Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

College Athletes can now be paid directly by schools to play


jayboogieman
 Share

Recommended Posts

23 hours ago, Barney said:

They need to take a look at the State funding a school receives.  If you have a kid at one of these football schools many times all of the money is flowing into athletics and athletic facilities while the regular student dorms are falling apart and many academic buildings are in bad shape, but check out that new and even bigger jumbotron.  If the schools start paying, any state funding going toward their scholarships should be removed.  I don't agree with our tax dollars paying college athletes.  Let that money come from boosters and endorsements.  

The money will come from the funds that the schools earn from sports.  For example, the ACC paid each of its schools an average of 45 million, which came from tv, bowls, ncaa tournament etc...  The money to pay the athletes will come from that distribution as well as any money the school makes from ticket and memorabilia sales.  Per the deal made, they are allowed to distribute 22% of that money to the players.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Davidson Deac II said:

The money will come from the funds that the schools earn from sports.  For example, the ACC paid each of its schools an average of 45 million, which came from tv, bowls, ncaa tournament etc...  The money to pay the athletes will come from that distribution as well as any money the school makes from ticket and memorabilia sales.  Per the deal made, they are allowed to distribute 22% of that money to the players.  

Great point.  I totally overlooked that piece.  I would say if they are being paid scholarships are no longer needed unless paid for from those same funds.  No more tax money going to fund any athletes being paid by the school.  I think with what you laid out here that should cover the student athlete payrolls.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Davidson Deac II said:

The money will come from the funds that the schools earn from sports.  For example, the ACC paid each of its schools an average of 45 million, which came from tv, bowls, ncaa tournament etc...  The money to pay the athletes will come from that distribution as well as any money the school makes from ticket and memorabilia sales.  Per the deal made, they are allowed to distribute 22% of that money to the players.  

I think his point is that under the old rules, special dorms, practice facilities, relaxation zones, scholarships and special meals were all justified by the "revenue" the major sports brought in. If 22% of the revenue is now paid out as cash, are those other "perks" being provided  at a loss to the taxpayer?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 hours ago, Terry Tjs said:

I think his point is that under the old rules, special dorms, practice facilities, relaxation zones, scholarships and special meals were all justified by the "revenue" the major sports brought in. If 22% of the revenue is now paid out as cash, are those other "perks" being provided  at a loss to the taxpayer?

From what I have read, all of that is paid out of the money that they make from sports, or from donations.  The power five schools make more than enough money to cover it.  I remember reading that some taxpayer funding went into the Dean Dome, but for the most part, almost all the funding comes from income generated by the sports program and from fees included in tuition.  At least at a power five conference school.  Not sure how the others do it.  

A few schools even make a profit which goes back into the general fund, although that may go away now.  

For example, UNCCH made 139 million in revenue last year.  That was more than enough to cover the expenses of the athletic program.  But the one part I found annoying when I paid for my son to go to a UNC school (not Chapel Hell) was that his tuition included an athletic fee that he had to pay whether he chose to go to a game or not.  I believe all the schools do this and for those that lose money, this is what puts them over the top.   

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 hours ago, Barney said:

Great point.  I totally overlooked that piece.  I would say if they are being paid scholarships are no longer needed unless paid for from those same funds.  No more tax money going to fund any athletes being paid by the school.  I think with what you laid out here that should cover the student athlete payrolls.  

Some of the schools might have to cut back in other areas though to cover it.  At a place like Alabama, probably not an issue.  But for say Vanderbilt or Wake Forest, this could mean some programs get cut or reduced.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • I see they blamed Slavin for the goal like I did. 
    • See this is the problem, you say "can't get off the line quick" and "can't separate quick" but in reality it's "he can get off the line better and create more separation" which are two completely different things. If he couldn't get off the line or separate, he wouldn't have put up the numbers he did and end up a Top 10 pick. But he can get better, and maybe more accurately, consistent with them both, and that will take his game to the next level.  These are things that are also much easier to improve once you get to the NFL than things like being a poor route runner or having bad hands, two of his strengths. Thinking he can't get open in the short passing game also shows you haven't watched enough tape on him, as he was used in that role so much in college with little issue getting open and making plays. And him not using his physicality as much isn't even something that hurts his game because he's so much more agile than a player of his size should be, which he used to his advantage.  Instead of throwing passes where he'd go up and box out a player like a TE or Mike Evans does, they use his athleticism and put the ball in places that only he can get to it, and he usually does (and yes, he'll still be able to do that against NFL DB's with his catch radius). But now that he's in the NFL, I'd like to see him get stronger and add that to his game because it also will help him take his game to another level. As I've said before, if he doesn't improve on those things at all, I think he's a Top 25 WR in this league, he's already that good.  But I think he'll improve on those things and be a perennial Top 10 WR and in his prime is considered and perform like Top 5 guy in some years. My expectations for him this year at 800 yards and 8 TDs (although I do think he'll get to 10 TDs) with a real chance at getting to 1,000.  But those expectations are because I think Thielen will lead the team in yards with close to 1k and XL/Coker each end up in the 500-600 range themselves, just too many mouths to feed this year for a rookie to dominate yardage, especially if we're running the ball well again. But if Thielen can't stay healthy or puts up sub 750 yards, then yea, my expectations for T-Mac likely shift to getting to 1k as a rookie.
    • Svech only 1 goal behind the guy they've pretty much already given the Conn Smythe to...
×
×
  • Create New...