jshawaii22 wrote:If they got paid players a decent living while the schools rake in millions, this probably wouldn't happen as they could structure the payments to be after the final game, and only if played. Of course, with Title IX in the way, that will never happen, but it should.
trents wrote:I've heard that argument a million times and I just don't buy into it. They are amateur athletes. How much money the university makes because of their participation is irrelevant. The players should be there as students to acquire life skills and income earning skills that may or may not include getting highly paid as a professional athlete. If they are in school only to play football and get exposure that may lead to a professional sports career then they are there for the wrong reason.
I disagree. The average student graduates with just under $40,000 worth of debt. These kids get to attend virtually for free, plus a handful get a chance to make millions. Besides, if you pay them, why not pay all of the student athletes? Why shouldn't the cross country team derive the same benefit as the football or men's basketball teams do?
trents wrote:I am dead set against able-bodied college players anticipating the NFL draft sitting out bowl games to avoid injury. Like Will Grier. What chance does WVU have without him to win their bowl game? He threw his team under the bus.
I think the universities should make them pay back their scholarships if they do that and I think the NFL should declare them ineligible for the draft for a year.
Hawktawk wrote:How about an NCAA funded insurance policy to repay any NFL bound athlete their anticipated earnings for their first couple of years as a pro if they are injured in a bowl game? I don't know the exact answer but I understand a top shelf athlete whose body has become a franchise unto itself not wanting to risk hitting the guaranteed lotto to play in one relatively meaningless game.
It's not a choice I would have made had I been that gifted but i understand it.
jshawaii22 wrote:the NCAA was a white persons club, not the young black kids version of 'how the world should be' that was invented, written and decided on by middle age or older white men probably 100 or so years ago.
It is woefully abusive, outdated and should be rewritten.
jshawaii22 wrote:It doesn't surprise me that most everyone who has never been in it is OK with the current system, because it has worked to give kids that wouldn't otherwise go to school the opportunity to do so and provided a great minor league to develop professional players.
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