MattMang23
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Per ESPN
Jim Delany said that the Big Ten would deemphasize athletics if O'Bannon won his court case ant it had lasting implications (I doubt that. The Big Ten was formed because of athletics. Where does it go without them?).
Is there any possibility that the Big Ten dismisses Northwestern for not conforming to the mission and morals of the league? On top of that Is there a "Public Ivy" located in a region of the country into which the Big Ten would expand?
Hmm interesting.
Jim Delany said that the Big Ten would deemphasize athletics if O'Bannon won his court case ant it had lasting implications (I doubt that. The Big Ten was formed because of athletics. Where does it go without them?).
Is there any possibility that the Big Ten dismisses Northwestern for not conforming to the mission and morals of the league? On top of that Is there a "Public Ivy" located in a region of the country into which the Big Ten would expand?
Hmm interesting.
I know it's different. The effect are further reaching. That is my point....This is different, and it appears that Northwestern administration is going to fight it.
I know it's different. The effect are further reaching. That is my point.
I'm pretty sure the O'Bannon case was settled out of court and the benjamins dispersed. This is different, and it appears that Northwestern administration is going to fight it. This is potentially a lot more damaging than the O'Bannon lawsuit. My understading is that recognizing intercollegiate athletes as being able to unionize effectively defines athletes as "employees".
What these things do point out, is that it seems to be coming to a head - the Pandora's box that was opened in 1984 by the Oklahoma/Georgia vs. NCAA case around college football.
Deregulation at first was a disaster, and then the conferences got organized, and the BCS was formed. But the old saying is that when you behave like a pig, you are a pig, and there were a lot of pigs over the years with all the money, and by now in 2014, the BCS is gone, in favor of a bas ized "playoff" format to the post season with contract bowl games, and the one population that intercollegiate athletics is supposed to serve, - the student-athletes themselves - is tired of the hypocrisy.
This is wide ranging though, it's not just football that this is going to affect anymore, like it was in 1990.
I'm curious as to what Delany's take on this is though - it's his conference.
Northwestern should take the high road and dissolve their football program for a couple years. That sends a loud and clear message that this nonsense won't be tolerated. The student athletes already enjoy free education, free housing, free meals, free transportation, free state of the art medical care and the best vehicle for auditioning their talents to prospective employers.... the TV. And that doesn't cost them a dime. And on top of all that they want a paycheck, then of course benefits, maybe a pension rivaling that of pro sports, where does it stop?
Right now, the schools (and you apparently) are getting to decide what a "good deal is." If the deal is "good" for the athletes, then it will withstand the market. If it isn't, it won't. But right now you can't tell me that coaches, administrators and TV executives aren't getting rich off their backs.
This ruling does not apply to public universities only private ones, so I'm not sure how big of a deal it is going to be since a lot of schools are public and can make their own rules.
I was thinking along this path as well. Think a bit of how this can play out.What will eventually happening - no - probably very quickly happen, if this actually does go through to being put into action - is that the days of scholarship funding for athletics will be over and athletes that play sports will actually have to go to school too across the country and actually be students that have to pay for education somehow.
Then the Ivy's will be able to dominate college football again.
Friggin Yale..
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I can't get behind this line of thinking when Nick Saban at Alabama is making what 7 million? Delany as Big Ten Commish gets what 3 million? Big Time college sports are a big business and there are business men getting rich off cheap/free labor. Do the right thing and give these kids a stipend already.Northwestern should take the high road and dissolve their football program for a couple years. That sends a loud and clear message that this nonsense won't be tolerated. The student athletes already enjoy free education, free housing, free meals, free transportation, free state of the art medical care and the best vehicle for auditioning their talents to prospective employers.... the TV. And that doesn't cost them a dime. And on top of all that they want a paycheck, then of course benefits, maybe a pension rivaling that of pro sports, where does it stop?
I can't get behind this line of thinking when Nick Saban at Alabama is making what 7 million? Delany as Big Ten Commish gets what 3 million? Big Time college sports are a big business and there are business men getting rich off cheap/free labor. Do the right thing and give these kids a stipend already.
This is bad for intercollegiate athletics. The financial aspects of minimum work comp insurance and benefits alone would destroy most athletic programs.