Players can sue their coaches now. Nothing prevents you from suing someone.
Minutes is the only way. If you base it on just showing up then there is no incentive to play well or stay with CBB. There's certainly tons of reasons to leave. Our society is built on competition. We should have pride it that fact and reward those who play well. Everyone has an equal chance to play the full 40 minutes per game. Everyone has a chance to make it to the final four or final game.
As I said, base in on how much the NCAA receives from advertising. I guarantee NCAA makes sure it collects the money from the TV contracts. I guarantee you NCAA honors its contracts with each University or college making sure they get paid their share. All I am saying is expand the sharing to include the players. This is really not that hard. If the NCAA can pay 64 schools, they certain can take their billions and create a system for paying 500 players who play in the tournament. We have computers for stuff like this!
There are so many ridiculous statements in this post than I honestly don't know if you're trolling or if you actually believe paying players based on minutes played is a good idea.
Who's the last NCAAB player to sue his coach? How many lawsuits have there been the past 10 years? If you give a coach 100% power over a player's pay, there are going to be lawsuits everywhere. Mookie Jones would have 12 lawsuits going through the courts right now himself.
You're saying the only incentive for NCAAB players is money? Did Villanova not want to win the title this year because they aren't paid cash? Was London Perrantes crying because he didn't make an additional $5k? Ridiculous.
Also, you didn't address my previous questions:
1) Say a coach gets mad at a player, and sits them (JB sitting Kaleb). At what point does it turn from "you're not performing on the court" to "I'm making this personal and making sure you don't get paid". You'd open up the door to lawsuits - 18 year old kids suing their college coaches for now playing them and not allowing them to make money.
2) If Syracuse wins by 40 points and the starters don't play the entire second half, should they get half the money for that game?
3) Bigs generally play less minutes, should they get less money?
4) If a team only has one guard due to injuries/suspensions and plays 39 minutes, but is terrible, should he get the maximum amount of money?
5) A player gets injured and misses the rest of the season (McCullough, Devendorf), should they get zero salary for 50%, 75% of the season?
6) A player has to miss time for personal reasons (family death, illness), should they not get paid if they miss 2 or 3 games?
I think you'd see locker rooms turned into fight clubs with cocky freshman mad that the upperclassman is taking his "promised playing time (CASH)" away, or the other way around. Players recruited and promised a starting spot, 32 mpg, let's say that's about $60k/season. They don't perform well so now they play 8 mpg, and that's only $15k. So you're promised $60k and now make $15k. I'll let you tell me how many problems that would cause.