you have to remember a lot of the income generated by football goes to paying for all the other non-revenue sports. a lot ends up going to the general university fund and helps to pay professors and lab materials etc. it's not like the AD is sitting there rolling in the dough making it rain because he has the best football program like he's a franchise owner or something.drunkernhelldawg said:How do you justify saying that people don't deserve compensation for their production and work? This free education stuff is vague. Pell grants are handing that out pell mell anyway. I don't think I should work for free, and I don't think that others should work for me for free. With the income being generated, the solution is just not as simple as we'd like it to be. I wouldn't support big money to college athletes but I think compensation on par with a middle class allowance is the least that is justified. I am a fan, but I don't like the way the game's being run at all.
uh, most schools have various majors that are designed to prepare kids for a career in coaching (phys ed?) or being an agent (business school -> law school?) or working in media (communications?). there doesn't need to be a specialized major that just teaches all the same **** to athletes only. i would be willing to wager that a majority of athletes are already majoring in phys ed, business, or communications, or something similar at the very least. <div>Bulldog Bruce said:The things that need to be adjusted is that all division I sports should have Professional Sports Degrees in the university. Professional Sports is a multi-billion dollar industry in this country and multi-trillion dollars worldwide. The de facto path for Football and Basketball is through the NCAA. Many Baseball players also go through the NCAA. Worldwide would add Hockey, Soccer, Skiing and Track. Athletes, that wish to have a career in professional sports, are the only students that have to go to school to study something other than what they want to do. It is like someone who wants to be doctor has to study to be a farmer. They need to take all their medical classes on the side. They can then only see the Medical School professors 20 hours for 4 weeks during the spring otherwise they have to go to their farming classes.
The Schools need to accept the fact that Professional Sports is a valid industry and do their best to prepare the student for their chosen major. There are also ancillary jobs in these sports, not just the playing of them. Coaching, media, agents, etc. are all careers that a person can make a living within the umbrella of pro sports. It does not matter if the major does not have a high degree of success. They train people in acting and music. Relatively few people make large amounts of money in these endeavors. So have a real curriculum for Professional Sports. This could include classes in Communications, Business, Economics, Law, Physical Education (human growth and development, kinesiology, etc.) as well as the classes concerning their particular sport. It will be up to the student to pass their courses just as now. You also pay these coaches large sums of money and the student is limited to the time they can spend with them. Make these "highest paid teachers" available to the students as much as necessary.
Allow athletes to make as much money as they are able as long as teh shool is not involved in setting up the situation. Athletes should own their own name and likeness. If they want to sign shirts and sell them, fine. They would have to buy the licensed product from the NCAA to sign. The schools would get the same money, if not more money from jersey sales. If they can setup endorsement deals on their own, again fine. Just make it so the school is not involved with setting up these opportunities. No other student is limited in the money they can make while attending school. If a Computer Science major writes Facebook or Google or Doom, they do not lose their scholarship.
Schools cannot pay the athletes or be involved with setting up the endorsement deals.
The final thing for the school is that they often currently get large endowments and gifts from athletes that made good money in their sports. Imagine how much more they would get if they actually helped the student succeed instead of them succeeding in spite of what they had to do while at school. Grateful wallets would open more readily. Also maybe more of these athletes would be able to take better care of their money if they are better prepared.
If a school did not want to be involved with this, have the division 2 and lower run like they do now.
Sort of funny to hear something like that from an OM fan. Seems to me like y'all are fine with head cases who require a signing bonus.mredge said:The warning signs are out on Evans. He may be a fine athlete, but he looks like a head case that will be more trouble than he worth to whichever school can direct him to the dotted line first.
Not that there's anything wrong with that.mredge said:<span style="font-weight: bold;">I've been out of the closet my entire lif</span>e.<div>
</div><div>Anyway. What does my statement of Evans have to do with me being a bear?</div><div>
</div><div>The kid has a world of talent, but is going to be a headache where ever he signs. You see these kids all the time in the recruiting process. They rarely live up to their potential.</div><div>
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i don't think it's a crime that they get paid, i just think it unbalances the field of competition such that schools like mississippi state will be lucky to attract even half the talent we do now. we don't have the fan base and money to throw around at kids for their signature like bama and uga and florida and lsu and auburn and tenn. if you can't conceive the huge can of worms that allowing players to seel their own jerseys and signature, etc will open, then i don't know what else to tell you. but i can safely say we might as well kiss our asses goodbye because from a competition standpoint, we'd be in an even deeper hole in the sec than we already are. <div>Bulldog Bruce said:You have the mentality that these players getting paid is a crime. The whole point is that if someone other than the school wants to pay them, it is not the schools problem. They will have to pay taxes on any income they make like a real business. SO if someone wants to pay them them the 100k for one shirt they will have to give Uncle Sam 50k and learn to deal with real money.
The Professional Sports Major athletic part will only be available to those on the team so not just anyone who can run and jump can succeed in that major. The academic side of the major would be available to anyone and would not be a bunch of courses to skate on. They would be real classes that people in those majors currently take. Things like contract law, accounting, journalism, public speaking, media communications on camera and radio, marketing, foreign language, courses that train on human body for development and recovery.
I took a bunch of these real classes, but my real reason for being there was the sport. If this degree is well rounded, it will make a fall back position be available in many different jobs.
Your 5% argument is probably true to almost any degree. Your 5% is people who are wildly successful in the sport. You are not accounting for those who play oversees, or do a peripheral job within the professional sports umbrella. Probably only 5% of all the people that go through business school become multi-millionaires. Only 5% of people in Media Communications get a job on air in Radio and TV and way less than that make the big bucks. Less than 5% of people in acting, movie making and music classes make the big bucks in those careers. There is no outrage if a person gets a scholarship and studies those curricula. So don't "protect" these people who want to try and make a career in professional sports.
Bottom line is that Colleges and Universities are suppose to be providing a service to a customer. Well provide the service that the customer wants. It is their life and choice.
No he can't.Bulldog Bruce said:But if this was in place maybe Cam Newton comes to MSU, He can make similar money at MSU selling shirts and doing endorsements as he can at Auburn.
exactly. glad i'm not the only one that sees it this way.00Dawg said:No he can't.Bulldog Bruce said:But if this was in place maybe Cam Newton comes to MSU, He can make similar money at MSU selling shirts and doing endorsements as he can at Auburn.
It would be an order of magnitude larger than what he could get in Starkville. For every Henry Mize or Leo Seal, the Alabama's and Auburn's of the world can roll out 5-10 guys of equal caliber and even more obsession with their program's athletics, many of whom would like nothing better than to guarantee someone like Cam Newton the potential to make millions, yes, millions while in collegeif he won a national championship or Heisman at their school. Then we get into the sidewalk alumni. Did you see the SI Tressel article where the kids would come by hunting the Ohio State players on a regular basis? You think that happens in Starkville? Now, imagine if those kids' parents could buy them all the signatures they could handle for $20-50 apiece? You think there's tens of thousands of State parents willing to pay that? I know there are for Alabama and Auburn.
Instead of leveling the playing field, this would tilt it. No Top 200 recruit in their right mind (without some majorlove for acertain school)would pass up the chance at the much higherguaranteed cash flow of playing in Tuscaloosa, Gainesville, Austin, etc.