BEhomer wrote:Again. I ask. how do they regulate these rules? and how will they enforce them? you can set the max and come up with any reasonable payout scales, but in the end it's about winning and often times winning at all cost. someone will start to abuse the system.
<b>this whole thing started with BIG5 thinking 'why should we play by the same rules?'</b>
it won't be long before schools like Texas asks the same question about their conference association.
robinreed wrote:My greatest fear in the upcoming quagmire is will the Big 5/Power 5 etc. increase the number of grants in aid for basketball. If the full cost of attendance increases student cost by $6,000 to $12,000 per player per year it will be acceptable for many of the BE schools. However if the Big 5 increase the number of scholarships from 13 to 20 many of us will be in trouble. I would also expect them to increase scholarships for football however that will not effect the BE. I also have questions concerning agents being given almost free reign with the players. It is bad enough now with players leaving early for the NBA. Should a player leave after his second year for the NBA draft, then fail to make the team why should the university be on the hook to pay for his remaining educational costs should he return to get his degree?
Of course there is also the NLRB ruling that the athlete is an employee of the university. The part about unions is of secondary import in my opinion for if the student is an employee then he must not only be paid but the university must provide unemployment comp, SSI and medicare payments and a wide variety of other services including paid sick days and paid vacation. In right to work states the student-employee could be terminated without cause and at any time.
This is a potential disaster however all will feel the adverse effects but the football schools more than others.
SJHooper wrote:Football really did ruin college sports. If the Big East was torn apart for football, you know the power 5 will separate for football from everyone else. Pretty soon the only teams on TV will be from the power 5. It will be like Division I vs. Division II. The power 5 will be division I and everyone else division II. Viewership will greatly decrease for those outside of them, hype will decrease, memories of the good old days of major hoops will slowly fade. I really hate to say this and hope I'm wrong, but the level of greed and corruption these days in college athletics almost assures that this will happen. It's when, not if IMO.
JOPO wrote:SJHooper wrote:Football really did ruin college sports. If the Big East was torn apart for football, you know the power 5 will separate for football from everyone else. Pretty soon the only teams on TV will be from the power 5. It will be like Division I vs. Division II. The power 5 will be division I and everyone else division II. Viewership will greatly decrease for those outside of them, hype will decrease, memories of the good old days of major hoops will slowly fade. I really hate to say this and hope I'm wrong, but the level of greed and corruption these days in college athletics almost assures that this will happen. It's when, not if IMO.
You are right. Football should not dictate all other sports. I never understood why football didn't form their own football specific conferences without basketball or any other sport attached as well. They do this for hockey, why not football?
Honestly, I think something that would help would be to cut the number of football scholarships from 85 to 63 (in line with 1AA limits). A professional team in the NFL can only have 53 so I don't see the need for 85 in college. It would not only spread the wealth but help with Title IX issues as well.
JOPO wrote:SJHooper wrote:Football really did ruin college sports. If the Big East was torn apart for football, you know the power 5 will separate for football from everyone else. Pretty soon the only teams on TV will be from the power 5. It will be like Division I vs. Division II. The power 5 will be division I and everyone else division II. Viewership will greatly decrease for those outside of them, hype will decrease, memories of the good old days of major hoops will slowly fade. I really hate to say this and hope I'm wrong, but the level of greed and corruption these days in college athletics almost assures that this will happen. It's when, not if IMO.
You are right. Football should not dictate all other sports. I never understood why football didn't form their own football specific conferences without basketball or any other sport attached as well. They do this for hockey, why not football?
Honestly, I think something that would help would be to cut the number of football scholarships from 85 to 63 (in line with 1AA limits). A professional team in the NFL can only have 53 so I don't see the need for 85 in college. It would not only spread the wealth but help with Title IX issues as well.
Bill Marsh wrote:This whole thing is a complete joke.
It includes a proposa that "student athletes" spend as much as 50 hours per week on their sport. Last time I looked, that's a full time job with 10 hour work days. Some jobs require that workers get paid overtime with days that long.
BUT these are STUDENT-athletes - full time students at that. They are supposed to be full time students who also work a full time job with long hours???
This entire proposal proceeds in this same hypocritical, contradictory vein. The fat cats who run college sports are making a fortune getting rich off these kids, while pretending that they're interested in amateurism and education. Let's call it what it is. They are running minor league sports and the colleges are rolling over and letting themselves be used.
This entire thing disgusts me.
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