There are a bunch of noteworthy quotes in this article on the pros and cons of making the athletes employees. Here are a couple.
“I never thought I’d say it, but I’m there on employment,” one of those SEC presidents told Yahoo Sports recently. “Let’s collectively bargain.”
“So far, the NCAA has never acknowledged the comparison to work study-style student employment,” said Paul McDonald, the attorney who filed the Johnson case. “It is not credible, or sustainable, to argue that college athletes — the most controlled students, and only students required to prioritize non-academic activities — do not qualify for, and deserve, the same student employee status as classmates selling popcorn at NCAA games or performing menial tasks around campus.”
Where will it stop? To some degree, already in high school. Middle school? Yep, people already meddling there too. What psychological toll is it taking on kids?
When I look at my 35 years of competitive sports, I take with it the greatest lesson in life: "team". I had the opportunity to learn how to meld different personalities, different nationalities, and different abilities. I learned to be humble, work hard, and listen. I learned that the worst of the worst, likely comes from the sidelines as if we're here to fulfill 'their' expectations. I saw the entire mid-west, which led me to broader things. I saw the entire world (figuratively, by the diversity of countries represented on our team). I learned to mentor. These are lessons, for the most part, that money can't equal. Is this direction sports is taking really good for individuals? So far, I think it's like everything else in life: immediate satisfaction for long term parallelization.
But, then again, maybe that's just me.