knapplc;1996252; said:
... if you have a concern about the salaries paid to college coaches, then you have a concern about the free market.
No, I have a huge concern about the benefits of the free market being doled out selectively at the whim of college presidents, ADs and coaches. Which is what's happening now.
The idea that players who can profit from their stardom will entirely change the schools they go to is ludicrous. First, a scant few "five-star" recruits can reasonably expect before entering school to make mucho dinaro from selling autographs, memorabilia, or from taking non-jobs ("spokespeople"). These guys will continue to go to the big-money schools, which is where they're already going.
Others will need to rely on making a name for themselves on the field before getting to the point where people will want to pay them. (AJ Hawk, Malcolm Jenkins come to mind.) Those guys will think about likelihood of early PT, likelihood of beating out the competition throughout their college years, etc. - just as they do right now.
I'm also not so cynical that I think the lure of the jersey (i.e., are kids fans of the school?) will have no influence on where a kid goes to school. A huge Buckeye fan is unlikely to go to Michigan just because a kid thinks he could make a few more bucks there.
Ultimately, the dollar market for kids to make money under my proposed system will look very similar to the "on-field" market of today; it's very unlikely that today's weak teams will become strong under this system just because of the system. Plus my system offers the very real advantage of being much less hypocritical, more equitable for those who provide primary value (the star players), and avoids all this nonsense about "impermissible benefits," which honestly are currently being doled out to players everywhere.
Oh, and seriously - you don't know who Jay Bilas is?