i heard about this earlier today. going to have to check out these articles when i get home. really, it is inevitable. though i wonder what this means for sports not called football. not sure this is a good thing.
Div 1 Bball is huge , not just football , what with 300 teams playing 300 games a week in front of good crowds, conf tournaments and of course the big dance.
College basketball?s most profitable men?s programs - Memphis Business Journal
some schools make a lot of money in b-ball though. couldn't find any current figures on iowa b-ball.
Schools raising fees to keep up with cost of college sports - USATODAY.com
according to that article, considering all sports, Iowa was one of only 7 schools in 2010 to actually make a profit in their athletic department.
Most NCAA Division I athletic departments take subsidies
you might be surprised with how many SEC schools are surviving off of subsidies.
College basketball?s most profitable men?s programs - Memphis Business Journal
some schools make a lot of money in b-ball though. couldn't find any current figures on iowa b-ball.
Can somebody get a clarification from Bowlsby as to the meaning of "relatively unanimous"?
It turns out that term "student athlete" was a contrived exprssion that the NCAA developed while defending themselves against workmens' compensation claims. The book above descirbes in detail the sagas of a few athletes who were paralized (1950's and 1960's) and subsequently sought relief. Only to be stonewalled by NCAA and their Universities who won in court.
The AAU used to control amature athletics back in the early part of the last century. Facinating story about how the NCAA came to power and wrestled away their control. Early on NCAA owned TV rights for the 1 game shown each Saturday on abc. Universities did not have any say or power to negotiate such TV deals. NCAA kept most of the cash. Notre Dame and Oklahoma fought back - NCAA went so far as to threaten any institution who ever played these two in a game would be kicked out and not receive distribuiton and could not be on TV. The universities won suit and won in a landmark decisioin.
Great read (short little book - really a long article)
Amazon.com: The Cartel: Inside the Rise and Imminent Fall of the NCAA eBook: Taylor Branch: Books
Once the schools get out from under NCAA, a lot of things can change. They make up their own rules.
Paying players, # of sports offered (NCAA mandates 16). Recruiting rules, almost everything except need to offer equal schollys to women as men (that's Federal law).
me thinks the big schools also want to distance themselves from NCAA because the litigation around royalties EA Sports, etc. They probably don't want the NCAA taking money from them to pay for the evenual settlement.
If athletic departments start paying players, will they be forced to split from the University, thus losing their non-profit status? Or will they not be paying the players, but rather just giving them an extra "stipend"?