We have gone from raising hell about Orgeron illegally paying recruits to visit Grenada Without The Lake to it becoming the legal expectation by recruits now.
Money corrupts everything if there is enough of it.
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We have gone from raising hell about Orgeron illegally paying recruits to visit Grenada Without The Lake to it becoming the legal expectation by recruits now.
Money corrupts everything if there is enough of it.
The NCAA has got to figure something out. What would your suggestions be to curbing all this or do you think it's too far gone? I do think players deserve a right to make money, but there has to be some boundaries set.
need a cap. Title IX I am hoping will help eventually. Everyone can get 50k. The superstar players will still get their money under the table by donating to your uncles roommates church like the good ole days.
A ton of mistakes and mis-steps were made by the NCAA. That's where the corruption started. They never fully enforced the rules unless it was on a lower tier team. Their inability to adjust to allow players to capitalize in some sort of way was the down fall. You can't sell shirts with my name on it without paying me for it. So rather than NOT selling the shirts (thus avoiding that situation), they decided to market it to sell more because we can do more.
The LOVE of money is an issue, but there is no money without the people called fans. Nobody watching... no advertisers. Nobody in the seats... no ticket sales, no concession sales. It all come back to the people who support the sport by watching and buying tickets, shirts, etc....
And right now, states all over have passed NIL for High School Students. That means that high school teams can shop for high school players. etc. etc.
The NCAA is done, they are so tied up in litigation that cant do anything, nor will they. The genie is out of the bottle and there is no putting it back in now. The change will have to come from within. When the Major boosters, Presidents and AD's of the blue bloods have had enough then change will occur. The thought of ever returning to the way things were will not happen, those days are gone forever. What is to come who knows, some kind of collective bargaining agreement like the NFL? A new division formed, or more that one new division which is what I and others have discussed coming. Things will shake out in 5 years or less give or take, the current state of things isn't sustainable for many of us.
No court is going to rule that a player can not use their NIL to make money and draw a line at how much. They have ruled in the opposite. And more court cases are going to decide if the players can unionize and if they are employees.
https://frontofficesports.com/stage-...oyment-status/
My guess is there's a Super League coming. The blue bloods will break away from everyone else to keep the money amongst themselves. Then they'll set caps and such to make sure they'll always make money. Everyone else gets left behind fighting over scraps, with pennies to use, and no chance of upward mobility.
Because the NCAA is so inept and ineffective, the best thing for college football would be for players to unionize - and force collective bargaining just like the other pro sports have. At least then there would be agreement about the structure.
The wild west we have now is not sustainable.
We can't even have a college football video game because of greed.
Do a college draft and put salary caps on coaches.
The ironic part of all this is that the impetus for all this was the fact that schools and coaches were making all this money from the TV revenue without any of it going to the players. Well, you know what, schools and coaches still have ALL that money with none going to the players and instead fans and boosters are being shaken down to throw in additional money from what they normally spend to satisfy the greed of the players who are now legally going to the highest bidder
All that has to be done is actually make it about NAME IMAGE AND LIKENESS. Player comes they do well they sell more jerseys, get more endorsements. It was NEVER meant to be pay to play. This is the Wild West and it is ruining a once great sport.
Two easy fixes that could be implemented tomorrow. Reduce schollys to 65 or 70 (any walk on who plays in a game counts in that number) and stop the one time free transfer. Allow transfers enabling the student to be on scholarship at the new school and get NIL money, but has to sit out a year. I'd leave an opening for grad transfers.
https://geniussports.com/
Here is a link to support you perception. This is the Arab type connection in the website link. They already have their hands on the betting aspect of college football BTW. They are in competition with Las Vegas also. A little whitewashing by using London as a proxy BTW.
Reducing roster sizes is a great idea to spread the talent pool, but it won't stop the way NIL is being used right now. In fact, it will drive the prices up.
The transfer rules are an issue for sure. They need to buckle down and say you get 1 transfer period. But even that will get struck down soon. That goes back to unionizing and making them employees. You don't really have the right to tell any human in the USA that they can not take a better job.
Now, having said that, they ALL should be under contract, just like a coach. Auburn wants your QB.... pay the buy out and make it a stiff one. But it makes them employees. Dak is employeed in football by Dallas. Dallas has the same cap as all teams. Dak makes way more in NIL and it's not capped. But he can not just leave to a portal. He's under contract.
The way I see it going is that they will be labeled as employees and at that point, the university owns a pro team. That is going to create a lot of issues.
It?s why many adults are losing interest.
Older adults don?t really want to contribute it seems. Maybe it?s not like that everywhere, but I?ve talked to multiple older State and Ole Miss fans who will no longer give to NIL or the school.
The schools are bloated with useless employees in the athletic department and giving programs they will say. And NIL is just greed they feel. The ?businesses? who are supposed to get some benefit from NIL, I don?t see. Maybe a handful.
People will just watch the NFL eventually.
Truth. We lost our tax write off for organizations like the BDC. Prices on everything keep rising. Now we're supposed to pay a damned salary to players on top of it. NIL should have meant players get cut in on the TV revenue and profits, not asking Joe from Podunk to give even more of his limited disposable income to players. And I will undoubtedly have someone reply to this post saying I don't understand economics, shut up, stick your hand in you pocket, pay more, and be happy about it.
This all started when coaching salaries ballooned to ridiculous amounts. Cap coaching salaries at $2M/year. Revenue share the TV money with the players and give them a cut of merch sales for jerseys, shirts, etc. Reduce schollies to 65-70 to spread out the talent and create more parity. Problem solved. But that would make sense, so it'll never happen.
Well, right now it?s seems a lot different than NFL. In the NFL I assume there are contracts between players and businesses.
In the current college scenario maybe there are, but from what I know people donate money to a collective in order to buy players to come to their university of choice. I personally think that is pitiful. No one is using the name image and likeness of some random backup lineman for anything.
People don?t donate to a collective for an NFL team. They buy merchandise or products those players represent.
That may be going on in college but it?s not the norm.
Fair point. The ncaa just refuses to enforce its rules. You plant informants and take somebody down, and it would only one time. Bust them red handed and give them the dealt penalty and it would stop.
Also, just reinstating the rule that you have to sit out a year if you transfer would almost completely kill the portal.
Will be interesting to see how the libs handle it. It?s been political from day one. It totally destroys title 9
That's not how NIL works. It's not the team paying the players. It's people and businesses working through a collective. I mean literally, this was a Supreme Court of the United States decision not the NCAA. A law suit made it all the way there where they ruled 9-0 in favor. It will never be capped. It's literally impossible to do it with that court ruling.
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