My original post/question was responding to those who say college sports has been exploiting players and that they should be paid. The issue is also being reviewed by the NCAA, many States and the Supreme Court. Many of the arguments are that the NCAA are colluding with colleges to artificially hold down compensation of athletes
The new NIL rules will address only part of this issue. Compensation from the universities directly to athletes still needs to be addressed unless, the scholarships, room and board, athletic training, stipends, and value of personal brand promotion are deemed to not be sufficient free market compensation
(I support the new NIL and transfer rules, but want to understand what can be changed to reduce the impact to competitive balance)
So I offered 3 market approaches to determine fair wages.
Then I asked, what people will think Cal would do in that situation
Cal will have to factor in the University mission, budget, TitleIX and many other factors to arrive at their conclusion.
Competitive balance also needs to be a factor, especially after 100% free agency all the time.
My question is NOT a strawman.
I just don't see any solution to move to what would effectively be a semi-pro franchise at Cal
So I'm asking the people who keep bringing this up to offer viable solutions, instead of just complain
BeachedBear said:
HoopDreams said:
BearSD said:
Paying the best basketball and football players as much as Nike or other sponsors would pay is very unlikely to be profitable for an athletic department that supports 20-plus varsity sports.
And paying them far less than what commercial interests will pay is unlikely to have much of an impact. If Nike is paying the next Zion $500,000 to play one year at Duke, then the next Zion won't care much if Duke offers him $10,000 on top of Nike's $500,000.
So, IMO, forget about the schools handing small checks to athletes. Just keep hands off and let the athletes accept whatever anyone else wants to give them.
Many players won't be getting $500k from Nike, and even those that do won't turn down their $10k salary. At least they would donate it to charity
And in a free market I don't think it will only be $10k
So far no one has offered an answer but some complain that we should pay the players
I'm simply asking how we decide the salary amount without violating antitrust?
I think you're putting the cart about a mile in front of the horse. Lot's of holes in your straw man - starting with asking for a simple answer to a complex and unprecedented proposal. It will evolve over time (or not) and I doubt you or I will be anywhere near the top of list in deciding salary amounts.
If I read you correctly, you are assuming that colleges will have the power of deciding salaries? I doubt that will happen., but please confirm.