Gotta disagree.
I've been hoping for a long time now that someone with influence would say "we shouldn't be the minor leagues".
Some alumni would hate it, a few school budgets would take a hit (but not a lot, many of the faithful would come even if the level of play went down a bit and the minors would only be skimming out the top couple of percent of players).
But we could conclude the charade that we currently have "student-"athletes, the athletes would find get earlier reads on whether they can get a pro job -- because some agent or team or sponsor would have to pay them minor-league wages -- or they should concentrate on acquiring some other employable skill/knowledge, colleges could stop paying 6- and 7-figure salaries to coaches, ADs and publicists & c. because they're no longer trying to run a semi-pro sports organization, and the corrupting influence of scads of money would abate somewhat in institutions that are supposed to be focused on other things.
Um, not really sure what you're saying here. Do you seriously believe that Delaney and the B10 are saying that the conference teams are not going to be trying to rake in the mega-millions from the ESPN etc. contracts with their unpaid essentially semi-pro players that are getting the media attention and getting the school the big bucks because they are seen as NFL potential players? That is truly naive. Delaney is just saying the schools don't want to allocate any of their revenue to directly paying players, and if they lose a few candidates to the straight-to-the-pro's route, they can live with that. Obviously paying players would have huge issues for the Title IX and the non-media hog sports, but the smarmy "we are not going to be semi-pro feeders" to the pro's is pap at its worst.
But some seem to think that football is the big cash cow that feeds the other programs. Except when they don't, which is true for about 43% of FBS schools, leading to less than 20% of FBS programs making a profit. For many schools, the losses for football programs are relatively huge, and even some of the revenue generating football programs have just small gains and are running gigantically behind the LSU's, Texas's, OSU's, who are skewing the football arms races to extreme and corrupting bounds. And this structure may well be based on a house of cards, as the desperation mode cable companies and frightened universities are looking at dramatic reductions in subscription rates among the young and a continuous shrinking pool of money from states and donors respectively. The US economic state isn't as bad as four years ago, but it has another big setback maybe because some Capitol crazies throw us into deep freeze, I shudder to think what could happen to many college programs when no one can afford to pay $100 for nose-bleed football seats or $20K for luxury boxes and all those shakily financed athletic facility improvements go bye-bye.
But it is what it is, and at least some of the football cash cow schools are at least able to keep the smaller sports alive, right? Well, SEC school Mississippi gets a nice chunk of change from their conference, but pull down the list of men's sports on their athletics homepage and you will see 6 sports listed. Many schools also cynically use their women's sports programs to make the numbers for Title IX requirements, but otherwise give them almost zilcho support. And we don't want to really get into how the faculty of schools like Rutgers feel about the paper dollar chase by the athletic departments as they end up making the school spend 7 times as much on athletes (football athletes are even higher) than on non-athletes. As the "haves" schools and "have-nots" schools slide further apart, schools desperately point to the increased profile they get from the big sports, with little evidence that the money-making hope is really true when stacked against the amount of investment that needs to be sucked away from other student activities and state legislature to keep the greased juggling balls up in the air.
Market Watch printed an article two years ago that basically sums up the situation with football and college sports. UConn football gets a mention unfortunately, but the Huskies are representative of many teams. But at least the Longhorns athletic department can pull in their $80M profit and feel proud to toss a little back to the other school departments when it's feeling generous.