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NCAA explores compensation for names, likeness
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<blockquote data-quote="dtm1997" data-source="post: 579598" data-attributes="member: 572"><p>It doesn't have to be about extreme market value at all. If every apizza place in New Haven, CT is willing to offer the top UConn women's basketball recruit free pizza for life, if they choose one to endorse, why should that be prohibited or come at the cost of a scholarship?</p><p></p><p>We jump to the "extreme" examples that reside in the men's college basketball scandal or the NBA mandating 1 & done, but the reality is it can be applicable anywhere across college athletics.</p><p></p><p>Even if players from year to year are "plug & play" with value driven by the school, why should that limit their earning potential, whether it be in cash or other goods and services?</p><p></p><p>Let them earn what could be on offer, if anything at all. Make it transparent. Tax it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dtm1997, post: 579598, member: 572"] It doesn't have to be about extreme market value at all. If every apizza place in New Haven, CT is willing to offer the top UConn women's basketball recruit free pizza for life, if they choose one to endorse, why should that be prohibited or come at the cost of a scholarship? We jump to the "extreme" examples that reside in the men's college basketball scandal or the NBA mandating 1 & done, but the reality is it can be applicable anywhere across college athletics. Even if players from year to year are "plug & play" with value driven by the school, why should that limit their earning potential, whether it be in cash or other goods and services? Let them earn what could be on offer, if anything at all. Make it transparent. Tax it. [/QUOTE]
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NCAA explores compensation for names, likeness
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