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NCAA v. Alston in the Supreme Court
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<blockquote data-quote="LibertyTurns" data-source="post: 792925" data-attributes="member: 789"><p>Like everything else it’s orders of magnitude, but right now they protect GT in the sense that open market negotiations for talent/ compensation is unnaturally suppressed but they offset it by punishing GT by disadvantaging schools with higher academic & personal conduct standards making it tougher to compete.</p><p></p><p>For example if they were really interested in academics they would reward schools recruiting kids with higher SAT/ACT schools, STEM majors, etc and maybe have a non-sports averaging starting salary component & punish schools whose kids cannot read/write, have no chance of ever graduating even from the easiest majors, etc.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="LibertyTurns, post: 792925, member: 789"] Like everything else it’s orders of magnitude, but right now they protect GT in the sense that open market negotiations for talent/ compensation is unnaturally suppressed but they offset it by punishing GT by disadvantaging schools with higher academic & personal conduct standards making it tougher to compete. For example if they were really interested in academics they would reward schools recruiting kids with higher SAT/ACT schools, STEM majors, etc and maybe have a non-sports averaging starting salary component & punish schools whose kids cannot read/write, have no chance of ever graduating even from the easiest majors, etc. [/QUOTE]
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