Affirm wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 8:42 pm
Article appearing Monday, June 10. 2024, by Rick Seltzer in The Chronicle talks about the plan to save small Division I athletics.
"As the biggest athletic programs lean into a burgeoning pay-for-play era, smaller athletic departments are dipping back into the amateurism well for ideas that might save them from this brave new world….
"Division I colleges without major football programs have the most to lose in a brewing legal storm. They’ll pay into a proposed $2.75-billion antitrust settlement if it’s approved, and they might soon have to negotiate with unionized athletes, but they lack the revenue potential enjoyed by the powerhouses that play on autumn Saturdays during national television windows.
"[The] ... new pitch is amateurism, revisited. Athletic directors and athletes in the two less-lucrative Division I subdivisions have assembled a proposal…
"The new plan is in a feedback phase. It was due to go before the annual convention of the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics on Sunday, but no vote was scheduled."
I hear that; but it's like trying to "unring the bell".
Once schools started selling tickets and getting TV money, while paying coaches millions, the bell was rung.
The only way to have amateur sports again is to cap staff pay, cap ticket sales, and no TV.
Basically, like high school.
Players can't demand money that is not there.
When I played, I was against players being paid; but things changed a lot since then.
Coaches are being paid much more and players seem to be exploited in a muti-billion dollar industry.
I started to feel like the schools were pimps and the players were street hoes.
I graduated from Furman in 1983 summer graduation as a 2nd Lieutenant in the army with a degree in Computer Science/Mathematics.
I keep saying this because a former teammate turned lawyer lied for 35-40 years that I didn't graduate.