Sure the OL's in the NFL get paid well, based upon their value to the team. But show me an OL at Clemson or Alabama who has a remote chance to get the T-shirt deal that Trevor or Tua can get.
Bootie liked this
you have a point sluggo. If something is gonna happen embrace it the best you can whether you like it or not. We got caught behind the 8 ball once w facilities and recruiting -a few years back; let's not get behind again
---------------------------FUPlayer74 wrote: ↑Thu Oct 03, 2019 10:31 pmGF give us what you suggest we do in embracing this change. What do you recommend Furman do so we're not "left behind the 8 ball"?
Fair enough. This will sound simplistic but very first step is just organize the right people (CH, the AD, etc) to begin having formal talks about how to address it. Go ahead and get some thoughts on the table well in advance. I admit that's rather vague but it is better than just letting it go for a year or so as we all know 'indecision is a decision'. Have a plan if the direction of pay for play goes this way we do X and if it goes this way we do Y and if this way we do Z.FUPlayer74 wrote: ↑Fri Oct 04, 2019 8:11 amI am not picking on you, just asking a simple question if you have any suggestions as to what Furman should do. Sluggo or anyone else, chime in.
Furman could stop writing the scholarship check to themselves and write 1/2 of it to the player for "food and housing".FUPlayer74 wrote: ↑Fri Oct 04, 2019 8:11 amI am not picking on you, just asking a simple question if you have any suggestions as to what Furman should do. Sluggo or anyone else, chime in.
Sluggo your post has some good points. I'm more on the anti-pay side of things as obviously noted in this thread, but I'm open to these points. However, I do have some counterpoints and welcome their discussion or dismantlingsluggo wrote: ↑Sat Oct 05, 2019 1:39 amFurman could stop writing the scholarship check to themselves and write 1/2 of it to the player for "food and housing".FUPlayer74 wrote: ↑Fri Oct 04, 2019 8:11 amI am not picking on you, just asking a simple question if you have any suggestions as to what Furman should do. Sluggo or anyone else, chime in.
We should stop pretending. Nobody pays someone $Millions to coach amateurs.
Stop "moralizing" about how pay ruins the players.
These are antiquated morals that were formed when head coaches were paid less than professors and no TV contract or ESPN.
Morals have changed!
People don't tell their daughter not to have sex on the first date anymore; they just pray that
she doesn't upload the video to Snap Chat because she wants to be Kim Kardashian II.
The players are the cash cow in a money making system that they had no say in creating.
The players didn't sign TV deals or build massive stadiums that earn millions.
The players didn't make college football a job; the universities did.
The players didn't put the cash incentives into the game; they are just the only ones left out of pay.
The players watch every other person involved in college football walk home with a fat check off of their hard labor.
College football players are laborers and entertainers for the rich elite who "admissions scandal" their kids into
school so they can get drunk all day and watch athletes sweat for their education.
A significant percentage of these athletes are coming from low income families and after they graduate with a broken
leg and a chipped tooth in the front of their mouth that they can't afford to fix; they wind up working retail at Walmart. They face lack of corporate jobs and Tech-school level jobs turn them down for being "over qualified".
Football players are leaving college with and broken teeth, broken legs and broken wallets while looking at the glorious head coach on TV flashing his millions.
We can deny reality for a very long time; but when billions are made from free labor it will eventually become a
civil rights issue that will make it's way through the courts.
The arguments against paying players sounds exactly like the "down playing" of slavery arguments that laud the free room/board and education in agriculture.
The "slippery slope" here is the continuance of the status quo.
For those who says nobody in FCS will make any money from endorsements :
I'd be happy to get a check for the jersey sales of #66 when I played.
Somebody made a lot of money off me and Standford Jennings.
The Lost Colony was a special placeFred Garvin wrote: ↑Wed Oct 02, 2019 11:57 am1. Allow students to move off campus again.
2. Give the players their "dorm money" to live off campus. Probably triple what it was 30 + years ago....
3. Hello Hoodwinds and The Lost Colony......
Correct, nobody is forced to play NCAA, but what is the alternative if you you intend to go pro? A player cannot go pro from high school in football or basketball. You say it right there, a new league is needed with new rules. However, the NCAA and pro sports are so closely tied it makes it very difficult for a free market solution.2. No one forces anyone to play sports. As much as I don't think it's fair for the NCAA to accumulate such piles of money off the players and give them nothing in return, the players know the deal going in. They know the NCAA is in control and makes money off of them. They know full well that most players don't move onto the pros and that injuries happen. They know all of this, yet they continue to pile in by the thousands every year. It's hard for me to have much sympathy for someone who freely puts themself in this situation.
4. I think there's a free-market solution to everything. Perhaps the NAIA or new league makes their rules differently, allowing players to be compensated by their earnings/value, and then players might begin to choose those schools instead NCAA schools, or the NCAA might change their own rules to compete.