Pro basketball players and now pro hockey players just going from their professional teams back to college.
Is it less than the cost of that particular school, or a general average?There was a rule change back in August, probably due to threatened litigation. Players from pro leagues can apply for eligibility, but they have to prove their total earnings were less than the cost of attending school. Which, with the cost of tuition these days, it may be easy to stay under that threshold.
I still don't understand why this would be true. Not all of them are getting a pile of money.fans are gonna have to come to grips with the fact that we’re now watching pro sports with college uniforms
I think this would just make it worse. It's the one thing you do to TRULY make it professional sports, which I tell you all again, you don't want.The only way to fix this is to unionize college athletes (maybe a separate union for each sport?) and have them collectively bargain for the eligibility rules.
It's either the unregulated Wild West with pros coming back to college, or it's unionized, standardized, common sense rules that everyone can live with. For example, I'm sure a players union would agree to no pros coming back to play college.I think this would just make it worse. It's the one thing you do to TRULY make it professional sports, which I tell you all again, you don't want.
I think paying the athletes to play is what makes it professional.I think this would just make it worse. It's the one thing you do to TRULY make it professional sports, which I tell you all again, you don't want.
The four years to play rule has survived many challenges based on the traditional four years to complete a degree. But those cases were all decided before the House Settlement went into effect. With the amount of money being handed out, I can see unlimited eligibility on the horizon.So what about fringe minor league guys that went out of high school. Maybe signed for $150k or so… flamed out after 3 years. Heck, if it’s truly Cost of Attendance rather than just tuition, then that opens the door for a ton of high school to minors flame outs.
Also, did the Supreme Court consider how much these rulings limit opportunities for high schoolers going forward? I mean, from a literal interpretation of the ruling, and the power it took from the NCAA, how can 5 or 6 year eligibility even be debated. Seems unlimited eligibility is inevitable or you’re limiting one’s rights to monetize themselves. Pavia will make a fortune the next 6-8 years bouncing around from Michigan to USC to LSU to Miami.
The four years to play rule has survived many challenges based on the traditional four years to complete a degree. But those cases were all decided before the House Settlement went into effect. With the amount of money being handed out, I can see unlimited eligibility on the horizon.
Is there a limit to how long a University can keep someone in school? Once you get a PhD, do you just enroll as an undergrad in a new major? Can you lose your eligibility by flunking out? Could a school get in trouble for failing to apply standard academic standards to athletes? (For that ladt one, I think the NCAA ruled long ago that schools are free to tarnish their own academic reputations in the name of sports, if thats what they want to do).
This is what I was alluding to above. The NCAA does still have academic progress requirements, but maybe thats the next standard to Fall.The thing that is mind-blowing to me as a college professor:
All colleges and universities have a set of rules that define what counts as satisfactory academic progress for a student, along with a whole litany of rules about conduct, etc. Students who are outside of these rules get kicked out of the college - this is how we keep deadbeats from living in the dorms for a decade (trust me they try it), There's also rules about hours to maintain full time status and scholarship eligibility, etc.
It feels like we've completely forgone any attempt to enforce the academic standards. - I'm so old I remember students not being allowed to participate in bowl games because they didn't carry a passing average for the fall semester. And unlike the NIL and payment debate, these are the academic standards of an institution and are a separate issue from paying players. I wouldn't be surprised to see at some point a nonathlete sue to have the same nonenforcement of academic standards as players appear to be currently benefiting from.
I actually don’t see how unionizing would fix it. The vast majority of those joining the player’s union would be those without hope of making it to the NBA, MLB or NFL. What would be their incentive to limit their own eligibility? Take Pavia, he can make $1-2mil per year for the next 8 years and never work a real job. He wouldn’t make an NFL practice roster though.I think paying the athletes to play is what makes it professional.
I really don't see how the players unionizing would make things worse. A CBA could resolve the transfer and eligibility issues, that are the worst part of college sports right now, and might even result in some financial rules for a little balance (keeping in mind the schools with larger fan bases will always have an edge).
I just don't see how they get to an enforceable collective bargaining position anytime soon.
It’s getting close to that.At this point they just need to tell players to play college ball as long as they want until the pros gobble them up or the college doesn’t want them anymore.
Adding for clarity: except for the ones with great real world job prospects. Yeah, Vick Ballard being an engineer is better long term, than making 5-600k over a few more years.I actually don’t see how unionizing would fix it. The vast majority of those joining the player’s union would be those without hope of making it to the NBA, MLB or NFL. What would be their incentive to limit their own eligibility? Take Pavia, he can make $1-2mil per year for the next 8 years and never work a real job. He wouldn’t make an NFL practice roster though.
Ok, another example, Victoria Vivians couldn’t last in the WNBA, but coulda made a couple hundred thousand a year staying in college at South Carolina or LSU.
Hubbard, much more value in college than the pros.
All that to say, we’re already seeing it. Why unionize and then the people forming the first union limit themselves to 4-6 years? They’d, by and large, say screw the ones behind me. I’m getting mine.
Hell, our 2021 baseball team may end up with zero big leaguers… but everyone of those guys would vote to stay in college and make $150k+/year for the next 10 years.
You’re looking at things through the lens of a State fan. Take a roster of a team actually competing for a title like UGA or OSU, and there isn’t a player of their starting 22 making less than six figures. Probably not even on their entire two deep if we’re being realisticI still don't understand why this would be true. Not all of them are getting a pile of money.
I think this would just make it worse. It's the one thing you do to TRULY make it professional sports, which I tell you all again, you don't want.
Pro basketball players and now pro hockey players just going from their professional teams back to college.
For every Pavia, there are 100+ teenagers who believe they are a year or 2 away from starting, and they don't want guys in their mid-20s taking up the starting spots. They would control the union and what it fights for.I actually don’t see how unionizing would fix it. The vast majority of those joining the player’s union would be those without hope of making it to the NBA, MLB or NFL. What would be their incentive to limit their own eligibility? Take Pavia, he can make $1-2mil per year for the next 8 years and never work a real job. He wouldn’t make an NFL practice roster though.
Ok, another example, Victoria Vivians couldn’t last in the WNBA, but coulda made a couple hundred thousand a year staying in college at South Carolina or LSU.
Hubbard, much more value in college than the pros.
All that to say, we’re already seeing it. Why unionize and then the people forming the first union limit themselves to 4-6 years? They’d, by and large, say screw the ones behind me. I’m getting mine.
Hell, our 2021 baseball team may end up with zero big leaguers… but everyone of those guys would vote to stay in college and make $150k+/year for the next 10 years.
Nah. College is more of the bell curve. Your middle 60% will vote to play and make a good living until they’re 32-33 and age out because of physical limitations. They’d be idiots not to do that.For every Pavia, there are 100+ teenagers who believe they are a year or 2 away from starting, and they don't want guys in their mid-20s taking up the starting spots. They would control the union and what it fights for.
In the professional sports, there are a whole lot more scrubs than stars, which is why those unions fight for higher minimum salaries and agree to salary caps, and other policies that help the borderline players more than the very top.
Additionally, the ones not good enough to play… the ones at the bottom of the bell curve, won’t be making enough NIL to justify the union dues.For every Pavia, there are 100+ teenagers who believe they are a year or 2 away from starting, and they don't want guys in their mid-20s taking up the starting spots. They would control the union and what it fights for.
In the professional sports, there are a whole lot more scrubs than stars, which is why those unions fight for higher minimum salaries and agree to salary caps, and other policies that help the borderline players more than the very top.
The problem is that every damn one of those 100+ teenagers in P4 football and basketball is already making well into the 6 figures annually in NIL and the revenue share, even if they are 2nd or 3rd string. They are getting rich as hell off the current system, too. They have nothing to gain other than artificially limiting their own pay as well.For every Pavia, there are 100+ teenagers who believe they are a year or 2 away from starting, and they don't want guys in their mid-20s taking up the starting spots. They would control the union and what it fights for.
In the professional sports, there are a whole lot more scrubs than stars, which is why those unions fight for higher minimum salaries and agree to salary caps, and other policies that help the borderline players more than the very top.
I think a draft is the worst thing that could happen to college football