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Brand New Transfer Season NIL talk
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<blockquote data-quote="roadkill" data-source="post: 989713" data-attributes="member: 1555"><p>Not only that but comparing athletes' compensation to that of coaches is a false analogy. Rank-and-file employees have no entitlement to make as much as their CEO. Market forces and all that. What the supremes said is that everyone has the right to profit off their own NIL. That shouldn't be controversial, yet the NCAA and CFB's powers-that-be colluded for decades to prevent it. The "amateurism" model was well-intentioned in the sense that those charged with protecting competitive parity saw it as necessary to prevent pay-for-play abuses.</p><p></p><p>Unfortunately, once you cross the NIL bridge and players are allowed any form of compensation beyond their school's scholly and stipend, pay-for-play cannot be controlled or easily enforced. I'm not sure where this will end, but somewhere down the road, there will need to be massive changes in the entire structure of the game if it is to survive. If there is no semblance of parity, the audience will shrink as will the revenues. It could end up being the collegiate version of pro wrestling (I hope not).</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="roadkill, post: 989713, member: 1555"] Not only that but comparing athletes' compensation to that of coaches is a false analogy. Rank-and-file employees have no entitlement to make as much as their CEO. Market forces and all that. What the supremes said is that everyone has the right to profit off their own NIL. That shouldn't be controversial, yet the NCAA and CFB's powers-that-be colluded for decades to prevent it. The "amateurism" model was well-intentioned in the sense that those charged with protecting competitive parity saw it as necessary to prevent pay-for-play abuses. Unfortunately, once you cross the NIL bridge and players are allowed any form of compensation beyond their school's scholly and stipend, pay-for-play cannot be controlled or easily enforced. I'm not sure where this will end, but somewhere down the road, there will need to be massive changes in the entire structure of the game if it is to survive. If there is no semblance of parity, the audience will shrink as will the revenues. It could end up being the collegiate version of pro wrestling (I hope not). [/QUOTE]
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