vegasvolfan
Do what you have to until you can do what you want
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- Sep 28, 2010
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Who is or isn't an employee is decided by the law, not by your opinions. Yes, the athletes could be reclassified as "employees", but you are missing a couple of things:
1) They would have other repercussions that are NOT to their advantage and they do NOT want, unintended consequences...
2) Being reclassified as employees is NOT necessary in order to get compensation for their name and likeness, or to earn money in a job while in college. Those are NEGOTIATED TERMS of the NCAA's student-athlete agreements, so it doesn't matter if they are employees or not.
Not sure why you're so adamant to have them declared employees legally when it wold not be in their best interest and it's not necessary.
The O'Bannon case showed us that a federal judge is willing to say on the record that the NCAA violates anti-trust laws. She was ready to hammer the NCAA over it, declaring that the NCAA can't restrict an athlete's earnings. She was also going to rule that the NCAA had to pay $5K to every athlete who appeared in a video game (etc.) for use of their likeness. But, then the appeals court stepped in and overturned that part. They said "that a full scholarship (tuition, room, board, books and fees) combined with the COA is sufficient compensation for college athletes." Garbage ruling.
Especially garbage since they completed left off any ruling about whether or not athletes should be allowed to earn outside money while in school. Cowardly omission IMO, leaving us where we are now.
This is being handled the right way, with states passing laws to force the NCAA's hand, and now the NCAA is renegotiating. This is a good thing.
I never said it was necessary. Your point seems to be that the NCAA is true amateurism which I am saying it’s not.
You say it would destroy college Athletics but it would only hurt it financially. The level of play would drop a bit but people would still follow, and I believe more so. If you think there are enough high school kids out there who are going to a minor league pro football team for $40,000 yr over a paid for college education then I've got some oceanfront primetime highrise property you might be interested in.It’s really funny to listen to people make the argument that allowing college athletes to profit from their likeness will destroy college athletics, but also argue we should just create an entirely new minor league system that is not affiliated with any college. It seems to me like THAT would ACTUALLY destroy college athletics.
You don't seem to mind at all the corruption it brings to the game? How can you not see that only the "rich" programs will take over recruiting if you bring money into it. Might as well throw all our history into the Tennessee river and open up a office for sports agent Sexton up on the hill.I don’t.
If I’m 19 years and let’s say I’m a famous singer, go to UTK and study biology...I can still make money off my name and image as much as I want. That’s a right this country gives out, which is awesome! The fact that these players have been stripped of that right because of a corrupt organization is wrong and in my mind, illegal. Anyone in this country should be able to make money off their name and likeness.
You don't seem to mind at all the corruption it brings to the game? How can you not see that only the "rich" programs will take over recruiting if you bring money into it. Might as well throw all our history into the Tennessee river and open up a office for sports agent Sexton up on the hill.
This thread, as anticipated, has already devolved to trash. This was not a criticism of the University of Tennessee. We all know Admiral loved playing here. He is beloved by fans across the country. Yet it was obvious some dullards were going to take this the wrong way and use it as an excuse to attack Admiral. He has a point. The #5 jersey was probably sold countless times at UT stores during his career and he didn't see a penny from that. Not everything is a personal attack on UT. Don't be so sensitive.
You don't seem to mind at all the corruption it brings to the game? How can you not see that only the "rich" programs will take over recruiting if you bring money into it. Might as well throw all our history into the Tennessee river and open up a office for sports agent Sexton up on the hill.
This thread, as anticipated, has already devolved to trash. This was not a criticism of the University of Tennessee. We all know Admiral loved playing here. He is beloved by fans across the country. Yet it was obvious some dullards were going to take this the wrong way and use it as an excuse to attack Admiral. He has a point. The #5 jersey was probably sold countless times at UT stores during his career and he didn't see a penny from that. Not everything is a personal attack on UT. Don't be so sensitive.
I don't think Admiral is saying anything against the university. Just saying that being able to profit off of his own image/likeness would be much more valuable than a college degree he will likely never use.
I don't see anything wrong with him wishing that he was able to make money / start profiting earlier.
Right vs Wrong is why it's different now. If a kid or a program cheats right now then good for them, if they can live with it so can I, I've got no problem competing to win the right way even if everyone else is cheating. I personally don't think cheating happens anywhere near what folks perceptions are. I've helped a bunch of kids through the recruiting process the last few years and not a single one that I know of have received anything other than scholarship money from the schools they attended. You may know of something different, and I'm sure it happens but I never see it and I work in that industry.How is that any different than it is now?
Okay, a biology major can create a YouTube channel and make money off of it. A college athlete can’t. That’s not fair and wrong. That’s the point.
It's easy to say it happens everywhere, weird how nobody gets caught and weird how other coaches or folks who claim it's happening never show proof. It happens some but no where near what people think and certainly no where near the level of how bad it'll get once legal.I mean this respectfully, but news flash this is already happening. Money already runs college sports. It's just not legal. The NCAA knows it's happening too, it's just easier for them to turn a blind eye.
It's easy to say it happens everywhere, weird how nobody gets caught and weird how other coaches or folks who claim it's happening never show proof. It happens some but no where near what people think and certainly no where near the level of how bad it'll get once legal.
It's easy to say it happens everywhere, weird how nobody gets caught and weird how other coaches or folks who claim it's happening never show proof. It happens some but no where near what people think and certainly no where near the level of how bad it'll get once legal.
Honestly, why. Why tweet that at him? Come on.....
That’s like saying why should he tweet. I have been using social media since the BBS days... you put something out there, you should expect a response. I think too much is being made out of me saying he cried... it’s not a shot... it was to remind him of the good feels we gave him as fans... I know his original post was about more than that... but that response to a reply to his post was less than that... it’s REALLY not that big of a deal.