25centsandwich wrote:LKN wrote:I'd like someone to actually provide a logical explanation for why they are opposed to this. I had an academic scholarship to go to college and I chose to study engineering (ended up with a computer engineering degree). I had a job doing some software work while I was a student. Why should I be able to do that, but a student athlete not be able to do that?
I get it - I can see arguments against directly paying the kids... but this? What in the world is the problem with kids being able to work off the court and earn money however they want?
I think the main issue is that if you take away much of the NCAA's regulatory presence and turn college sports into a truly free market system then you get just that.
And that may create a gap between the major revenue generating schools and sports and non-revenue generating schools and sports that's just too large to overcome.
Why continue to have sports that generate no profit? Why have sports when you don't have the endowments or booster activity to pay highly talented players to compete? The NCAA provided some oversight with this but if they're out the picture then you allow corporations, agents, and boosters to set many of the ground rules on compensation.
That's great if you're Zion Williamson or Trevor Lawrence or an olympic caliber athlete at Oregon...but they're going to get well compensated anyway eventually. It's catastrophic for 90% of the other athletes who don't generate any profit who may see their sports get cut and be mired in student debt if they want to go to college.
Nice to see someone understands a probable unintended consequence. I did play football at a D1 school and I know that football is the #1 revenue generator for most major colleges and universities, with basketball being #2, and every other sport sucking revenue from those two sports. At Rutgers, you get 50,000 watching our crappy football team (we were good when I played, yay!!), basketball gets a nice crowd even when we suck (normal these days), 400 watching baseball, 300 watching field hockey...you get the picture. Title IX legislation, signed into law by Richard Nixon, also will rear its head into this. For those who need a quick primer on Title IX:
Athletics programs are considered educational programs and activities. There are three basic parts of Title IX as it applies to athletics:
Participation: Title IX requires that women and men be provided equitable opportunities to participate in sports. Title IX does not require institutions to offer identical sports but an equal opportunity to play;
Scholarships: Title IX requires that female and male student-athletes receive athletics scholarship dollars proportional to their participation; and
Other benefits: Title IX requires the equal treatment of female and male student-athletes in the provisions of: (a) equipment and supplies; (b) scheduling of games and practice times; (c) travel and daily allowance/per diem; (d) access to tutoring; (e) coaching, (f) locker rooms, practice and competitive facilities; (g) medical and training facilities and services; (h) housing and dining facilities and services; (i) publicity and promotions; (j) support services and (k) recruitment of student-athletes.If athletes are getting paid, do they really need a scholarship that could be used by an academically gifted young man or woman who wants to be an engineer or scientist? Depends on the athlete I suppose.
Does this open the door to new forms of corruption? Probably...colleges through boosters paying agents and sponsors under the table to help steer a client to their schools may get out of hand.
Will there still be equitable funding across the board for fulfilling Title IX, even if it means every sport get a 10% cut of funding across the board?
Why not just pay the players who are stars instead of giving them a scholarship, then let them skip to the pros? Much more realistic for basketball than football anyway, as nineteen-year olds aren't playing in the NFL like they do in the NBA. Give them the choice at least?
I think this type of free market system means that you will see less talent go to the smaller schools. It also will put a premium on acquiring the top coaching talent, pay be damned. College football coaches are already the highest paid employee at a fair number of colleges. That number will increase, and top basketball coaches will become the second highest paid (or first at some schools) school employee.
The almighty dollar will now be out front for all to see, the real ruler of the sports world as we have known for decades. No more pretending folks. Hail to the $$$$$$$$$$$$.
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