Devo182
"Well Known Member" TWSS
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Agree to a great degree but monopolies and trusts are not good for the free market. I'm a pretty strong disciple... but as long as fallible, sinful human beings are involved there's always a risk for corruption.I don't think you understand my post. My post agrees with you, and the "robbing" was a reference to denying the player the right to make the deal freely.
The quote you replied to was arguing against limiting or halting the free market due to its supposed impact on those who can't afford to compete in it. That'd be like telling Porsche that they can't charge for their cars since everyone can't afford one.
I agree completely. I am in favor of limited oversight and intervention into markets (particularly due to the bolded). And I agree as well per the athlete getting the deal they agreed to in the old system. Who is to say that Universities HAVE to offer more than they want to offer?Agree to a great degree but monopolies and trusts are not good for the free market. I'm a pretty strong disciple... but as long as fallible, sinful human beings are involved there's always a risk for corruption.
This debate tends to break down into camps who think the players have been screwed and those who think reductions to the power of the programs will ruin the game. I don't think the players have been screwed. They agreed to the deal they got... and got something of tremendous worth if they applied themselves at all.
I am not certain yet about the other. It will definitely change the game. The risk is that there will be too few "haves" and too many "have nots". Coupled to the portal... there's a risk that about 120 teams have very little need to show up on Saturdays.
Does being in favor of the NFL's salary cap mean I want to limit another person's ability to make money? No, it doesn't take food off my table. But I don't get a warm and fuzzy feeling at the idea that Texas AM is going to win a championship off of nothing but cash in the next few years either. Reducing college athletics to a silent auction is not why anyone watches sports.That's fine. You can keep your insurance and benefits. Just give up your salary
Seriously though, why do so many of you want to limit another person's ability to earn money?
Does this take food off your table?
@MetalVolunteer saying the NIL opportunity being presented to Nico will be "unprecedented" for TennesseePlease just recap it or quote it, on my phone
NIL is not an agreement between the university and the athlete, as you yourself affirmed in the post. NIL is an external sponsorship deal, independent of the university (owners, in your analogy). For your analogy to work, the NFL would have to prohibit/limit the sponsorship money of athletes in an effort to promote equity of talent among the teams.Does being in favor of the NFL's salary cap mean I want to limit another person's ability to make money? No, it doesn't take food off my table. But I don't get a warm and fuzzy feeling at the idea that Texas AM is going to win a championship off of nothing but cash in the next few years either. Reducing college athletics to a silent auction is not why anyone watches sports.
Prior to NIL, college athletes could make as much money as they wanted. All they had to do was leave school and go join the work force. Being an NCAA athlete was not the grand imposition people made it out to be, and, like any other aspect of life, athletes don't have to sign a contract they don't want to sign.
I agree with NIL in principle. Workplaces don't get to tell you how to make money outside of work, generally speaking. But what is happening now is just further justification for why that rule was in place. None of the money being passed around has anything to do with name, image, or likeness, and everyone knows it.
Does being in favor of the NFL's salary cap mean I want to limit another person's ability to make money? No, it doesn't take food off my table. But I don't get a warm and fuzzy feeling at the idea that Texas AM is going to win a championship off of nothing but cash in the next few years either.
Prior to NIL, college athletes could make as much money as they wanted. All they had to do was leave school and go join the work force. Being an NCAA athlete was not the grand imposition people made it out to be, and, like any other aspect of life, athletes don't have to sign a contract they don't want to sign.
I agree with NIL in principle. Workplaces don't get to tell you how to make money outside of work, generally speaking. But what is happening now is just further justification for why that rule was in place. None of the money being passed around has anything to do with name, image, or likeness, and everyone knows it.
Yes, that's exactly what I addressed in the last paragraph. What you said is exactly why I agree with the NIL rules in principle.NIL is not an agreement between the university and the athlete, as you yourself affirmed in the post. NIL is an external sponsorship deal, independent of the university (owners, in your analogy). For your analogy to work, the NFL would have to prohibit/limit the sponsorship money of athletes in an effort to promote equity of talent among the teams.
Yes, that's exactly what I addressed in the last paragraph. What you said is exactly why I agree with the NIL rules in principle.
But in practice, all its done is defer the labor costs from the university to some interested third parties, who can launder the money under the guise of NIL.
If players, fans, and boosters were using NIL in good faith, I wouldn't have any issue with it at all. But I don't think anyone can look at the state of things now and act like prohibiting NIL money didn't serve a useful purpose.
Cool, but quoting the state of Missouri, "Show Me".@MetalVolunteer saying the NIL opportunity being presented to Nico will be "unprecedented" for Tennessee
I think you picked not a great time to say MLB is just fine without a salary cap. MLB has tons of problems. Many of which stem from a lack of competitive balance. And that's why anyone would support a salary cap. Competitive balance. Small market teams go through years where it is literally impossible for them to compete. And the only reason it works at all is because of the intricate farm system in baseball that no other sport has, where teams hold players to 6+ year contracts from the time they are drafted. With the transfer portal and a maximum of four years to the rights of any players, most teams would never be able to get to the point of chasing championships.MLB is just fine without a salary cap. You never stated why you support the NFL salary cap.
A&M's 3 pre-NIL recruiting classes were ranked 8, 6, and 4 overall. I think you're misreading the cards here. The programs with the most money have always won in recruiting and on the field. Why is it only a problem now?
If you agree that the athlete is entitled to sponsorship money, what is the "good faith" hang-up, and why the need to "launder"? Just let the athlete be compensated as the market will bear. You seem to be smuggling in the idea that freeing the market for athletes (outside of university scholarships) is wrong), while agreeing "in principle" with just the opposite.Yes, that's exactly what I addressed in the last paragraph. What you said is exactly why I agree with the NIL rules in principle.
But in practice, all its done is defer the labor costs from the university to some interested third parties, who can launder the money under the guise of NIL.
If players, fans, and boosters were using NIL in good faith, I wouldn't have any issue with it at all. But I don't think anyone can look at the state of things now and act like prohibiting NIL money didn't serve a useful purpose.
I think you picked not a great time to say MLB is just fine without a salary cap. MLB has tons of problems. Many of which stem from a lack of competitive balance. And that's why anyone would support a salary cap. Competitive balance. Small market teams go through years where it is literally impossible for them to compete. And the only reason it works at all is because of the intricate farm system in baseball that no other sport has, where teams hold players to 6+ year contracts from the time they are drafted. With the transfer portal and a maximum of four years to the rights of any players, most teams would never be able to get to the point of chasing championships.
You could make the argument the system was already broken, so just open the floodgates, what difference does it make. Maybe that's right.
I would argue that if the sport has a problem with under the table spending, addressing that problem is probably better than simply streamlining it. But maybe you're right. Who knows. The players are certainly better off now than they were. How temporary that is remains to be seen.
I don't agree with that at all. Competitve balance in the NFL is much better, and the problems they have had recently seem to stem from how important they have made the QB position with rule changes, and there simply aren't that many good QBs. IMO.The same MLB problem you referenced has existed in the NFL forever regardless of how high/low the salary cap has been set.
I think we should define “under the table”. What are you proclaiming currently is “under the table”? It seems it’s fairly open to me
