I'm curious as to why you think this?I'm on the record that this will destroy higher education as we know it.
I'm fine blowing up college sports.
But not at the expense of higher education as an institution.
Yeah this wave is en route to the beach as we speakCan't wait to see how (if) Title IX may be applied/enforced on a football driven NIL trust "subdivision."
Either women athletes are going to start getting PAID or more non-football men's programs are going bye bye.
(Probably a mix of both)
Colleges can’t afford it plain and simpleI'm curious as to why you think this?
College sports has been an ugly corrupt business since its inception. The whole notion of "student athlete" was just a corrupt designation so schools could keep all the money for themselves and not have to worry about pesky employment laws and safety regulations.
The Opening Kickoff is a great book that details the earliest days of college football corruption.
Some colleges can and they are the ones who would love it - they want it for a reason and it isn’t because they just want to be generous to their players.Colleges can’t afford it plain and simple
Agree. Such an approach might also reduce the churning we are seeing with players in the transfer portal.Interesting concept. I still think there needs to be a salary cap of sorts to create some more parity in college football. Make it a level playing field while still paying the players. Then I believe the actual value of the education they are receiving might have a bigger impact. It would also allow more than the top 5-10 schools to compete for national titles each year.
It don't matter the Blue Bloods will still cheat. They've been doing it for years so they'll figure out something for this too.I’ve been thinking all along that the current setup is not sustainable and that it would change eventually, this is faster than I thought though.
Now just introduce a salary cap system for each conference agreed upon by conference members.
They get the vig.So what would be the NCAA role in this new setup?
Agreed, but UNC demonstrated that it was destroyed years ago.I'm on the record that this will destroy higher education as we know it.
I'm fine blowing up college sports.
But not at the expense of higher education as an institution.
Yea, this is going to get gross.Can't wait to see how (if) Title IX may be applied/enforced on a football driven NIL trust "subdivision."
Either women athletes are going to start getting PAID or more non-football men's programs are going bye bye.
(Probably a mix of both)
NIL is being used so they can try to skirt employment laws, IMO. I wonder if it will hold up. Its pay to play, right now.How can they have a cap when schools weren't suppose to even be paying players in the first place and were anyways? It'll just be the same schools cheating the cap as well.
I don't know RG, these boys want it all but that said, I hope you're right and they can put a financial fine to this or the like.NIL is being used so they can try to skirt employment laws, IMO. I wonder if it will hold up. Its pay to play, right now.
When they cheat the cap, they pay a fine, and it goes into the general fund for the Have nots...
Absolutely. Title IX could work against student athletes, in this case. Why I suggest a lower % to revenue losing sports. Those kids deserve to compete.If this comes to fruition, I wonder if this would lead to some schools dropping lower revenue sports so they could put more money into the fund for the bigger sports (that is if I am understanding how this will work correctly).
If this comes to fruition, I wonder if this would lead to some schools dropping lower revenue sports so they could put more money into the fund for the bigger sports (that is if I am understanding how this will work correctly).
^^^^ This.This all seems like a ridiculous attempt to skirt the issue: These players are employees of a billion dollar sports league and the schools that run it can't just admit this and pay them.
I'm curious as to why you think this?
College sports has been an ugly corrupt business since its inception. The whole notion of "student athlete" was just a corrupt designation so schools could keep all the money for themselves and not have to worry about pesky employment laws and safety regulations.
The Opening Kickoff is a great book that details the earliest days of college football corruption.
AZ got to the heart of it. I don't disagree at all about the corruption you mentioned. But right now, that primarily happens outside of the academic mission of higher ed institutions. As it should.Colleges can’t afford it plain and simple
They should just call it the SEC/B10 conference.
If this comes to fruition, I wonder if this would lead to some schools dropping lower revenue sports so they could put more money into the fund for the bigger sports (that is if I am understanding how this will work correctly).
100% CorrectThey should just call it the SEC/B10 conference.