Make each individual athlete have to choose if they want a scholarship or they want to market themselves and get paid for their image and likeness.
If they choose to go the free market route, then they pay their own way for school, housing, etc.
Make each individual athlete have to choose if they want a scholarship or they want to market themselves and get paid for their image and likeness.
If they choose to go the free market route, then they pay their own way for school, housing, etc.
Make each individual athlete have to choose if they want a scholarship or they want to market themselves and get paid for their image and likeness.
If they choose to go the free market route, then they pay their own way for school, housing, etc.
This model is basically the current system+NIL, which still ignores the issue at hand in Justice Kavanaugh's concurrence. The NCAA has developed a system where the the member institutions have established a maximum to what they can compensate to their labor, the athletes. This is a market rate in the form of a scholarship. The athletes have no means of negotiating what their fair market rate is, and the NCAA's de facto monopoly on college athletics means that there is no competition to force the increase of compensation.Personally, I think this whole mess could be solved relatively easy. Allow athletes to market themselves freely. Continue to give athletes scholarships, but if they are able to make money off of their likeness, they should be free to do so. Not everyone will be able to do that, but they deserve the option to. As a student, I was not limited to ways I could make money. If I wanted to monetize a YouTube channel, I am allowed to do that; the fact athletes cannot do that is wrong.
My solution would be 1) continue to give students scholarships and living stipends as they currently do (no change here). Personally, to me, this is their pay. 2) Allow for more full ride scholarships to the non-revenue generating sports. I understand that title IX gets in the way here, but giving partial scholarships to athletes in non-revenue generating sports is not enough compensation in my opinion. 3) Allow athletes to make money by marketing themselves how they see fit.
How is your plan going to pass Title IX standards?I think if the NCAA is to survive wrt college football (I think it does have a legit role in organizing intercollegiate olympic sports regardless) then it had better figure out a damn good way to compensate revenue athletes (esp football) asap across the board.
It needs to be fair to the athletes (revenue share seems to make sense to me) and fair across different schools too. You will have to allow the bigger and wealthier schools to pay more but can't have a 100x difference between Bama and say, Texas Tech.
People gripe about the NCAA (rightfully) but the money will come out of schools budgets. If ISU gets $30M in TV money for Big12 football, well, going forwards the players might get half of that. That will impact the budget a LOT. That's a big wrench in JP's works, he will use every bit of accounting acumen to reorganize all that. The facilities and salaries arms race could get tamped down some.
This describes very few college athletes. I guess that's ok. It's only going to be a handful of athletes at each school making big money.Except that's not the free market route. The players' labor is extremely valuable to the school itself. In a free market, people generally get to sell their valuable labor to competitive buyers. Image and likeness is completely separate from the value of their labor, which they do currently get compensated for, just in a fixed market.
I don't think they have the leadership in place to do something like that any time soon.I think that major college football, and maybe men's basketball will split from the NCAA.
The easiest way to avoid both the Title IX issue and the anti-trust issue, is for all student athletes at a school to collectively bargain. Not just football or basketball individually, but all scholarship sports. A CBA could ensure fair compensation based off of athletics department revenue, and reduce the incentive for the school to cut sports in order to maximize revenue.Schools cant start paying or they will bump up against Title IX issues. The only solution is to allow NIL rights to athletes. It's going to be the Wild Wild West of boosters and local companies paying athletes out there. I can see why the smaller revenue schools are leery of this.
Should be crazy.
Is there a way to do the collective bargaining with athletes who are going to be there for a little over 4 years?The easiest way to avoid both the Title IX issue and the anti-trust issue, is for all student athletes at a school to collectively bargain. Not just football or basketball individually, but all scholarship sports. A CBA could ensure fair compensation based off of athletics department revenue, and reduce the incentive for the school to cut sports in order to maximize revenue.
Additionally, the CBA can exist separately from NIL. Just like professional athletes receive a contract and a salary from their team, while also having outside endorsements, college athletes could do the same. That would allow the biggest athletes to capitalize on their popularity.
This model is basically the current system+NIL, which still ignores the issue at hand in Justice Kavanaugh's concurrence. The NCAA has developed a system where the the member institutions have established a maximum to what they can compensate to their labor, the athletes. This is a market rate in the form of a scholarship. The athletes have no means of negotiating what their fair market rate is, and the NCAA's de facto monopoly on college athletics means that there is no competition to force the increase of compensation.
Is there a way to do the collective bargaining with athletes who are going to be there for a little over 4 years?
I think the biggest issue here is competitive balance and fair/realistic compensation. The entire business and competitive models of NCAA Football are different from the NFL or other professional football leagues (arena, CFL, etc).
Anyone can agree its unfair that players are paid relatively little compared to coaches and that they don't have the ability to negotiate their compensation. But what is a fair compensation? The (often repeated) idea that this is a billion dollar business and players are not getting the money they deserve is more false than true. Look at ISU for example. The money made by ISU athletics is primarily going into facilities and other amenities that directly benefit the players. Out of ISU's athletic budget, you could say that Matt Campbell and TJ Otzelberger and a few of the top football staff get extremely high salaries relative to player compensation. So where do you go from here? Where does the money come from to pay the players? Drop Campbell's salary to $100-200k? Cancel facilities upgrade projects? Give the players a choice to take benefits like food and tutoring as cash payments rather than free services?
I think there is this idea that the CFB industry just has piles of money sitting around that are making a lot of people rich off the backs of the players, which just doesn't seem to line up with reality. A small handful (fewer than 10) athletics departments have the money to pay high salaries to players and maintain current levels of facilities and other perks, while the rest can only offer a small increase in pay without making significant sacrifices elsewhere.
So what is the next step? A salary cap system for CFB and CBB? It seems like that's where it has to go if we want to start that path.
Agree, the NCAA is being wrongly punished because no one will fund alternative professional leagues for HS grads, especially for football. The NCAA should have told the Supreme Court: "NCAA participation is purely voluntary and there are no restrictions on someone forming alternative professional leagues."But there is competition. In the case of FB and MBB, it just so happens that the primary "competition" to the NCAA in determining market labor rate for athletes, namely the NFL and NBA, has minimum age restrictions, and those leagues have few jobs to offer relative to the number could compete in college sports. So, in essence, the NCAA is being punished for offering opportunities to athletes that are otherwise precluded from working for the NCAA's competition.