marquette wrote:I don't know if the NCAA would go along with that. I realize that the tourney is where they get all their money, but I'm pretty sure there would be very strong legal challenges to overcome in order for the P5 to be able to play under different rules (Georgetown puts out some pretty good lawyers, I hear, and Marquette has the best sports law program in the country). If they keep their other sports under the same rules as the other NCAA schools, then we have a possibility. If not, then we are looking at a scenario where the P5 will have to have a complete brake from the NCAA. In that event it would be necessary to take along several non-football conferences in order to fill out their non-revenue sports, and the Big East is probably the top of that list. Hopefully the college sports bubble bursts before they have a chance to fully go through with this either way. Without the massive influx of tv dollars, this all becomes moot.
XBand15 wrote:I personally think that what will eventually happen is that the FBS football schools will get their own division for football, but only football. The idea that they would split apart and form their own division and still compete with everyone else will not fly. There are too many important alumni within the government from non-FBS schools for them to be able to get away with this without some form of lawsuit shutting it down. You might laugh, but we have seen in the past how politicians can get worked up about sports. I also firmly believe that if they did try and form a new division that the Big East would do everything in its power to be a part of it. I'm sure they could work out a way to have us there and just having us abstain on all votes involving football. Ackerman knows what to do and she will keep us in the top competition. But like I said, this will only happen for football. I think the NCAA is ready to admit defeat in football, but it will not give up on its big revenue tournaments most notably basketball.
Dave wrote:Football only for the P5? It's difficult. Take Louisville and Kentucky, for example. They are going to pay stipends to football players, but not basketball players, who generate considerable revenue? (Ville hoops profits outpace many FB program profits). So expect lawsuits from basketball interests if you pay FB players but not hoopsters. And if you pay male athlete stipends, you have to reciprocate to female athletes to comply with Title IX law, which is not exclusive to the NCAA. So that's why all sports get dragged along with FB in such a move.
marquette wrote:Dave wrote:Football only for the P5? It's difficult. Take Louisville and Kentucky, for example. They are going to pay stipends to football players, but not basketball players, who generate considerable revenue? (Ville hoops profits outpace many FB program profits). So expect lawsuits from basketball interests if you pay FB players but not hoopsters. And if you pay male athlete stipends, you have to reciprocate to female athletes to comply with Title IX law, which is not exclusive to the NCAA. So that's why all sports get dragged along with FB in such a move.
That would get very expensive, very fast. If P5 schools have to pay their women's athletes and non-rev athletes anywhere near the same amount as their revenue generating athletes they will go broke in 1 school year (P5 schools have a lot more non-revs and women's sports than us). You are talking about paying maybe $10,000/year/athlete. We are talking about millions of dollars for these schools. Is it really worth it overall to separate and get a bump in revenue, just to have that negated by having to pay athletes?
DumpsterFireA10 wrote:marquette wrote:I don't know if the NCAA would go along with that. I realize that the tourney is where they get all their money, but I'm pretty sure there would be very strong legal challenges to overcome in order for the P5 to be able to play under different rules (Georgetown puts out some pretty good lawyers, I hear, and Marquette has the best sports law program in the country). If they keep their other sports under the same rules as the other NCAA schools, then we have a possibility. If not, then we are looking at a scenario where the P5 will have to have a complete brake from the NCAA. In that event it would be necessary to take along several non-football conferences in order to fill out their non-revenue sports, and the Big East is probably the top of that list. Hopefully the college sports bubble bursts before they have a chance to fully go through with this either way. Without the massive influx of tv dollars, this all becomes moot.
Well said. That's exactly why I hate SLU's involvement in the Dumpster Fire so much. If they split, there is no way the Atlantic 10 goes with the bigger schools. If that happens, every school not in the Big Division becomes nationally irrelevant.
XBand15 wrote:I personally think that what will eventually happen is that the FBS football schools will get their own division for football, but only football. The idea that they would split apart and form their own division and still compete with everyone else will not fly. There are too many important alumni within the government from non-FBS schools for them to be able to get away with this without some form of lawsuit shutting it down. You might laugh, but we have seen in the past how politicians can get worked up about sports. I also firmly believe that if they did try and form a new division that the Big East would do everything in its power to be a part of it. I'm sure they could work out a way to have us there and just having us abstain on all votes involving football. Ackerman knows what to do and she will keep us in the top competition. But like I said, this will only happen for football. I think the NCAA is ready to admit defeat in football, but it will not give up on its big revenue tournaments most notably basketball.
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