One of my students brought this up and its actually very interesting. I'm not sure exactly how this needs to be implemented but we definitely need to go ahead and make it legal for colleges to pay athletesA. They bring in so much revenue to the universities and deserve part of it anyway.B. They are poor and you have athletes that need to go out and steal just to feed their famliesi because all their time is spent on the university.C. Theres no way to keep people/schools from doing it anyway and there would actually be a lot more partiy because you wouldn't have "honest" programs reluctant to engage in these activities.D. Many would say "well now you're putting alll this money into 18 yr old hands instead of somehwere better" well "immature" spending would actually boost the economy.
12/21/2009 7:10:23 PM
How are you not suspended yet?
12/21/2009 7:13:27 PM
I agree. In fact, I think that colleges should abolish academics and use that money to pay athletes to come to their college, at least the colleges that are already good in sports. If they want to get a degree or learn anything besides basketball they should go to a shitty sports school.
12/21/2009 7:23:17 PM
mambagearl strikes again
12/21/2009 7:25:39 PM
Step 1: Get rid of Title 9But I don't know if the OP would be down with getting rid of all the womens sports that lose money
12/21/2009 7:26:41 PM
I loved when the other faculty at Texas was pissed when Mack Brown got a raise a few weeks backBecause their English classes were bringing in the same amount of money that his perennial top 5 team was[Edited on December 21, 2009 at 7:31 PM. Reason : x]
12/21/2009 7:31:08 PM
12/21/2009 7:40:13 PM
Because an English professor's job is clearly just to bring in money to the school.[Edited on December 21, 2009 at 7:42 PM. Reason : or that ^ ]
12/21/2009 7:41:18 PM
and thats exactly why they don't get 5 million a year
12/21/2009 7:44:00 PM
What those teachers fail to realize is that athletics are pretty much self supporting. Its not like that $5million is coming out of the education budget.
12/21/2009 7:53:29 PM
I never realized until I was on scholarship, that somebody is actually paying your tuition. I thought the school just kinda threw you in for free and didn't charge you, but they actually have to raise the money and pay the school your money back. I guess it makes sense, I just never really thought about it.
12/21/2009 7:58:25 PM
when you click "reply" mamamamagrl wins
12/21/2009 8:54:28 PM
12/21/2009 9:13:53 PM
Can't wait for her opinion on the forward pass in football.
12/21/2009 10:01:43 PM
God did you just post another stupid thread Half the fuck sticks that play will never go anywhere in life. All those pro field hockey players Shut the fuck up. Fuck
12/21/2009 10:07:50 PM
how are you not suspended yet?
12/21/2009 11:03:15 PM
This is teh dumbest thread ever
12/21/2009 11:44:51 PM
mambagrl please address the aspect of this possibly happening which would be the dismissal of title 9, aka womens athletics
12/22/2009 12:02:50 AM
12/22/2009 12:15:32 AM
someone watched the u
12/22/2009 12:29:17 AM
HORRIBLE thread. Fail. Suspend.
12/22/2009 12:51:22 AM
when you click "reply" mamamamagrl winshow are you not suspended yetetc
12/22/2009 1:31:46 AM
so you want collegiate athletes to be professional athletes
12/22/2009 2:10:04 AM
this will end well.
12/22/2009 2:31:26 AM
I'm in favor of paying athletes, but it needs to be limited. We also need to do away with Title IX (or pretty soon, there will be requirements that x number of players on a team must be of a certain race, etc.).Just hypothetically speaking (aka feeding the troll)$1500 per player per month during basketball season maximumIf you can't pay 13 players $1500/month then don't expect to compete.Any school that couldn't afford that isn't going to be able to compete anyways.I could go on, but you see where I'm going with this..
12/22/2009 5:27:34 AM
You do realize that a large majority of athletes already are "paid" more than that as it is now, even on lowly womens bball and soccer teams.[Edited on December 22, 2009 at 7:08 AM. Reason : .]
12/22/2009 7:08:13 AM
free tuition + free food + free whatever else = getting paid
12/22/2009 9:16:37 AM
free tuition + free food + free whatever else = roughly 1/100th of the value Tim Tebow brings to the program thereHe should be able to sign a deal with Nike, Subway, Tampax and whoever else wants his name on their shitAlso this way, we finally get the names in the video games
12/22/2009 9:19:48 AM
12/22/2009 9:27:11 AM
I go back and forth on this issue.Ultimately, universities are academic institutions first, then illegal drug distribution centers, and then sports clubs. And student-athletes are students first. While I know this isn't always the case, it doesn't mean we should just give in and make the NCAA a professional league. If anything, we should just do whatever we can to keep things from going that way.
12/22/2009 11:01:28 AM
12/22/2009 11:05:01 AM
I'll play your game, you rogue.I'm pretty sure it's not illegal to pay them right now.It's just unethical and against the rules of the NCAA. No one goes to jail for it.
12/22/2009 11:12:34 AM
12/22/2009 2:47:04 PM
GO PLAY INTRAMURALS, BROTHER!
12/22/2009 3:02:44 PM
12/22/2009 5:28:00 PM
12/22/2009 5:41:13 PM
12/22/2009 5:41:30 PM
AHAHAH, any players out there stealing to feed their families, come holla at me so we can talk about this thing called point shaving.For once, I'll have the upper hand on Bodog!
12/22/2009 6:16:42 PM
i think we should hand out "legacy scholarships" to these student athletes. i mean, each of the mentioned revenue generating student athletes would get a handful of scholarships to assign to their dependents and spouses. or they could be scholarships for the individual to get follow on degrees - undergard or grad, pending they qualify academically. they could be conditional, and used as vouchers to other in-state schools. for example, say John Doe was a skilled running back. he would study here free, and upon graduation his wife and first born also studied free and/or he got to continue in a masters program with the legacy scholarship/voucher covering costs of tuition, room, meal plan, and books. and if someone with the legacy scholarship didn't qualify academically for a program here, they could use it to go to another in state school such as Western Carolina, NC Central, etc. these scholarships could carry a significant amount of value after the athletics is said and done, and it wouldn't be the same as "paying" them.
12/23/2009 1:17:17 AM
everyone has opinions and is ready to shit on my idea but nobody has an alternative solution to the current problem (C)
12/23/2009 3:38:55 AM
There is no problem, dweeb
12/23/2009 9:26:30 AM
12/23/2009 11:35:34 AM
12/23/2009 11:52:29 AM
^^ what you suggest in addition to a "legacy scholarship" or two would work out great i think
12/23/2009 12:16:45 PM
Do you guys undertstand that making that sort of promise is a contractual agreement to be paid and would therefore make these guys professional athletes?its not just against the rules to put money in their hands, its against money to promise them or provide expectation of any earning other than per diemsyou cant even use a football players likeness or have them appear in any sort of charity where they dont get a dime. If they do and it wasnt approved by the AD then that athlete is a professional and can no longer play college ballplus your suggestion is stupid to begin with, these guys practice the same, sit through the same bullshit meeting, and all wake up at 4 in the morning to do the same bullshit drills, no reason for young men and women that are AMATEURS to be assigned some kind of value for their role. That is for professional athletes and it should remain as such.and you are assuming that all these amateur athletes want to go pro after they graduate. How many people do you actually think go pro? What about sports like track and wrestling where the biggest thing they have to look forward to is competing in the olympics. Are we supposed to imagine an amateur athletes value if they were to return to their home country and compete for them? How much is a basketball player gonna be worth playing pro ball in Turkey?
12/23/2009 12:44:10 PM
I think its kinda messed up that football and basketball players bring in millions per year to the school without getting a cut of any of it. But paying players would open up a whole new can of worms that would be pretty difficult to control.
12/23/2009 12:53:39 PM
there is a problem. the problem is that programs like usc and many others ALREADy pay athletes and theres no way to stop them. if you don't think anybody is paying athletes already, or you think it can be completely regulated then you live in a glass house.
12/23/2009 12:56:49 PM
i don't think you understand what a glass house analogy means.
12/23/2009 1:43:28 PM
So wait, somehow your solution and the problem are one in the same
12/23/2009 3:39:18 PM
12/23/2009 3:42:50 PM