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The End of College Sports As We Know It
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<blockquote data-quote="RamblinRed" data-source="post: 982755" data-attributes="member: 1776"><p>Reading the articles one note is that 50% of the money in the educational trust that would be established by a University has to meet Title IX - basically the money has to go to women sports.</p><p>Beyond that, there is no maximum put in the document, only a minimum - $30K per every 2 athletes at a school.</p><p>If a University wants to create a trust that pays every athlete $100K, they can do that.</p><p></p><p>[URL unfurl="true"]https://www.cbssports.com/college-football/news/ncaa-president-proposes-creation-of-subdivision-allowing-schools-to-directly-compensate-student-athletes/[/URL]</p><p></p><p>[URL unfurl="true"]https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/2023/12/05/ncaa-economic-proposal-smart/[/URL]</p><p>" Money distributed by the university would be subject to Title IX requirements, meaning half the allocated money would be required to go to female athletes. "</p><p></p><p>"Player compensation gaps will inevitably emerge inside every conference, even the big ones — Ohio State will surely pay more than Purdue; same for Alabama compared with Mississippi State — and eventually, the tribal identity of the sport will migrate completely from history and geography to economics and marketability."</p><p></p><p>"The football-based subdivision would be independent of the FBS and FCS dichotomy. Teams at either level are eligible to opt into the football subdivision. However, teams that opt in will ultimately be able to exist at a different level than the rest of college football. The group could decide different roster sizes, recruitment practices, transfer or NIL rules, even while competing against other members of FBS or FCS working under the existing rules. "</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="RamblinRed, post: 982755, member: 1776"] Reading the articles one note is that 50% of the money in the educational trust that would be established by a University has to meet Title IX - basically the money has to go to women sports. Beyond that, there is no maximum put in the document, only a minimum - $30K per every 2 athletes at a school. If a University wants to create a trust that pays every athlete $100K, they can do that. [URL unfurl="true"]https://www.cbssports.com/college-football/news/ncaa-president-proposes-creation-of-subdivision-allowing-schools-to-directly-compensate-student-athletes/[/URL] [URL unfurl="true"]https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/2023/12/05/ncaa-economic-proposal-smart/[/URL] " Money distributed by the university would be subject to Title IX requirements, meaning half the allocated money would be required to go to female athletes. " "Player compensation gaps will inevitably emerge inside every conference, even the big ones — Ohio State will surely pay more than Purdue; same for Alabama compared with Mississippi State — and eventually, the tribal identity of the sport will migrate completely from history and geography to economics and marketability." "The football-based subdivision would be independent of the FBS and FCS dichotomy. Teams at either level are eligible to opt into the football subdivision. However, teams that opt in will ultimately be able to exist at a different level than the rest of college football. The group could decide different roster sizes, recruitment practices, transfer or NIL rules, even while competing against other members of FBS or FCS working under the existing rules. " [/QUOTE]
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