by universities? I have seen it over and over the past few years, now again with the Cam Newton case. There are even sports writers/tv personalities (Desmond Howard for example) saying that universities are making millions and the athletes and families are being exploited.
How is it that they overlook the fact that the kids are getting a free education. They are getting a chance to showcase their talent to NFL scouts that they wouldn't otherwise have a chance to do. And they get the recognition and adoration of the fanbase they represent. Not to mention, if they are truly good enough and worthy of gobs of money because of their talent, they are gonna get it in as little as 3 years anyway. This argument makes me sick to think that one day I might not watch college football any more because enough people with this attitude might get together and make college football a pro league which I have no real interest in watching.
Am I missing something on this issue? Thoughts?
College football governs its players based on an antiquated model that is no longer applicable to the business of college football. They no longer govern themselves with that model since revenues started increasing astronomically. The financial growth of the game allows for TV netowrks, conferences, Bowls, Universities, and even coaches to earn salaries/profits at incredible, and exaggerated, rates. The players, who do most of the work, are left with the same compensation that players got 50 years ago.
The idea that they are the treated the same as students is a joke. Students on academic or merit scholarships are allowed to hold jobs. Student athletes are not. Students on scholarship can meet with prospective employers at any time. Student athletes cannot. Student athletes are expected, dare I say forced, to put in 20+ hours a week without additional compensation. Students on scholarship are not. Athletes have no control over their image and likenesses should the NCAA, Conference, or school decide to make money off of it. That doesn't happen with scholarship students.
To make matters worse the NCAA is constantly looking to maximize their profits and share it with everyone but the players. When a player seeks or accepts further compensation he is derided and cast out of the system.
Ultimately we are all capitalists. I wouldn't work for pennies while my company and bosses got rich. These kids shouldn't have to either.
I'm not going to suggest that players should be salaried but I think the NCAA can take better care of their athletes. They can close scholarship loopholes that force kids to buy required school supplies. They can approve modest or improved stipends for normal living arrangements, that many academic scholarships provide. They can provide guaranteed lifelong health care for players that suffer debilitating injuries on the field. They can take a percentage of merchandise sales that bear students names or likenesses put it in an escrow account and then make equal payouts to graduating students each semester. (Note it would be important that all students receive the same payment in this scenario to preserve equality amongst the schools, but their are models that allow for that easily.)
I believe last year Alabama's football program made $92 million in revenue. Assuming $20k per athlete the compensation given to players was $1.70 million which equates to about 1.8% of the total revenues. In any other industry that would be considered incredibly unfair.
Had Marcel Dareus been an journalism major, on scholarship, who was flown to a party full of publishers and editors at the expense of a former classmate that was a working professional no one would have batted an eye. Because he's on an athletic scholarship he's vilified and forced to sit out 2 games.
To me it seems neither fair nor ethical to treat the players that way.