SDK46
Well-Known Member
Originally Posted by SDK46
#1--Free education is great. But very few athletes get to pursue the degree of their choice. Pre-med? Pre-pharmacy/pharmacy? Pre-nursing/nursing? Engineering? Please. It's called "keep eligible." Rocks for jocks is alive and well. Not all degrees are created equal.
Be honest, most of these kids playing sports wouldn't go for these types of degrees in the first place if they went to the school without an athletic scholarship.
(Seth: My point exactly. The quality of the degree the athletes are getting for 'free' isn't first-rate. Sorry, it is what it is. There simply is no time for most of the FB'ers to pursue the really rigorous degrees...the ones with the best long-term employment opportunities. They are funneled into the "stay eligible" tract...and after 4-5 years they may have a piece of paper, but again, not all degrees are equal...not by a long shot. I had a chance to play JC ball after high school...but one look at the academic offerings and I realized I had a lot more potential than to give 40 hours a week to a program which would mold me into a gym teacher, with no other opportunities (it was highly discouraged to take classes outside the "proposed academic tract")
#2--The education isn't free per se. These student/athletes are putting out 50+ hours per week during the season and about 50% of that during the "off season" (if there is one). They earn it. A lot is given for sure, but a lot is expected. Try living under a spotlight/microscope for 5 years in Iowa City.
I can't really argue with this point. Except I highly doubt they would spend this 50+ hours studying if they weren't playing football. They would be doing something else not helping the school.
(Seth: All I can say is I gave my school work 40 hours per week...i.e. I treated college like a full time job, when I was going through pharmacy school, and later, my MBA. If you're an athlete, you do not have a choice but to give those hours to the athletic department. A sort of servitude if you will.)
#3--If it wasn't for these players, there wouldn't be the BCS, BTN, new Kinnick stadium, women's sports, wrestling....in essence the FB kids generate the millions and millions and millions of dollars the schools bank every year. We can't give them $100 a month for pizza and other incidentals? Please.
As soon as you give them $100 they will start to find envelopes filled with money that "accidently" must have been placed in the wrong envelope. This is a can of worms that should never be opened. Do you really think if giving a kid $100 was ok'd by the NCAA that schools like USC, Alabama, etc... wouldn't start giving kids more and creating bigger problems then there already is? It would turn out to be a bidding service for a kids services for him to come play football at your school, whomever supplies the most money can have his services.
(Seth: "More money" in the envelope is purely conjecture. You simply put another rule in the NCAA rulebook stating $100 is the max...give more and you violate it. You don't give cash money anyway....you deposit it through direct deposit so it can be monitored. My point is once you eliminate the "you can't have any at all" mentality, the pressure to seek any money at all subsides. Look at prohibition...zero tolerance and zero supposed availability was a monumental failure.)
Pay them.
It keeps the criminal/booster element out of it.
Not even close and very misinformed if you believe this, read what I wrote above, it would actually increase the criminal/booster element of it.
(Seth: We'll have to agree to disagree. Again, look at history...prohibition. Outlawing something doesn't work in the long run. Bring it out in the open, regulate it....is it perfect...no...but it's a lot cleaner with much less criminal element. Legalizing marijuana would do the same thing in this economic scenerio...remove the criminal element and drive prices downwards.)
They've earned it.
(Seth: This statement is my basic premise. Do the non-revenue athletes deserve the same $100/month...probably, but one could make an argument they don't because they don't produce millions of dollars of revenue like the FB'ers. Dunno...but if I were an athlete producing millions of dollars a year and I couldn't go get a pizza because I'm broke it's "illegal"...I'd find an "illegal" way to get my money and go have a dammed pizza!)
#1--Free education is great. But very few athletes get to pursue the degree of their choice. Pre-med? Pre-pharmacy/pharmacy? Pre-nursing/nursing? Engineering? Please. It's called "keep eligible." Rocks for jocks is alive and well. Not all degrees are created equal.
Be honest, most of these kids playing sports wouldn't go for these types of degrees in the first place if they went to the school without an athletic scholarship.
(Seth: My point exactly. The quality of the degree the athletes are getting for 'free' isn't first-rate. Sorry, it is what it is. There simply is no time for most of the FB'ers to pursue the really rigorous degrees...the ones with the best long-term employment opportunities. They are funneled into the "stay eligible" tract...and after 4-5 years they may have a piece of paper, but again, not all degrees are equal...not by a long shot. I had a chance to play JC ball after high school...but one look at the academic offerings and I realized I had a lot more potential than to give 40 hours a week to a program which would mold me into a gym teacher, with no other opportunities (it was highly discouraged to take classes outside the "proposed academic tract")
#2--The education isn't free per se. These student/athletes are putting out 50+ hours per week during the season and about 50% of that during the "off season" (if there is one). They earn it. A lot is given for sure, but a lot is expected. Try living under a spotlight/microscope for 5 years in Iowa City.
I can't really argue with this point. Except I highly doubt they would spend this 50+ hours studying if they weren't playing football. They would be doing something else not helping the school.
(Seth: All I can say is I gave my school work 40 hours per week...i.e. I treated college like a full time job, when I was going through pharmacy school, and later, my MBA. If you're an athlete, you do not have a choice but to give those hours to the athletic department. A sort of servitude if you will.)
#3--If it wasn't for these players, there wouldn't be the BCS, BTN, new Kinnick stadium, women's sports, wrestling....in essence the FB kids generate the millions and millions and millions of dollars the schools bank every year. We can't give them $100 a month for pizza and other incidentals? Please.
As soon as you give them $100 they will start to find envelopes filled with money that "accidently" must have been placed in the wrong envelope. This is a can of worms that should never be opened. Do you really think if giving a kid $100 was ok'd by the NCAA that schools like USC, Alabama, etc... wouldn't start giving kids more and creating bigger problems then there already is? It would turn out to be a bidding service for a kids services for him to come play football at your school, whomever supplies the most money can have his services.
(Seth: "More money" in the envelope is purely conjecture. You simply put another rule in the NCAA rulebook stating $100 is the max...give more and you violate it. You don't give cash money anyway....you deposit it through direct deposit so it can be monitored. My point is once you eliminate the "you can't have any at all" mentality, the pressure to seek any money at all subsides. Look at prohibition...zero tolerance and zero supposed availability was a monumental failure.)
Pay them.
It keeps the criminal/booster element out of it.
Not even close and very misinformed if you believe this, read what I wrote above, it would actually increase the criminal/booster element of it.
(Seth: We'll have to agree to disagree. Again, look at history...prohibition. Outlawing something doesn't work in the long run. Bring it out in the open, regulate it....is it perfect...no...but it's a lot cleaner with much less criminal element. Legalizing marijuana would do the same thing in this economic scenerio...remove the criminal element and drive prices downwards.)
They've earned it.
(Seth: This statement is my basic premise. Do the non-revenue athletes deserve the same $100/month...probably, but one could make an argument they don't because they don't produce millions of dollars of revenue like the FB'ers. Dunno...but if I were an athlete producing millions of dollars a year and I couldn't go get a pizza because I'm broke it's "illegal"...I'd find an "illegal" way to get my money and go have a dammed pizza!)