The stench of college athletics is no longer even noticed by "fans".
It happens more often than it's uncovered, but the idea that 'most' or even 'many' schools "cheat" (paying players) is an unfounded and ridiculous claim. Thus the "uneven" playing field and "poor schools that have to compete with cheaters" is without merit.RJABear said:
Listened to XM college sports talk radio this morning.
Chris (the hosts) basically said
- No-one cares
- Everyone cheats (Arizona, LSU, etc)
- Schools with serious athletic aspirations all cheat
- The rules are still the rules
- He feels bad - schools that try to play within the rules are at a competitive disadvantage
GBear4Life said:It happens more often than it's uncovered, but the idea that 'most' or even 'many' schools "cheat" (paying players) is an unfounded and ridiculous claim. Thus the "uneven" playing field and "poor schools that have to compete with cheaters" is without merit.RJABear said:
Listened to XM college sports talk radio this morning.
Chris (the hosts) basically said
- No-one cares
- Everyone cheats (Arizona, LSU, etc)
- Schools with serious athletic aspirations all cheat
- The rules are still the rules
- He feels bad - schools that try to play within the rules are at a competitive disadvantage
If you're a losing program, it's not because of Sean Miller and those like him. It's because your program sucks on its own merit.
Evidence, please.MilleniaBear said:
Losing program? I can agree to that. Top 25? Nope. Virtually every top program is implicated in some way and those that aren't are openly discussed as having some sort of other deal. I do not believe Addidas is the only shoe company funneling $ to top 100 recruits. Nike and UA have to be dirty too. They just weren't caught yet.
Totally. Give up your paycheck. It's just an ego stroke.bearchamp said:
Cheating will go on anyway. I have known college players on the "take" from as many as four agents at once; when the players did not "need" more money to live. In one case the player was wealthy. Getting paid is an ego stroke. Paying is an ego stroke for the boosters. Paying the players is not the answer.
It's right there in BearChamp's post. Get out of scholarship athletics. It's a joke how corrupt it is. Go back to sports with real students who are admitted on academic merit.concordtom said:Good points.bearchamp said:
The open market already exists: in Europe, Asia, Australia, NBA, etc. What is suggested here is that the colleges go directly the into professional sports business. Professional sports is unlikely to be found in any college charter and also unlikely, as a matter of law, to be supportable by tax dollars. The real problem is the colleges trying to be "not quite" in the professional sports business. The answer is to get out of "professional sports" and return to academics. Also, athletes getting paid "above board" will not eliminate "under the table" payments. Finally, what does the college do when its "one and done" superstar who it is paying several million dollars per year turns out to be Ivan Rabb and not Zion Williamson?
But what then is the solution?
That would be really interesting ... but almost impossible. Even in Division III, with no scholarships and strict rules about practice time, etc., the competitive nature of human beings creates a drive to succeed. And I coached one player who got financial help to play D-III (an academic grant, I think) and there are always ways to encourage athletes to come to your school.FuzzyWuzzy said:It's right there in BearChamp's post. Get out of scholarship athletics. It's a joke how corrupt it is. Go back to sports with real students who are admitted on academic merit.concordtom said:Good points.bearchamp said:
The open market already exists: in Europe, Asia, Australia, NBA, etc. What is suggested here is that the colleges go directly the into professional sports business. Professional sports is unlikely to be found in any college charter and also unlikely, as a matter of law, to be supportable by tax dollars. The real problem is the colleges trying to be "not quite" in the professional sports business. The answer is to get out of "professional sports" and return to academics. Also, athletes getting paid "above board" will not eliminate "under the table" payments. Finally, what does the college do when its "one and done" superstar who it is paying several million dollars per year turns out to be Ivan Rabb and not Zion Williamson?
But what then is the solution?
You'd have to go waaaaaaaaaaaay back in history to get to that point. The conference that preceded the Pac-12 broke up in the 1950s because several schools had boosters who were paying football players, and then the schools whose players were getting paid started a new conference that is now called the Pac-12.FuzzyWuzzy said:It's right there in BearChamp's post. Get out of scholarship athletics. It's a joke how corrupt it is. Go back to sports with real students who are admitted on academic merit.concordtom said:Good points.bearchamp said:
The open market already exists: in Europe, Asia, Australia, NBA, etc. What is suggested here is that the colleges go directly the into professional sports business. Professional sports is unlikely to be found in any college charter and also unlikely, as a matter of law, to be supportable by tax dollars. The real problem is the colleges trying to be "not quite" in the professional sports business. The answer is to get out of "professional sports" and return to academics. Also, athletes getting paid "above board" will not eliminate "under the table" payments. Finally, what does the college do when its "one and done" superstar who it is paying several million dollars per year turns out to be Ivan Rabb and not Zion Williamson?
But what then is the solution?
Thanks. I've been wanting to post something like this, but was not up to doing the research. I've been involved with youth, high school and college bball since the early eighties. It has been corrupt the entire time. And back when I started, the people involved since the 40s and 50s said the same thing. If you look at college football in the 20's (almost a hundred years ago) - corrupt. I think the only difference lately is the amount of money involved (also higher relative to the economy) and the agencies have morphed into shoe companies and runners.BearSD said:You'd have to go waaaaaaaaaaaay back in history to get to that point. The conference that preceded the Pac-12 broke up in the 1950s because several schools had boosters who were paying football players, and then the schools whose players were getting paid started a new conference that is now called the Pac-12.FuzzyWuzzy said:It's right there in BearChamp's post. Get out of scholarship athletics. It's a joke how corrupt it is. Go back to sports with real students who are admitted on academic merit.concordtom said:Good points.bearchamp said:
The open market already exists: in Europe, Asia, Australia, NBA, etc. What is suggested here is that the colleges go directly the into professional sports business. Professional sports is unlikely to be found in any college charter and also unlikely, as a matter of law, to be supportable by tax dollars. The real problem is the colleges trying to be "not quite" in the professional sports business. The answer is to get out of "professional sports" and return to academics. Also, athletes getting paid "above board" will not eliminate "under the table" payments. Finally, what does the college do when its "one and done" superstar who it is paying several million dollars per year turns out to be Ivan Rabb and not Zion Williamson?
But what then is the solution?
More likely you couldn't get back to such a place anyway. Ivy League schools don't offer athletic scholarships, but admit many athletes who don't meet the regular admission standards of the school, a loophole that was exploited by Rick Singer and the rich families who paid him to arrange phony "recruited athlete" designations for their kids.
How can that work? What happens to the players who don't get paid? They will claim discrimination, and lawsuits will surface. They won't pass the ball to the players who are getting paid, will they? And if you pay the boys, you will have to pay the girls, according to Title IX. They are not workers. They are students. They are already being paid by full scholarships, and cushy part-time jobs they are given. Give me a break.ClayK said:
Does anyone believe this is an outlier?
After all, UNC -- which cherishes its academic reputation -- set up bogus classes for athletes (and others who were clever enough to get in on the scam) and didn't even care. When caught, they fired the women's basketball coach, and of course the NCAA did nothing.
I will repeat that I believe most of this stems from not paying workers who generate a tremendous amount of income. If high school and college athletes were able to negotiate contracts and be paid whatever the market decided, then much of this corruption would disappear. (Note that I'm not saying all college athletes should be paid -- only those who generate enough interest on the open market to draw a salary.)
If you pay them, you will have to pay every player on the team, schollie holder or not, or you will face charges of discrimination. You will have to pay the players the same pay regardless of race, etc. You will have to pay the women players. So will say Title IX. And when the transgenders get their teams (that may be coming sooner than you think), you will have to pay them. You will have to add new staff to negotiate and administer all employment contracts with athletes. Where are you getting the money to pay for all this? Cal is still in debt over a football stadium and if basketball remains in the tank, it won't have enough attendance to stay out of debt, let alone turn a profit for the school.concordtom said:I starred your third sentence.RJABear said:
Get rid of the one-and-done rule. Let the kids who are capable go pro as soon as possible.
I would watch the same amount of college basketball with or without John Wall, Zion Williamson, and Anthony Davis.
But your first sentence won't fix the cheating.
You gotta pay the kids their market value. Otherwise the incentive to cheat is huge.
If you are a poor family, $100,000 is massive. But if you pay $100,000 on top of that, it's not as motivating to cheat and risk. Basic needs can be met with the initial pay amount.
You got something against trangeneder people?SFCityBear said:If you pay them, you will have to pay every player on the team, schollie holder or not, or you will face charges of discrimination. You will have to pay the players the same pay regardless of race, etc. You will have to pay the women players. So will say Title IX. And when the transgenders get their teams (that may be coming sooner than you think), you will have to pay them. You will have to add new staff to negotiate and administer all employment contracts with athletes. Where are you getting the money to pay for all this? Cal is still in debt over a football stadium and if basketball remains in the tank, it won't have enough attendance to stay out of debt, let alone turn a profit for the school.concordtom said:I starred your third sentence.RJABear said:
Get rid of the one-and-done rule. Let the kids who are capable go pro as soon as possible.
I would watch the same amount of college basketball with or without John Wall, Zion Williamson, and Anthony Davis.
But your first sentence won't fix the cheating.
You gotta pay the kids their market value. Otherwise the incentive to cheat is huge.
If you are a poor family, $100,000 is massive. But if you pay $100,000 on top of that, it's not as motivating to cheat and risk. Basic needs can be met with the initial pay amount.
Ivy WestFuzzyWuzzy said:It's right there in BearChamp's post. Get out of scholarship athletics. It's a joke how corrupt it is. Go back to sports with real students who are admitted on academic merit.concordtom said:Good points.bearchamp said:
The open market already exists: in Europe, Asia, Australia, NBA, etc. What is suggested here is that the colleges go directly the into professional sports business. Professional sports is unlikely to be found in any college charter and also unlikely, as a matter of law, to be supportable by tax dollars. The real problem is the colleges trying to be "not quite" in the professional sports business. The answer is to get out of "professional sports" and return to academics. Also, athletes getting paid "above board" will not eliminate "under the table" payments. Finally, what does the college do when its "one and done" superstar who it is paying several million dollars per year turns out to be Ivan Rabb and not Zion Williamson?
But what then is the solution?
Where did I say anything against transgender people? Show me where I did. You also need to spell it right.concordtom said:You got something against trangeneder people?SFCityBear said:If you pay them, you will have to pay every player on the team, schollie holder or not, or you will face charges of discrimination. You will have to pay the players the same pay regardless of race, etc. You will have to pay the women players. So will say Title IX. And when the transgenders get their teams (that may be coming sooner than you think), you will have to pay them. You will have to add new staff to negotiate and administer all employment contracts with athletes. Where are you getting the money to pay for all this? Cal is still in debt over a football stadium and if basketball remains in the tank, it won't have enough attendance to stay out of debt, let alone turn a profit for the school.concordtom said:I starred your third sentence.RJABear said:
Get rid of the one-and-done rule. Let the kids who are capable go pro as soon as possible.
I would watch the same amount of college basketball with or without John Wall, Zion Williamson, and Anthony Davis.
But your first sentence won't fix the cheating.
You gotta pay the kids their market value. Otherwise the incentive to cheat is huge.
If you are a poor family, $100,000 is massive. But if you pay $100,000 on top of that, it's not as motivating to cheat and risk. Basic needs can be met with the initial pay amount.
I don't understand why everyone on the team would have to be paid.
I don't understand why football income generating players should have to pay women. It's a different thing.
I don't understand why you think football should subsidize golf or gymnastics.
You ALWAYS go back to an argument that says "we can't pay market rates for players (we must keep our NCAA amateur bullshi/ monopoly) because we need to steal their money for others."
Football income generating players should collectively strike. Where's the labor union to break the monopoly?
It wouldn't make an ounce of difference. There will always be people willing to ask for / demand more than they are legally given and there will always be people willing to pay it if they think it will help them win.ClayK said:
I will repeat that I believe most of this stems from not paying workers who generate a tremendous amount of income. If high school and college athletes were able to negotiate contracts and be paid whatever the market decided, then much of this corruption would disappear. (Note that I'm not saying all college athletes should be paid -- only those who generate enough interest on the open market to draw a salary.)
Seems like it would be better for legal reasons to keep the universities out of the business of paying the athletes. Keep the rule that universities and their employees still can't pay the athletes, but permit athletes to accept any payment not provided by the university, just as Olympic athletes can accept payments not provided by their government or national Olympic committee.ClayK said:
Why does everyone have to be paid?
Look at the system now: Women's basketball has 15 scholarships and they have to be full scholarships. I don't know for a fact, but I'm guessing women's tennis does not have 15 scholarships and none are full. So why don't they sue?
This wouldn't penalize anyone. The system as it stands would remain in place, except that universities/boosters/whoever can pay athletes on top of their scholarships, and athletes would be able to have agents advise them.