One Post wrote:
The same marketing and promotional benefits for a university are present regardless if the players are enrolled in class. Your idea that schools are looking out for the wellbeing of their college football players is so naïve it is adorable. Everything in the last 25 years of college football has been about extracting every dollar out of the enterprise that can be had at the expense of the players. More games, more travel, less rest between games, more out of season requirements, etc. The only difference in the last 3 years are that they players are going to get some of that money.
None of that explains what is BETTER about not having players be actual students.
One Post wrote:
The irony is that you seem to have some old times definition of a student athlete. You seem to think the top 30 players on Ohio State are wearing letterman jackets and sitting next to Joe Fatso in Econ 201. I hate to break it but that hasn’t happened for a long time. I’m just accepting that the environment has changed and that the idea of some kid making 900k a year as the QB at Auburn needs to enroll in 12 hours of classes he won’t attend is nothing more that a facade. Let’s just be done with that facade.
The elite talent doesn't need school. They know as long as they stay healthy they get life changing money the first year they are eligible. Pretty much everyone else is going to need to do something besides football player or basketball player as a career.
One Post wrote:
You’ll still have plenty of kids that do attend school and are on the team. It’s just your top 30 guys that won’t enroll and will walk away with a few hundred thousand dollars in the bank at the age of 21. They can pay for their own education at that point and actually focus on class instead of position coach Ron telling them then need to major in general studies so academics doesn’t interfere with their job as a football player.
No you won't. That's what you don't seem to get. You are incentivizing not going to class and therefore everyone who chooses to not be an enrolled student has a major advantage in actually playing. Also, this hybrid model doesn't really work. How are practices structured? Do they still block out times for practice so players who want to go to class can still go to class? Will coaches be hesitant to have any player who isn't 100% in because he wants to attend class?
You aren't giving any benefit to the idea of letting players not go to college and still play college football. There are many downsides(players who want to go to class will be treated worse, players will go 4-5 years with no academic progress and finish at the age of 23 and then have to basically be a college freshman, the illogical nature of rooting for a college team that has no connection to the college).
I get that this is just the continuation of the thought that players should just be thankful they get a place to sleep and a scholarship instead of being greedy in wanting $100k from a program making $100 million or more a year.