I don't understand when everyone cries "no compensation!" People do realize the specific athletic scholarships most of these guys receive, right? That despite making up
a third of total financial aid given out by universities, athletic scholarships go to
close to only a tenth of the total student body on average. And on top of that, they're still eligible for non-athletic scholarships on top of those. TBF, the student tuition and debt crisis in this country is itself a huge issue and very much intertwined with this one, and in a world where tuition rates aren't skyrocketing this first paragraph might need to be rethought, but that day isn't today.
On top of that, do you really want what's supposed to be an amateur sports league
dominated by only the top handful of organizations who have the $$ to buy athletes? Which itself also further incentivizes colleges to spend $$ on athletics programs over faculty and academic programs? LSU in my own home state rightly decries
budget cuts in education (thanks Jindal, you dolt), plausibly claiming it's had to let go swaths of faculty due to inability to pay them. And yet the same article says this:
My sister was in the middle of her college career counting on the TOPS money she was promised and had studied her ass off to earn to help pay for her education, but when that well ran dry the university and its community decided instead of helping pay for programs for the general student body and their faculty they'd work on keeping that top shelf football coaching staff instead. You shouldn't get to bill yourself as an academic institution with those kinds of priorities in practice, much less a public one.
Moreover, why is time spent on and institutional monetary benefit from an extra-curricular used as the metric for compensation eligibility? If that's the case then maybe we should be paying the musicians and stage-actors who spend a dozen+ hours a week practicing for performances, the same performances that many colleges also make money from in ticket sales.
The REAL solution is to 1.
crack down on circumvention of practice time rules and overwork culture in college sports programs and 2. create a minor league NFL, lower the NFL minimum age requirement, or create some other avenue for a potential professional football career not directly linked to universities. But I'm not gonna sit here and have our students and universities continually sold down the river for a game.