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I'm definitely for players getting endorsement deals if their offered. They should also have rights other students have as well. Being a former division 1 athlete, I know the effort, hard work and time management it takes to be successful in the classroom and the field. I'm on the line with this debate because their are a lot of people getting wealthy while some get crippled.
They should definitely be able to work, accept endorsements or simply let someone buy them dinner.
Mark, what did you play and for whom?
simple answer- NO
With Title 9- equal money needs to go to sports of both genders.
So a very profitable sport will subsidize and provide scholarships and equipment to a lot of players.
Good players are already paid via Scholarships...
I am in favor of players getting endorsement deals and being able to work without the NC2A bull shizzle restrictions rules...
I just don't see how you could pay the foot ball players without eliminating / reducing the other male sports on campus with title 9 issues....
They do get paid-----Free tuition with room & board in exchange for their playing skills. Some tuitions with room and board can easily reach 100k a year.
Most kids would give their eye teeth to get college free, let alone acceptance to some of the finest universities.
I went to Notre Dame which was paid for by my parents.....I was very lucky my parents could do that for me.....how nice if
I was able to catch a football while running record speeds and save my parents that money.
Then law school which I paid for from loans.
My non scholarship co worker has $80K in student loans and he has been paying already for 4-5 years (Northeastern University). If they come out of school debt free Id say they are getting paid.
There's no way this is "getting paid". If your friend could not afford to go to that school he shouldn't have went. I don't feel sorry for people with huge student loan debts. I came out of school debt free but I didn't get "paid".
If your friends not complaining and paying it off, that's a different story. It's the ones that feel entitled that are the PITA.
Everything else I'm in full agreement with you about.
For those of you that think getting a tuition is "getting paid" let me ask you this. Are you willing to live in one spot for 4 years and never leave? Are you willing to eat at one restaurant for every meal for four years and rarely eat anywhere different? Because that is what it's like. A D1 student athlete gets very little in the way of stipend money. Sure, you get a room and a meal card, but what are you going to do for other things?
College Football has got to the point that money COMPLETELY over shadows anything else and there is enough of it to go around without skipping a beat. It used to be parody would allow the little schools to compete with the bigger ones however that's no longer the case by any stretch so why not let the athletes have a little more freedom?
I was a D1 scholarship football player and let me tell you if it wasn't for my parents helping me now and again there's no way my stipend would have supported me exclusively, especially in a bigger market like Southern California, Miami, etc.
Well dariof saying it and doing it are two different things. Again, 7 days a week you cannot go away from the cafeteria because "you" come from a struggling home and mom and dad don't have extra money to give you. How are you going to eat when you want to go away for the weekend with friends? Are you going to rely on your friends paying your way? What about going to movies, dates, etc? Where are you going to get all that extra cash?
No pmclaine, tuition isn't taxed because technically it's not income.
Of course I'm thankful, especially when I look and see HS friends that didn't have a chance to go to school struggle. But call it pragmatic or call it what you want, but I can still remember being "bored" and looking for stuff (girls) to do. You must admit that no matter how thankful they are 18-21 year old athletic males are not ones to sit around doing nothing for very long, especially on the off-season weekends.
I was a OL at Cal, primarily a pulling guard, long snapper and TE if all the other TE's came down with the plague.
waveslayer said:skip the sports in the NCAA and go to the pro level if you want to get paid.
jethro, your opinions matter as much as anyone else. Good post!Not that my opinion really matters on the subject, but I say yes. However, I think it should be capped at some reasonable sum like $15,000 per year. It should be similar to what a full-time student might make per year if they are working nights/weekends. I'm sure many of the student athletes (college football comes to mind) probably train/practice year round which doesn't allow them the time to have a job. Many college athletes get housing, food, and a free education, so they are already ahead of the game when compared to non-scholarshiped athletes. That being said, I'm sure a HUGE majority of them come from families that cannot afford to give them money for extra stuff.
The kids should have enough pocket money to buy plane tickets back home for the holidays or an engagement ring for their girlfriend or Christmas gifts for their family. They should also pay taxes on whatever they make....perhaps that might help to prepare some of them for the real world at the next level.
It can be done reasonably if everyone at each university was full of integrity.....but that likely is not the case.