Oski87;842297280 said:
This will kill athletics.
If by "athletics", you mean the current corrupt cartel known as the NCAA, then yes, it will kill it. The NCAA may claim that they're too poor to provide better compensation for the players, but just watch how they spend millions on attorneys to fight this thing to the death.
The NCAA gets a billion bucks from the NCAA tournament alone. The schools and conferences make billions from TV revenue, ticket sales, and wealthy alumni donations. They pay themselves first: the head of the NCAA gets $2,000,000 per year; the head football and basketball coaches get millions (100 times what they made 30 years ago!). The conference administrators and ADs get paid a pretty penny as well. Then they pay hundreds of millions for new facilities, much of which is spent on luxury boxes for the wealthy alums. Meanwhile, ticket prices keep going up and typically require additional donations. Then, after all of this freewheelin' spending for themselves, they tell the athletes that there's no more money left. If the players got paid a little more - the Northwestern players are just asking for a little additional expense money and health insurance for long term injuries - then the NCAA says that the whole system will collapse, and athletes in non-revenue sports will be out on the streets. What a pile of crap.
It's free market capitalism for the administrators and coaches. It's serfdom for the athletes. On the one hand, we say that without an athletic scholarship, the players could not attend college. Either play football, or suffer the lifetime consequences of having no degree. Then we say it's a "choice" to play football, and when you face a lifetime of medical bills when your knees get ripped to shreds, it's tough luck, it was your "choice".
It is no surprise that football and basketball players - the players whose labor brings in the revenue - tend to be impoverished people of color. These people are poor and are being exploited, pure and simple. The NFL and NCAA have a corrupt bargain to enforce their mutual monopoly. If you are out of high school less than three years, too bad - the NFL will not hire you. The NFL does not schedule games on Saturdays until the NCAA regular season is over. Anybody ever wonder why? The NCAA does not schedule games on Sundays and does not have postseason games on Saturdays in January, (the new playoff championship game will, of course, be on a Monday night) while providing a free farm system for the NFL, which of course, we pay for.
In any other industry, this would be an illegal monopoly that would have lost an antitrust suit long ago. You know why they break up monopolies? They can get away with paying employees next to nothing. They charge the highest possible price for their product without market competition.
Let's stop pretending that the NCAA and the current system cares about the athletes and is trying to save athletics. It's all about money in their own pockets and nothing about the athletes. They're making and remaking conferences, destroying traditional rivalries, increasing the price of tickets 2000% over 30 years ago, moving the venue for our home games to a pro stadium 50 miles away, becoming whores to the corporations (including embarrassing stadium re-naming), adding games to the schedule, and, oh yeah, cutting non-revenue sports.