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??? I guess it's about where the players get the small "stiphoned" in terms of all the money generated by D1 college football. If Bama wants to be foolish with their money and give a high school QB a $million on top of the cost of his education, what's wrong with that? Oh, NCAA rules that keep schools from competing for athletes in this manner. No rules to stop them from giving a coach $32 mil....The players do get a small stiphoned.
??? I guess it's about where the players get the small "stiphoned" in terms of all the money generated by D1 college football. If Bama wants to be foolish with their money and give a high school QB a $million on top of the cost of his education, what's wrong with that? Oh, NCAA rules that keep schools from competing for athletes in this manner. No rules to stop them from giving a coach $32 mil.
Why does the NCAA have rules which forbid schools from offering athletes anything more than tuition, room, and board? Because some schools would be more able to pay athletes, thus creating unfair imbalances in competition. So why doesn't the same standard apply to hiring coaches? Mississippi State can't afford to pay a coach $32 million. How will they ever be able to hire a top coach? If it's OK to cap what an athlete is "paid", why isn't it OK to cap a coach's salary? If it's all about a level playing field?
??? I guess it's about where the players get the small "stiphoned" in terms of all the money generated by D1 college football. If Bama wants to be foolish with their money and give a high school QB a $million on top of the cost of his education, what's wrong with that? Oh, NCAA rules that keep schools from competing for athletes in this manner. No rules to stop them from giving a coach $32 mil.
Why does the NCAA have rules which forbid schools from offering athletes anything more than tuition, room, and board? Because some schools would be more able to pay athletes, thus creating unfair imbalances in competition. So why doesn't the same standard apply to hiring coaches? Mississippi State can't afford to pay a coach $32 million. How will they ever be able to hire a top coach? If it's OK to cap what an athlete is "paid", why isn't it OK to cap a coach's salary? If it's all about a level playing field?
NCAA athletes can get paid in sports they aren't playing in college. Ricky Williams & Cedric Benson played minor league baseball while in college. If the NCAA wanted their athletes completely amateur, they wouldn't allow pros from other sports to compete.I hadn't heard the NCAA ever saying anything about the problem being one of fairness. Rather, I've always heard the argument being that the players are presumably students first and players second.
Well, that was the major point of the thread. The inequity between what the coaches and players receive for their efforts.Do they deserve a little extra something with all the revenue generation? Probably. But unfortunately all the money is providing for other sports and filling their coaches' increasingly fat pockets.
Well, that was the major point of the thread. The inequity between what the coaches and players receive for their efforts.
You make a good point regarding the non-revenue producing sports. Few schools could pay their athletes across the board. That's why football and basketball players would have to become legitimate employees of the university, rather than student-athletes. You give the players salaries and benefits, while making enrollment and academic competency conditions of employment. Title IX is taken out of play.
Why won't the NCAA schools go to an employee-athlete system? Because, they make more $$$ under the student-athlete system. And until football and/or basketball players decide to unionize their ranks, that's how it will be.