On Wednesday morning, it is my understanding, Kentucky freshman Enes Kanter went before the NCAA student-athlete reinstatement committee to determine if the original ruling that he was permanently ineligible would be permitted to stand.

His family had the opportunity to collect millions from the Turkish club Fenerbahce Ulker and the Turkey basketball federation, but instead chose merely to accept expenses from the club in an effort to maintain NCAA eligibility. The amount the family received â€“ about $33,000 -- was deemed to be excessive by the NCAA.

On Wednesday afternoon, another SEC athlete had his eligibility case heard. Auburn quarterback Cameron Newton was ruled ineligible this week, but the school appealed for his reinstatement on the grounds he did not know his father had conspired with a private scout to sell Newtonâ€™s commitment to Mississippi State, reportedly for a six-figure sum.

Newton got the OK to play for the Tigers this week in the SEC championship game.

Kanter still does not know if heâ€™ll ever play college basketball.

Seriously?

Having typed out those words, it seems even more ridiculous in print.

Enes Kanter might be permanently ineligible because his family, thousands of miles and a culture or two removed from NCAA regulations, did not properly interpret what their son would be allowed to accept from a club while he practiced and competed. Kanter was only 16 years old when all this began, and yet he is being held strictly liable for how his family managed his eligibility. He is derided by many in the media as a â€œprofessional,â€ the word pronounced as though spelled with entirely scarlet letters.

Cam Newton will be permitted to play the remainder of his college football career, whether itâ€™s two more games or through the 2011 season. His family had every reason to fully understand NCAA rules, because Newton already had gone through the recruiting process once and played two seasons at the University of Florida. And yet Cecil Newton has acknowledged attempting to arrange for a payment from Mississippi State in exchange for getting his son to sign there last winter. Cam Newton is being excused on the grounds he did not know about that pursuit.

One family purposefully does wrong, shredding the NCAAâ€™s most obvious rule, and the son prospers and excels.

One family mistakenly stumbles outside the more ambiguous pages of the NCAAâ€™s rulebook, and the son sits with the weight of permanent ineligibility draped across his shoulders.

If the NCAA wants its operation to be perceived as serious, and certainly it does given the billions at stake, there can be no option other than to order Kanterâ€™s family to repay the amount in question and restoring his eligibility immediately, counting the six games missed as time served.

The Kanters would gladly write that check. Unlike some, they are not looking to be enriched by their sonâ€™s time as an NCAA athlete.