The Champ
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- Joined
- Sep 28, 2008
- Messages
- 8,957
Lol. More realistic that GT cheats and remains unsuccessful, or becomes less successful.No there are no successful clean programs. The premise of the second question is not realistic.
Lol. More realistic that GT cheats and remains unsuccessful, or becomes less successful.No there are no successful clean programs. The premise of the second question is not realistic.
There are no successful football teams that don’t cheat.I wonder if the posters on this board think there are any successful football teams that don't cheat? And if they'd think that GT cheats if we were successful?
And unsuccessful ones do tooHonestly... any successful team buys their players. There's no way around it.
The NCAA had ample time and opportunity to share some wealth with players in such a way that would have appeased players and kicked the can down the road regarding compensation. They should have settled the O’Bannon case by giving a significant amount of E-game revenue to the athletes. They should have eased rules to allow compensation for travel home and given opportunity for work. Instead they lawyered up and played hardball to keep the real money for themselves, coaches, and athletic departments. Now, judicial and legislative decisions have blown everything up.
Now, the NCAA wants to pretend they can still enforce rules in the new world, maintaining you still cannot be paid for play. That’s absurd. No one can draw a reasonable line of distinction between NIL income going to a player primarily because the player plays for a certain school. Saban wants all the NIL money pooled and evenly distributed for locker room harmony. That is not how he divides up coaching salaries. He resents Texas A$M being able to overcome Alabama’s recruiting advantage with cash. He is really frightened that Deion Sanders has shown a top recruit can make money at an HBCU. If black athletes wanted to work together with these schools, the very best college football and basketball players could end up at these schools, the next TV deals might send the biggest cash to Jackson State- Grambling. It could happen.
What to do? Admit the genie is out of the bottle and declare NCAA control over college football and basketball over. Now, players are independent workers who make money beyond their scholarships through their NIL. There is no need to cap this, apportion this, or over regulate this. Let them sign with agents, use help from schools, and make all the money they can.
Look to professional leagues for guidance. No more signing LOIs, sign contracts. They do not have to be guaranteed for more than a year. Keep everything above board. Regulate the portal just as the pros regulate the start and close of free agency. Allow schools to replenish depleted rosters to an agreed upon number, somewhere between 65-85 for football and 12-15 for basketball.
Leagues may re-form based on the magnitude of their overall level of compensation to athletes. But, you are never again going to be able to legally prevent an athlete from having financial control over their own name, image and likeness. That day is over, from Notre Dame to Slippery Rock. Use the pros to show you how you can use legal contracts to help protect the health and integrity of your sport in a world where athletes can be entrepreneurs and enjoy regulated free agency.
What does college football have to do with college in your scenario?The NCAA had ample time and opportunity to share some wealth with players in such a way that would have appeased players and kicked the can down the road regarding compensation. They should have settled the O’Bannon case by giving a significant amount of E-game revenue to the athletes. They should have eased rules to allow compensation for travel home and given opportunity for work. Instead they lawyered up and played hardball to keep the real money for themselves, coaches, and athletic departments. Now, judicial and legislative decisions have blown everything up.
Now, the NCAA wants to pretend they can still enforce rules in the new world, maintaining you still cannot be paid for play. That’s absurd. No one can draw a reasonable line of distinction between NIL income going to a player primarily because the player plays for a certain school. Saban wants all the NIL money pooled and evenly distributed for locker room harmony. That is not how he divides up coaching salaries. He resents Texas A$M being able to overcome Alabama’s recruiting advantage with cash. He is really frightened that Deion Sanders has shown a top recruit can make money at an HBCU. If black athletes wanted to work together with these schools, the very best college football and basketball players could end up at these schools, the next TV deals might send the biggest cash to Jackson State- Grambling. It could happen.
What to do? Admit the genie is out of the bottle and declare NCAA control over college football and basketball over. Now, players are independent workers who make money beyond their scholarships through their NIL. There is no need to cap this, apportion this, or over regulate this. Let them sign with agents, use help from schools, and make all the money they can.
Look to professional leagues for guidance. No more signing LOIs, sign contracts. They do not have to be guaranteed for more than a year. Keep everything above board. Regulate the portal just as the pros regulate the start and close of free agency. Allow schools to replenish depleted rosters to an agreed upon number, somewhere between 65-85 for football and 12-15 for basketball.
Leagues may re-form based on the magnitude of their overall level of compensation to athletes. But, you are never again going to be able to legally prevent an athlete from having financial control over their own name, image and likeness. That day is over, from Notre Dame to Slippery Rock. Use the pros to show you how you can use legal contracts to help protect the health and integrity of your sport in a world where athletes can be entrepreneurs and enjoy regulated free agency.
What does college football have to do with college in your scenario?
I do not believe that enrollment in college should be required for professional athletes. College courses have zero connection with one's ability to ball. And it is discriminatory.Not much. But, that has been in question for some time. I would imagine full time enrollment would still be required for athletes in order to compete. If they choose to use the opportunity provided to benefit from their education, good for them.
If they don’t have to enroll in classes then why should they be allowed to wear a uniform that represents the college? What is the connection with the college?I do not believe that enrollment in college should be required for professional athletes. College courses have zero connection with one's ability to ball. And it is discriminatory.
Imagine professional sports without drafts or salary caps. Where the big money teams would win championships just about every year and small market teams wouldn’t stand a chance.
That’s where we are now.
Same connection as between Manchester City and Etihad Airlines. Or M&Ms and Kyle Busch.If they don’t have to enroll in classes then why should they be allowed to wear a uniform that represents the college? What is the connection with the college?
I hear what you’re saying. And I agree with you. In an ideal world there would be minor league NFL professional football that would be completely unaffiliated with the college game. NIL has done nothing but ruin college football.
Ehh, if the only purpose is marketing I'm not sure that's a good strategy. Most of the kids interested and coming to Tech these days are coming because of the academic reputation, a lot do not care about football even a little.Same connection as between Manchester City and Etihad Airlines. Or M&Ms and Kyle Busch.
Agree 100 percent that it is not a good marketing strategy for Tech to recruit students. Tech doesn't even need to recruit students. To quote a line from the great movie "Heat," that kind of öööö sells itself.Ehh, if the only purpose is marketing I'm not sure that's a good strategy. Most of the kids interested and coming to Tech these days are coming because of the academic reputation, a lot do not care about football even a little.
Well, we cheat too. That's the sad part.I wonder if the posters on this board think there are any successful football teams that don't cheat? And if they'd think that GT cheats if we were successful?
It kind of goes along with the story about an injured player in the locker room at Miami that was on the floor riving in pain, and Nick supposedly walked right past him (the story said "over him") without even acknowledging his need for assistance, and he just continued to his office, ignoring the player.
Great interview. Lane willing to tell it like it is.Lane Kiffin opens up on NIL running amok in college football - Sports Illustrated
The Ole Miss coach shares how he feels about bidding wars, Alabama’s dominance and college football’s new normal.www.si.com