AuTX Buckeye
Founder & Pres of the Flemming/Holtmann Fan Club
Yahoo Pickem Champ
Former Game Champion
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Last program I can remember (of any prominence, anyway) was Houston in the late '80's. I believe they were on a television ban during Andre Ware's Heisman season.
This whole situation literally makes me laugh out loud, but also frustrates me.
If you just let the kid profit off his "likeness" Adidas could've offered him $100,000 above the table to go to Louisville. Or a local car dealership could've given him a $100,000 endorsement deal.
You have people breaking laws to circumvent archaic NCAA rules that prevent kids like Brian Bowen from making what would be life changing money for his family.
It's absurd.
I hope every school that operates this way gets the light shown on them. Everybody knows Kentucky does it this way. If you're a big time basketball school, you're doing it like this, also. Round them all up. Did Carmello Anthony decide to go spend the coldest part of the year in Syracuse NY because he liked the town? Hell no. Bust every school.
What's absurd is making them go to college in the first place.
I don't have an issue with them going to college....just be real about it.
The NCAA has developed the best "minor-league" system for the NBA but it also benefits thousands of kids a year by giving them an education.
99.9% of college athletes won't be able to profit off their likeness. The ones that can are the ones generating, literally, billions of dollars for everyone but themselves.
Just let them make money above the table from Adidas, Nike, car dealerships, local businesses, etc. This [Mark May] is insane.....
That 0.01% shouldn't be subject to the 1 year requirement and the NCAA's archaic rules. They're in school for a couple of semesters. If you have the name or skill to generate money for someone, then go do that in a D league or in the NBA. Same for the NFL. Losing the top 0.01% or 1% would arguably make college sports more competitive.
This this this. I can understand not wanting to pay players because of Title IX issues, but to prevent them from taking endorsement money is BS.This whole situation literally makes me laugh out loud, but also frustrates me.
If you just let the kid profit off his "likeness" Adidas could've offered him $100,000 above the table to go to Louisville. Or a local car dealership could've given him a $100,000 endorsement deal.
You have people breaking laws to circumvent archaic NCAA rules that prevent kids like Brian Bowen from making what would be life changing money for his family.
It's absurd.