The NCAA sucks. That we can agree with. It was originally created as a government entity (Think about that for a second), and it has developed into what it is today - a hypocritical governing body that goes after a women's soccer player in Oregon for washing her car at the coliseum but lets things like Cam Newton and Johnny Manzeil happen with no penalty.Mark my words - Manzeil will not miss a snap due to all of this.
And this is why the NCAA sucks. If they would do their job and administer championships (something they do very well) and enforce rules evenly whether its the small school or the big school, then I wouldn't have a problem with them. They don't need to be selling merchandise unless its for one of their events like the Final Four or the CWS.
I think its a lost cause at this point. They've lost the respect of most college sports fan. I think we are going to inevitably see the break off of about 75 schools (SEC, ACC, Big 10, Big 12, Pac 12, and Basketball Big East) and they are going to play their own game. The USM's and ULM's of the world are going to be a lower division with the Delta State's and the North Alabama's. The top tier is going to get bigger and richer, and it is going to kill a lot of regional schools that are doing better all around because of athletics. The new association is going to pay players a stipend and that is wrong. I will never agree with paying players to play college sports - because its supposed to be at least as much about college as it is sports. And its not.
Three Points to Consider:
Quality of Student
Yes, the graduation rates of athletes is on par with the normal student body. But the normal student body is lower than it needs to be. MSU and Ole Miss are the easiest BCS-conference schools to gain admission to. Mostly due to the Ayers case, but how many really believe that a 2.25 High School GPA and a 16 ACT is ready for a four year college? Move out of MSU/Ole Miss for a second. The non-athlete with those credentials could not gain entry to any other BCS university other than MSU or Ole Miss. None. Zero. And there's only a handful of regional universities (mainly in the South) that would accept them.
Add to all of this that the quality of student has diminished over the past 20 years. I read a study in the COHR that in 1995, only 13% of respondents' grades given were A. In 2011, that percentage was close to 35%. Are kids that much smarter than they were 20 years ago? Absolutely not. College has gotten a lot easier under pressure to keep enrollment numbers sky high (and federal student aid rolling in). Think about our own alma mater, all of the improvements to campus over the past 10 years is amazing, but we're basically letting anyone with a pulse in, and federal aid is paying the bills. We're about 10 years away from this being a major problem, but that's a different subject for a different day.
Paying Players
As I said, I don't support giving players a dime. We're already giving them a $100,000 education that a lot of them don't care about. Johnny Manzeil is taking online chump classes. And does anyone really think if we were giving players a $300 monthly stipend they would turn down $180,000 in Newton's case or $25,000 to sign some autographs. Hell no - it won't change a thing, it will just make certain people feel better.
And we're paying coaches way too much. Jackie SHerrill was hired at MSU for $75,000. Just over 20 years later, there are only a handful of Division II coaches that don't make that, and many high school coaches make more than that. Its hard to attract a ton of great professors at MSU because of two things - (1) Starkville schools and (2) Among the lowest paid at a major research university. But we're paying assistant volleyball coaches for 2 conference win teams more than we are paying our best professors.
The price of a season ticket in 1995 was as low as $50. Lower level, too. The first college football game I ever went to was Penn State at Alabama in 1999. I still have the ticket stub. $10. You can't take a family of four to an MSU football game for under $250. Multiply that by 7, and you are spending north of $1500 for a season. People are doing it, so there's not much I can say, but for a lot of people, its too much. Paying players will be passed on in higher ticket prices.
The Unfair Treatment of Student-Athletes
I think the Dean of Students at every major college should step down immediately. Student-athletes can get away with just about everything short of murder nowadays. My freshman roommate was kicked out of MSU for possessing paraphernalia on campus.
Every day we read about players getting arrested. We have Marshall Henderson thugs doing just about everything they can and still retaining their scholarship. Its ridiculous. We have what happened at Penn State happening. Ohio State. And people wonder why the intellectual side of a college campus has disdain for athletics. If you start paying them, its just going to add to it.
Just my two cents. Be easy on me.
And this is why the NCAA sucks. If they would do their job and administer championships (something they do very well) and enforce rules evenly whether its the small school or the big school, then I wouldn't have a problem with them. They don't need to be selling merchandise unless its for one of their events like the Final Four or the CWS.
I think its a lost cause at this point. They've lost the respect of most college sports fan. I think we are going to inevitably see the break off of about 75 schools (SEC, ACC, Big 10, Big 12, Pac 12, and Basketball Big East) and they are going to play their own game. The USM's and ULM's of the world are going to be a lower division with the Delta State's and the North Alabama's. The top tier is going to get bigger and richer, and it is going to kill a lot of regional schools that are doing better all around because of athletics. The new association is going to pay players a stipend and that is wrong. I will never agree with paying players to play college sports - because its supposed to be at least as much about college as it is sports. And its not.
Three Points to Consider:
Quality of Student
Yes, the graduation rates of athletes is on par with the normal student body. But the normal student body is lower than it needs to be. MSU and Ole Miss are the easiest BCS-conference schools to gain admission to. Mostly due to the Ayers case, but how many really believe that a 2.25 High School GPA and a 16 ACT is ready for a four year college? Move out of MSU/Ole Miss for a second. The non-athlete with those credentials could not gain entry to any other BCS university other than MSU or Ole Miss. None. Zero. And there's only a handful of regional universities (mainly in the South) that would accept them.
Add to all of this that the quality of student has diminished over the past 20 years. I read a study in the COHR that in 1995, only 13% of respondents' grades given were A. In 2011, that percentage was close to 35%. Are kids that much smarter than they were 20 years ago? Absolutely not. College has gotten a lot easier under pressure to keep enrollment numbers sky high (and federal student aid rolling in). Think about our own alma mater, all of the improvements to campus over the past 10 years is amazing, but we're basically letting anyone with a pulse in, and federal aid is paying the bills. We're about 10 years away from this being a major problem, but that's a different subject for a different day.
Paying Players
As I said, I don't support giving players a dime. We're already giving them a $100,000 education that a lot of them don't care about. Johnny Manzeil is taking online chump classes. And does anyone really think if we were giving players a $300 monthly stipend they would turn down $180,000 in Newton's case or $25,000 to sign some autographs. Hell no - it won't change a thing, it will just make certain people feel better.
And we're paying coaches way too much. Jackie SHerrill was hired at MSU for $75,000. Just over 20 years later, there are only a handful of Division II coaches that don't make that, and many high school coaches make more than that. Its hard to attract a ton of great professors at MSU because of two things - (1) Starkville schools and (2) Among the lowest paid at a major research university. But we're paying assistant volleyball coaches for 2 conference win teams more than we are paying our best professors.
The price of a season ticket in 1995 was as low as $50. Lower level, too. The first college football game I ever went to was Penn State at Alabama in 1999. I still have the ticket stub. $10. You can't take a family of four to an MSU football game for under $250. Multiply that by 7, and you are spending north of $1500 for a season. People are doing it, so there's not much I can say, but for a lot of people, its too much. Paying players will be passed on in higher ticket prices.
The Unfair Treatment of Student-Athletes
I think the Dean of Students at every major college should step down immediately. Student-athletes can get away with just about everything short of murder nowadays. My freshman roommate was kicked out of MSU for possessing paraphernalia on campus.
Every day we read about players getting arrested. We have Marshall Henderson thugs doing just about everything they can and still retaining their scholarship. Its ridiculous. We have what happened at Penn State happening. Ohio State. And people wonder why the intellectual side of a college campus has disdain for athletics. If you start paying them, its just going to add to it.
Just my two cents. Be easy on me.