patdog said:
RebelBruiser said:
I just don't understand the correlation between going to college and going to the NFL/CFL. If you have the athletic ability to possibly develop into a professional football player, why would you have to go to college and pass classes to earn the right to do that professionally. Tennis players and golfers that are at the top of their game don't have to go to college to play professionally. Neither do soccer players or baseball players. What makes football and basketball so different that we have to require athletes to go to school after high school to have a chance to play at the professional level? Do those sports require extra academic preparation?
The correlation is that as long as there is big-time college football, the NFL sees no need to fund a professional minor league system like baseball and hockey (and even basketball to a limited extent) do.
I understand completely why the NFL doesn't care to change anything. They have a built in farm system, and it really isn't hurting their overall product if they miss out on a handful of players every year that simply couldn't cut it academically.
I'm just saying that if you take a step back and look at it, it's a little silly that in basketball and football, if you have extreme talent, you're forced to attend school post-high school if you want to pursue an athletic career.
And I completely understand that a minor league system would hurt college football, which is why it'll never happen. I'm just pointing out the fact that I think it's bogus that we force players to pass courses to try to pursue a pro career. I go back to Taye Biddle as an example. He was bright enough to pass college courses and earn a degree, but when his eligibility was up his senior year, he walked off the campus never to attend another class simply because he had no interest in a degree at the time, and supposedly that's not all that uncommon. He was in school pursuing a professional football career, not a degree, even though he was capable of getting a degree.
I'm sure I'll get the argument of, what will they do if they don't make it in the pros? Well, for a lot of them, it'll be the same thing they'd have done if they didn't have the athletic ability, and for others, if they have a brief career that fizzles out, they can afford to put themselves through school to get a degree if they choose.