Pwns wrote:Chizz, do you understand why it's problematic to let college athletes profit off of their likeness? If you do, you're going to have wealthy boosters paying star players $3000 for their abstract crayon art. Player autographs and jerseys and such are only valuable because that player is a player is on a college sports team, anyways.Chizzang wrote:
No he missed the point entirely...
Nobody is debating how Student Athletes are forced into anything
The debate is about two things:
1)
The NCAA uses college basketball and football players likeness to profit on video games to the score of tens of millions of dollars - and has absolutely no profit sharing for the very focal point of the profit center - players could be payed AFTER they graduate (Right..?)
That's ^ slimy by anybody's standards...
2)
The NCAA has the kids sign an employee contract with 400 pages of conduct and stipulations associated with performance etc. etc. (clearly an employee contract) and refuses to admit that is what it is
It's the same reason you have restrictions on athletes holding jobs, because if there weren't you will have athletes working for $50 an hour as an elevator operator in a one-story building.
So my post holds. When you sign the letter of intent, you agree to the terms. If you don't like the terms, don't sign them. If you don't like it that your school makes a lot of money and you don't get a cut of it, don't sign with a big-money athletic department. Simple.
Why not have wealthy booster throw money at college athletes..?
Its their money let them spend it how they want
And:
I still don't see what the problem is paying a kid $50 an hour to be a imaginary figurehead employee..?
I don't see the problem with these kids sharing in the NCAA piles of money
I don't see why the POWER should remain in the hands of a TINY FEW BILLIONAIRES who use college athletics to generate hundreds of millions annually - the employees (athletes) should get paid
I'm all for paying athletes as much as any other entertainer...



