forensicbuzz
21st Century Throwback Dad
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- 8,851
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- North Shore, Chicago
You totally miss the WHOLE point. It's college sports, not professional sports. College sports is supposed to NOT be professional sports. It's attitudes like yours that allow these types of changes to occur, thus ruining it for everyone else. I understand how free-market economics works. College athletics is not supposed to be that way.Again this is a free market in operation, simple concept. When the price point gets high enough that consumers (fans) are pushed out of the market (they don’t but tickets) the market will correct. Whether we like it or not isn’t relevant at all.
professional sports have continuously adapted over time and the public’s preferences for spend money on attending/watching sports has changed over time as well.
The same is true for college sports. Basically it’s adapt or become extinct.
Older fans don’t generally like the changing landscape. Heck virtually none of us played soccer as kids. Now soccer is the biggest youth sport in the Country. When that generation becomes the market force the economics of sports will change along with the consumers desires. Basic free market in action.
You seem to favor non free market systems where athletes have no power or say in their sports (business). Your opinion counts as much as mine, not beyond how we spend our discretionary dollars on sports entertainment.
I'm done discussing this. There will always be a segment of the population that sees a change of any kind as progress and a segment of the population that always sees change as the ruination of what they love. The reality is somewhere in the middle; not all change is good (i.e. paying college football players, having a weak NCAA that allows the arms wars to happen), and not all change is bad (i.e. concussion protocols, improvement in equipment, the forward pass).
Personally, I think the schools should institute a rule disallowing any coach's salary from being higher than the average of the five highest-paid academic faculty members on campus. That would certainly help to settle some of these runaway salaries.