Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
The obvious reason that a minor league system hasn't taken off in those sports is that one is not needed. There is already a defacto system in place and it doesn't have to be funded by the NBA or NFL. I think it's pretty obvious that our university system isn't there to run minor leagues for professional sports.
That pretty much destroys the credibility that these players have a significantly higher value than they are paid. Let's say the NBA decided to pay every player $500k. An enterprising businessman would come in and offer $1.5 million a year and every player would jump to that league. This has never happened and won't. Our de facto "under 22" leagues pay significantly less in other sports.
I agree that something would probably come up if all college sports went away. It would probably be as important and lucractive as AA baseball. It all comes down to one simple question. Why wouldn't I just watch the best professionals, rather than professionals that aren't that good? The answer for college sports is pretty easy. I watch because I have an affinity for my school. Now, maybe I'd have an affinity for the West Lafayette astronauts, but I doubt I'm spending my Saturday watching.
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
At one time what you're saying was absolutely correct. Football and basketball did give young men opportunities they would not have otherwise had and many of them made the most of it. But money corrupts everything. At some point big time college athletics crossed the Rubicon and the original mission was forgotten. Special academic programs were created to do nothing more than give players an easy ride to do what they were really brought in for. We can't really pretend a kid is on scholarship for the kid's benefit. And to me, that's the sticking point. Once the scholarship stopped being for the benefit of the kid and began being for the benefit of CBS and Urban Meyer, the system needed to be radically altered. And that didn't happen over night. It was a process. A guy like Bo Schembechler began his career as an educator and ended it as the CEO of a football machine. Somewhere it all just went wrong.
The answer is somewhere in the middle. There are plenty of football and basketball players who are also students.
However, if that is your objection, then I think the obvious answer is to fix the problems, instead of accepting them. Increase qualification requirements, lower practice time, and give them a long range solution to the times of the year where they have less time to deal with academic issues.