick will star in the Showtime documentary, One and Done, which is set to air Friday.

In an excerpt from ESPN, Simmons ripped the NCAA for wasting his time at LSU.

He said:

“The NCAA is really (expletive) up. Everybody’s making money except the players. We’re the ones waking up early as hell to be the best teams and do everything they want us to do and then the players get nothing. They say education, but if I’m there for a year, I can’t get much education.”

Though he put up solid numbers at LSU, Simmons was unable to lead the Tigers to the NCAA Tournament. He was left off the Wooden Award list due to a sub-2.0 GPA. He’s repeatedly said that he skipped class at LSU, and he was benched for the first four minutes of LSU’s loss to Tennessee in February.

The NCAA’s Academic Progress Rate (APR) regulations — by design — urge programs to enforce student-athlete attendance and monitor academics. A four-year average score below 930 will result in a postseason ban. If a one-and-done player skips an entire semester — like Ben Simmons claims he did — it could potentially hurt a program’s future long after the one-and-done player leaves school.

LSU coach Johnny Jones gets a $100,000 bonus for each year the Tigers’ APR score is above 930. Well, Simmons saw right through that benching.

Simmons said via ESPN:

“[Coach] Jones said, ‘We need to make up a punishment if you miss another class,'” Simmons said. “I missed my next class about preparing for better study habits. I’m going to the NBA next season. Why bull—- if it’s not going to help me?”

The film debuts Friday on Showtime.