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You are talking about the elite of the elite of the elite.

https://ftw.usatoday.com/2015/09/what-are-the-odds-of-making-it-to-the-nfl

If a kid chooses a college based on ability to make the nfl - which DOES happen, no doubt - but if that is the ONLY thing motivating them, they need to know the odds.

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To an extent I am. To an extent I'm not. While it's true that very few ever make it to the NFL, that doesn't change the fact that it's the goal and dreams of far many more and the ultimate goal they are working towards.


Intoducing for The Cleveland Browns, Quarterback Deshawn "The Predator" Watson. He will also be the one to choose your next head coach.

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Eh, I think the goal of the majority is to continue playing a game they love, while getting an education for free. Not all, by any stretch. But, too many think they'll make the nfl. Or nba, or whatever.

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I too agree that too many of them have unrealistic expectations by thinking they'll be drafted into the NFL. But I do admire that at least they have goals and dreams.

But the discussion I was having with YTown was about top athletes gravitating toward top schools. I don't think this policy will change any of that. And for those you described, I think they realize their talent isn't going to lead them to commercial endorsements.


Intoducing for The Cleveland Browns, Quarterback Deshawn "The Predator" Watson. He will also be the one to choose your next head coach.

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Originally Posted By: Punchsmack
Originally Posted By: clwb419
The free (or lower) cost education & room and board, free clothing, free tutoring, stipends, and high paying cushy jobs scholarship athletes already get aren't enough?

My 2 cents - these kids and their parents are making a choice to have the kid play a sport and go to school for low/no cost. The alternate choice is to pay regular prices like the rest of us. Sure, football and basketball are the moneymakers (normally), but those programs pay for the existence of most, if not all of the other sports at the school. Start paying kids and you'll see the number of sports drop at every school, down to zero in some cases. And where does it stop - pay them and some kids will want more, others will still break the rules. Nobody is forcing you to play sports - if you choose to, take your free education and shut up


Seems like you didn't read the main article. No school will be paying a dime for the athletes. The money the school brings in will still go to the other low generating sports. The students will be free to get money outside the university, selling their likeness as they see fit.

From what I could find, and it's a few years old, the OSU athletic department takes in about 20% of it's budget ($33 million) from donations and contributions... what happens when that money isn't given to the AD to use for the whole department but is used to pay off a few dozen or so football and basketball players?


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I’d argue this change opens avenues for money to be paid to the players that is either already happening illegally or not at all. I’d bet the current money going to the university will be there tomorrow. If not, they’ll have to work harder for it. Where does all that TV and Big10 network money go now?


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Do all Big10 (or whatever conference) teams get the same amount from the network deals?


"First down inside the 10. A score here will put us in the Super Bowl. Cooper is far to the left as Njoku settles into the slot. Moore is flanked out wide to the right. Chubb and Ford are split in the backfield as Watson takes the snap ... Here we go."
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j/c:

I don't get the uproar by some folks who don't want the players to be paid for doing things like sitting down somewhere and autographing memorabilia for an hour or two.

Just so I'm clear.............if people think that a ton of highly recruited players are not being paid by alums of big-time colleges, you are sadly mistaken. I actually think this idea is going to reduce corruption and get some guys who are are not 4 star recruits some money.

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Originally Posted By: Versatile Dog
Originally Posted By: clwb419
The free (or lower) cost education & room and board, free clothing, free tutoring, stipends, and high paying cushy jobs scholarship athletes already get aren't enough?

My 2 cents - these kids and their parents are making a choice to have the kid play a sport and go to school for low/no cost. The alternate choice is to pay regular prices like the rest of us. Sure, football and basketball are the moneymakers (normally), but those programs pay for the existence of most, if not all of the other sports at the school. Start paying kids and you'll see the number of sports drop at every school, down to zero in some cases. And where does it stop - pay them and some kids will want more, others will still break the rules. Nobody is forcing you to play sports - if you choose to, take your free education and shut up


Let me guess. You are white? You were raised in a middle class suburban family? You have no athletic talent? You think it's okay for baseball players to sign out of high school? You think hockey and baseball fights are cool. You think NBA and NFL fights are the acts of thugs?



And you whine about other people making personal attacks. Your shticks is old. Not everyone who disagrees with you is racist. You pull this crap all the time. I know 419 and he is the farthest thing from a racist. I stopped interacting with you because you have claimed many on this board are racist, including me because my views don’t align with yours. I have written this post before but always deleted it because you aren’t worth it. This time you picked on a friend (who you don’t know anything about) and I refuse to stay silent.

Btw do not pm me. I don’t care what you have to say.


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Okay.

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Originally Posted By: Punchsmack
Originally Posted By: clwb419
The free (or lower) cost education & room and board, free clothing, free tutoring, stipends, and high paying cushy jobs scholarship athletes already get aren't enough?

My 2 cents - these kids and their parents are making a choice to have the kid play a sport and go to school for low/no cost. The alternate choice is to pay regular prices like the rest of us. Sure, football and basketball are the moneymakers (normally), but those programs pay for the existence of most, if not all of the other sports at the school. Start paying kids and you'll see the number of sports drop at every school, down to zero in some cases. And where does it stop - pay them and some kids will want more, others will still break the rules. Nobody is forcing you to play sports - if you choose to, take your free education and shut up


Seems like you didn't read the main article. No school will be paying a dime for the athletes. The money the school brings in will still go to the other low generating sports. The students will be free to get money outside the university, selling their likeness as they see fit.


I didn't read this one no, just based it on previous articles about the same overall subject. I normally do, my bad, should have.

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I'm sorry if this offends anyone, but I do wonder why some folks get upset about college players getting paid for signing autographs or for companies using their image.

I also wonder why it's okay for baseball and hockey players to sign w/pro teams right out of high school and why football and basketball players can't.

I wonder why it is okay for folks to celebrate hockey and baseball brawls, but get upset about basketball and football fights?

This is the United States of America and I have the right to express those thoughts.

I also think that minority athletes are being exploited by universities. The universities are making huge money off these players and they break academic and legal rules to ensure that the players are able to attend their institutions. Here is one article about the subject....and believe me............there are many more. I would gladly share them if anyone is interested.

Quote:
Are Universities Exploiting Black Male Athletes in Order to Raise Revenues?
A new study suggests the answer is yes.

James McWilliams
Updated:
Apr 20, 2018
Original:
Apr 19, 2018


A recent report put out by the University of Southern California's Race and Equity Center delivers some disturbing, if familiar, news about college athletic programs: They exist as mechanisms of exploitation, particularly of African-American men.

The meta-analysis, authored by Shaun Harper, an education professor at USC, concludes that "perhaps nowhere in higher education is the disenfranchisement of black male students more insidious than in college athletics." The takeaway, according to Harper, is the need for "more outrage and calls for accountability."

Of the 65 universities studied, black men comprised 2.4 percent of all undergraduates but 55 percent of football team members and 56 percent of basketball team members. Total student-athlete graduation rate was 69.3 percent over six years, and 76.3 percent for all students, but only 55.2 percent for black male student athletes. It's not as if these numbers are in the process of improving. At 40 percent of the universities black male athlete graduation rates have dropped by 6.5 percent in the last two years.


Given the formidable revenue generating force of college athletics—especially football and basketball—these figures strongly suggest racial exploitation, the kind whereby black men are used primarily for their athletic skills to generate income for universities that educate mostly white graduates for successful careers.

Harper is unusually direct about the underlying reason for the disparities his report documents. He places his findings in the deeper context of sports sociologist Harry Edward's 1984 claim that black student athletes:

[M]ust contend, of course, with the connotations and social reverberations of the traditional "dumb jock" caricature. But Black student-athletes are burdened also with the insidiously racist implications of the myth of "innate Black athletic superiority," and the more blatantly racist stereotype of the "dumb Negro" condemned by racial heritage to intellectual inferiority.

According to Harper, not much has changed when it comes to the prevalence and power of these stereotypes over the past 40 years. "This caricature and other racial stereotypes continue to plague Black male student-athletes at many predominantly white colleges and Universities," he writes, citing a slew of peer review studies to back his point.

If the disparity in graduation rates for black male student athletes is, as Harper indicates, rooted in long entrenched racial attitudes, then his call for a "sociocultural understanding of the status of Black male student athletes" is not only apt, but it may be the only way to get to the root of this problem in order to work our way out of it.

There are caveats to consider before concluding that racism is the cause of the comparative failure of black student athletes to graduate. Harper's numbers are culled from student-athletes who are on scholarship, and exclude those who may have walked on without financial assistance and possibly had a more successful educational experience.

While this limitation might overlook some black male students who graduated and played sports, the omission also indirectly strengthens Harper's argument in that it's a reminder that the figures that are included are based on students who had a high drop out rate despite being protected from the leading cause of dropping out: inability to pay tuition.

There can also be significant differences among the surveyed universities, gaps that might make the average numbers less meaningful. For example, Northwestern University graduates 88 percent of its black male student athletes; the corresponding figure for Louisiana State University is 34 percent.

The USC study has itself been the source of some criticism, mostly from conservative think tanks. Writing on the website of the James G. Martin Center for Academic Renewal, a right-leaning think tank, Shannon Watkins takes issue with Harper's sociocultural framing of racial attitudes as a leading cause of the lower graduation rates among black male athletes.

Instead, she argues that the black male students are, as reflected in their lower SAT scores and high school grades compared to the school's standard admissions requirements, relatively unprepared to deal with the academic challenges they have to face. She concludes:

[T]he problem is not that universities are intimidating or preventing black athletes from succeeding in college—it is that university officials compromise academic integrity for the sake of gaining star players.

It may be true that black male athletes granted scholarships to help their universities win games, sell merchandise, and generate media attention—that is, raise revenue—are academically unprepared next to the average student at the surveyed universities. But so what?

Watkins' argument does nothing to address Harper's fundamental assertion that deleterious racial attitudes undermine the potential of black undergraduates to succeed on white campuses. In fact, it only asks us to see the problem in a broader scope, taking careful note that the racism Harper identifies as holding down black athletes in the classroom did not begin the day they started college. When I pushed Watkins on this point, she said, "there could be [other] factors, but I don’t deal with the areas outside of higher education."

Watkins further insists "the correlation between academic success and standardized test scores, such as the SAT, cannot be ignored." But this claim, in light of Harper's study, is disingenuous—if not dangerous—when not also considered against the overwhelming evidence that a phalanx of disadvantages due to racial disparity (and racism) have led to lower SAT scores and poorer academic achievement.

The notion that the university should be some sort of meritocratic utopia ignores the deeper reason that the resort to meritocratic thinking on such an issue is especially noxious: Race matters. And it matters more than ever.

It is to Harper's credit that he joins contemporary thinkers such as Ta-Nehisi Coates and Bryan Stevenson in not only affirming this obvious reality but demonstrating that the racial legacy of slavery and Jim Crow continues to appear everywhere, even on the football field and basketball court of our favorite teams, where we rarely think about who's really winning and losing.

Tags
SportsCollege SportsAfrican AmericansStudent Athletesquick studiesHigher Education


James McWilliams is a Pacific Standard contributing writer, a professor at Texas State University, and the author of Just Food: Where Locavores Get It Wrong and How We Can Truly Eat Responsibly and a Revolution in Eating.

https://psmag.com/education/are-universi...-raise-revenues


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Originally Posted By: Versatile Dog
Originally Posted By: clwb419
The free (or lower) cost education & room and board, free clothing, free tutoring, stipends, and high paying cushy jobs scholarship athletes already get aren't enough?

My 2 cents - these kids and their parents are making a choice to have the kid play a sport and go to school for low/no cost. The alternate choice is to pay regular prices like the rest of us. Sure, football and basketball are the moneymakers (normally), but those programs pay for the existence of most, if not all of the other sports at the school. Start paying kids and you'll see the number of sports drop at every school, down to zero in some cases. And where does it stop - pay them and some kids will want more, others will still break the rules. Nobody is forcing you to play sports - if you choose to, take your free education and shut up


Let me guess. You are white? You were raised in a middle class suburban family? You have no athletic talent? You think it's okay for baseball players to sign out of high school? You think hockey and baseball fights are cool. You think NBA and NFL fights are the acts of thugs?



Not sure why any of this matters, but I'll play.

You are white? yes

You were raised in a middle class suburban family? suburban yes for most of my childhood. middle class depends on the definition. my mom worked her tail off as a secretary, there were times we were on food stamps, I remember a lot of government cheese. I remember McDonalds being a special occasion. I remember not having a snack when I got home from school so my little brother could have an extra one. I don't recall missing many meals. I call that pretty lucky because I knew others worse off than we were. If that is middle class, then yes I was middle class.

You have no athletic talent? played 3 sports in high school and chose not to play collegiate. did play intramural in college and adult leagues after college. Held my own against former collegiate football players in flag football and collegiate volleyball players in both sand and court volleyball. ran half marathons and Hood to Coast averaging under 7:15/miles...I'd say that is pretty athletic compared to the average person. Unathletic compared to pro athletes. You pick.

You think it's okay for baseball players to sign out of high school? I don't follow baseball too much outside of checking the standings every so often and maybe a couple games if the Indians make the playoffs. Kudos to the kids if they're that talented to get signed, beyond that I haven't put thought into it. I can see positives and negatives.

You think hockey and baseball fights are cool. Not really, not much of an MMA or Boxing fan either

You think NBA and NFL fights are the acts of thugs? Not a fan of fighting in general

For the record, my opinion was intended to be race agnostic, sorry if I offended you in some way, there was no intent. If you want to chat via PM, I'd definitely be open to understanding what I did to trigger that response and how to avoid it moving forward.

edit: thanks for the article right above this, the numbers provided are staggering



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For the record, I did not call you a "racist," even though PDawg is saying I did.

My point was that sometimes it is hard to understand the plight of others when you haven't lived their lives.

The comments you made in your OP were completely misaligned w/the information that was provided in the original article. Just a few minutes ago, I saw that you did not read the original article. I did not know that when I made my comments. Can you at least understand why I thought your comments were off-base given the information that was contained w/in the article.

I apologize if I hurt your feelings. I did not call you a racist and I didn't even mean to imply it.

I will add after reading PDawg's post that I now have a better understanding of the "Well Deserved" comment I read at some point on this board.

Y'all have a good night.

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You seem like a good dude and I sent you a brief PM. When I wrote my original post, I didn't realize that you hadn't read the article. That changes things a lot. I thought you were blowing off the information provided and just bashing dudes who need the money.

I hope we are cool moving forward.

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Originally Posted By: Versatile Dog
You seem like a good dude and I sent you a brief PM. When I wrote my original post, I didn't realize that you hadn't read the article. That changes things a lot. I thought you were blowing off the information provided and just bashing dudes who need the money.

I hope we are cool moving forward.


We're good man, don't sweat it. Just read the article, it'll be interesting to see where this goes.

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I'm curious how this plays out, This gives schools in Cali a huge recruiting advantage. This is going to be either widely adopted or the NCAA will step in.


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Originally Posted By: archbolddawg
Originally Posted By: jfanent
I don't think the NCAA will play nice with this. I could see them banning Cali schools from the tournament.


Possibly.

The biggest issue I see with this, aside from it being dumb, is next we'll hear about the swimmers that don't get any money, or the divers, or the shooting team, or the lacrosse team members, etc, etc.

Next law will be "every athlete gets paid the same",



It doesn't work that way. This law allows a player to profit from endorsements. Not every player is going to be able to do that. Only top stars will be able to make the Wheaties box cover and receive payment. It's not like the University is going to be able to pay the players.

This could however impact recruiting. A Rivals top ranked player who otherwise might consider playing for OSU or Florida might decide to take the chance and sign with a California school with the hope they do get endorsement offers.


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Originally Posted By: Ballpeen

This could however impact recruiting. A Rivals top ranked player who otherwise might consider playing for OSU or Florida might decide to take the chance and sign with a California school with the hope they do get endorsement offers.



I think the ideal situation would be for states to eventually level the playing field, in this regard.


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It would be much simpler for the NCAA to allow this rather than try to get 49 states pass legislation. As far as I know it isn't illegal for players to do this as far as state or federal laws. It is a NCAA rule.

Now we will find out if the NCAA can indeed have rules it can enforce. I am sure they will attempt to tell California schools that if they don't want to abide by the rules of the group...group meaning NCAA members, they can withdraw their membership.

What isn't known is what the schools think. Schools can release players from their scholarship.


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j/c:

This story is the kind that aggravates me. I think there is only one reason why the NCAA would not allow players to make money off of their own likeness, signing merchandise, etc. And that reason is pure greed by the NCAA!

They make a ton of money off of these kids w/out having to take away that right. Greedy ********!

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Originally Posted By: Versatile Dog
j/c:

This story is the kind that aggravates me. I think there is only one reason why the NCAA would not allow players to make money off of their own likeness, signing merchandise, etc. And that reason is pure greed by the NCAA!

They make a ton of money off of these kids w/out having to take away that right. Greedy ********!

I'm not sure how this makes the NCAA greedy. In theory, it costs the NCAA nothing to allow this to happen, it's private entities paying directly to players with no NCAA involvement.
In fact it may even increase revenue if it encourages high value players to stay in the NCAA another year or two before turning pro.

I'm not 100% sure what the NCAA's motivation is, effect on non-revenue sports? Balance of power between wealthy and non-wealthy teams/fan bases? I don't know.. Whatever it is, I'm not saying they are right or wrong, but I don't see how greed factors into it.


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DC, it makes them greedy because right now the NCAA is making money off of selling the player's likenesses, jerseys, etc.

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Originally Posted By: Versatile Dog
DC, it makes them greedy because right now the NCAA is making money off of selling the player's likenesses, jerseys, etc.


I know they all like to say "football programs and sports don't make money!" but I'm sure college merchandise makes a good profit based on how the teams are playing.

I'm quite certain no one would buy OSU stuff if they weren't good, and the majority of people who rep buckeye stuff didn't even attend OSU. NCAA and colleges count on their sports teams to turn a little extra coin.

It's sickening.

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Originally Posted By: DCDAWGFAN
Originally Posted By: Versatile Dog
j/c:

This story is the kind that aggravates me. I think there is only one reason why the NCAA would not allow players to make money off of their own likeness, signing merchandise, etc. And that reason is pure greed by the NCAA!

They make a ton of money off of these kids w/out having to take away that right. Greedy ********!

I'm not sure how this makes the NCAA greedy. In theory, it costs the NCAA nothing to allow this to happen, it's private entities paying directly to players with no NCAA involvement.
In fact it may even increase revenue if it encourages high value players to stay in the NCAA another year or two before turning pro.

I'm not 100% sure what the NCAA's motivation is, effect on non-revenue sports? Balance of power between wealthy and non-wealthy teams/fan bases? I don't know.. Whatever it is, I'm not saying they are right or wrong, but I don't see how greed factors into it.


I think it's more about control. In the current system, a player good enough to potentially get into the NFL must go to a power 5 program, and maybe even one of their preferred teams (ND, OSU, Bama, USC, etc.). The system is setup to favor those teams and keep them on TV.

If a player from Idaho can stay in Idaho and get paid, even a 5 star recruit, it gives the player and booster more control. The NCAA has all of the control right now and losing even a bit is scary to them.

Heck, as you mentioned, the NFL stands to lose control too. If that Idaho player is making nice cash, why does he HAVE to go to the NFL at the earliest opportunity. Maybe more players stay an extra year or two because being a dominate NCAA player is better for their brand. If players are staying longer, that would thin out the draft and put a bit extra wear and tear on players before the NFL gets them.

Look, I think the NCAA of a horrible organization, but what do we all expect them to do? Give up? They're running this cash cow business and they've been trying to keep it going for the sake of the sport (and the cash). Changes could be made over the next few decades that devalue college sports (the NBA is looking to lower the draft age to 18 again). They have to keep fighting or they could turn into minor league baseball (okay, that's a flimsy prediction but you get my point).


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I understand why the NCAA doesn't want to pay their players. It's almost impossible. A starting LB on Toledo isn't worth the same as the starting LB from Alabama. Heck, the Bama LB is probably worth $5M/year. How do you set up that payment structure? And any money going to the players takes away from the men's water polo and women's power-lifting teams.

I know the players should be paid, but I think it's too complicated if the NCAA is writing the checks. Maybe it's perfect to have the players to get money from the outside, but like my post above, the NCAA loses the control, there are heavy corruption problems and it could damage the sport in quite a few ways.


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The NCAA wouldn't be paying anyone. Did you read the thread?

It would allow players to profit from the likeness and endorsement deals only.


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Originally Posted By: PitDAWG
The NCAA wouldn't be paying anyone. Did you read the thread?

It would allow players to profit from the likeness and endorsement deals only.


Yeah, I'm aware. I've already said that to someone else in the thread. smile

I brought up them paying to illustrate how it could never happen. This is the scenario that works for all sides:

1. It's based on the player to decide if they want money while in college
2. Any sport and any player can benefit. If Al's Toy Barn wants to give $30,000 to the women's softball team, no problem.
3. The NCAA doesn't have to do a single thing differently, heck, they don't even have to govern the transactions (although someone might).

The only bad thing is how it may change college athletics, which we don't really know how it will change, yet.


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I actually feel it will force other states to adopt the same policy. If states believe their teams will lose top athletes to other teams like in California, they won't wish to risk that. And how do you see paying a player for an endorsement the same thing as someone giving money to a team?

But I believe athletic boosters already do that.


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Originally Posted By: PitDAWG
I actually feel it will force other states to adopt the same policy. If states believe their teams will lose top athletes to other teams like in California, they won't wish to risk that. And how do you see paying a player for an endorsement the same thing as someone giving money to a team?

But I believe athletic boosters already do that.

Pretty sure he meant girls softball PLAYERS, not the whole team or the athletic department..


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Originally Posted By: DCDAWGFAN
Originally Posted By: PitDAWG
I actually feel it will force other states to adopt the same policy. If states believe their teams will lose top athletes to other teams like in California, they won't wish to risk that. And how do you see paying a player for an endorsement the same thing as someone giving money to a team?

But I believe athletic boosters already do that.

Pretty sure he meant girls softball PLAYERS, not the whole team or the athletic department..


Well, we don't know how any of this will work yet, so it's still brand new. However, let's keep it simple for example 1.

- Al's Toy Barn has $30k to blow in advertising, they like women's softball and want to support the team. They could approach the players and offer an even $30k split if they appear at the toy store a couple days during the season, sign autographs and be on a few cable ads.

Questions:
1. Can they wear the university uniforms during the appearances/ads?
2. If it were Al's ADULT Toy Barn, could they still do it?
3. Do they get the cash right away or does it go into escrow until after they graduate?
4. Would that affect their amateur status if they wanted to play for the Olympic team?
5. What if one of the players opted out of the cash but still appeared in the ad, could they still go to the Olympics?
6. Could a different player refuse and sign a separate deal with Jenny's Game Depot across town?

I suppose Al's could also donate straight cash to the university athletic program and maybe even the only to the softball team, but I'd believe those would be separate transactions (one with the university and one with the players agents - assuming they can sign with agents now).

- And for example 2, what's to stop an Alabama billionaire hedge fund owner tossing $5m at a LB to "represent" his company so he can play for the Tide? Wouldn't that be the same thing, but for one player?

- Maybe example 3 has Nike contacting player X in high school and offering $5m/year if he signs with Oregon and must stay for all four year. Is that okay?

And yes Pit, this will have to be in each state. I think someone posted in the past few days that a bill was recently proposed at the federal level to do the same thing. Meaning, this is happening across all states and soon.

Good for the players, but I worry if we're going to like it as fans 5-10 years from now.


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j/c:

When an Ohio State game jersey is sold, who profits off of it other than the manufacture and the distributor? When posters are sold w/player likenesses on it, who profits on the sales other than the manufacture and the distributor? I could go on and on and on. But, I hope y'all get the point.

Why should the NCAA be the benefactor of cashing in on what the players are accomplishing in addition to ticket sales, mega TV deals, attention for their institutions, etc while a ton of poor black kids don't receive a dime for any of those things?

Exploitation. It's one of the forms of racism that I despise the most.

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I don't know the answers to your questions other than, I don't think the Olympics really cares about your amateur status any more...

A more realistic example would seem to be, Al's Toy Barn typically gives $100K a year to the athletic department of FU. Al's really only passionate about basketball so this year he divides the $100K in half to recruit and give directly to two 5-star basketball players.. now, women's softball is negatively impacted because the overall funds of the athletic department are reduced..

Example 2 pretty much captures what I'm saying.. other than the fact that I got a chuckle out of the Alabama hedge fund manager..

Example 3 poses an interesting challenge.. Nike has contracts with certain schools.. Under Armour does too.. Adidas has some.. are they allowed to play in this game? Could Nike have just given Zion Williamson his shoe deal coming out of high school IF he attended a Nike school? Seems like it meets the letter of the law to do that...


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They probably will if the NCAA loses when it tries to exclude any team that has players receiving payment from post season play, if not season play..

As a private organization that teams choose to join, it can have it's own rules that members must follow.

I understand my above point will have to be litigated and adjudicated several times over.


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Very true. Just like when states started legalizing recreational weed and the NFL quickly sent out notice to the teams.. THEY had not changed their rules.


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The Push for Player Pay Goes National

Days after California enacted a law allowing college athletes to sign endorsement deals, lawmakers in other states and in Congress threaten legislation to advance player compensation.

https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2019/10/04/us-congressman-propose-college-athlete-payment-bill

This will be the snowball effect that the NCAA will be powerless to stop.

Banning all the best teams in the NCAA will not be an option.


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I think the power 5 has been on a course to separate from the NCAA for some time. The NCAA will still have a strong foothold in the other conferences.

If they do in fact get overruled that they can't prevent players from seeking compensation from endorsements.


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J/C

This just in....

NCAA Votes to allow players to earn money from likeness.

NCAA Football should be back on game consoles near you! lol

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Originally Posted By: willitevachange
J/C

This just in....

NCAA Votes to allow players to earn money from likeness.

NCAA Football should be back on game consoles near you! lol


The beginning of the end of the NCAA.

(That is a good thing.)

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