DeerPark12
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In part, this is my beef. You can pay a S&C half a million dollars and say that it is okay because that is what he is worth based on his field and level of expertise, same with trainers, doctors etc...What is Griner worth, once in a decade, if not a lifetime type of player? How many butts does she put in the seats? How many tickets does she sell? In the same way that Butch Jones' agent can gauge the market a player could too.
11 guys are making 6.2 million per year to coach 100 football players. This is just the staff and S&C coach. Each one of those eleven should be directly responsible for getting ten players to class imo, for that kind of money. If you say a UT degree means something... shouldn't that be the goal? 40% (roughly) of the time we fail on our promise
That's all well in good, but nowhere near the fair market value of what SOME of these athletes could make if they simply said, "I will not sign over the use of my likeness to the NCAA for the rest of my life. You can have it for four years and if the NCAA or my University uses my name and or likeness after that four years, it owes me a set fee."
But that's kind of my point on what makes college sports different. You can't really quantify what a player means to school when it comes to things like ticket sales. And I think women's basketball is the perfect example here, so i'm glad you brought it up. Put a gamechanging player like Candace Parker or Griner on a college team and fans continue to buy season tickets at roughly the same rate they did before. Take that same player and put her on a WNBA team and nobody cares. People ultimately pay to see the schools and root for those players because they wear the name across the chest. When they move on, it doesn't have a large impact on the school's bottom line because fans line up to cheer for the next generation. Monica Abbott was a great pitcher at UT, but the Lady Vol softball team still sells out their stadium, as they did 8 times last season, even though she moved on six years ago.
Same goes for the Manziel example. Texas A&M sold out games before him, and they will sell out games with him next year and will most likely continue to do so once they leave.
The relationship isn't parasitic, either. These players that get the affection of home fans parlay that to professional careers they never would have attained without the resources the school provided. Even less-successful athletes are able to use the fact that they were athletes at a school to get into jobs in the business world that they wouldn't have been in on as a regular student.
Are you aware that the five-year graduation rate for athletes, "failure rate" as you put it, is still higher than the five-year rate for non-athletes? We're doing something right there.
As to your last point, that's certainly fair, but denying the ability to use future rights creates more problems than it solves. To even do something as simple as showing a classic game on television, you would have to get the permission of every single player on every single team, then figure out how many pennies they would get every time the game airs. Players are free to license their name on university-related items once they graduate as it is. Signing over rights doesn't deny them that ability.