The Ranking a Banned Program Debate

October 3, 2010

Read the opposing arguments from Loyal Homer and Bleacher Fan.

Earlier this summer the BCS brought the pain when it punished the University of Southern California for its lack of institutional control. As a result of a four year investigation into inappropriate benefits received by USC players, the BCS stripped the school of several scholarships, demanded forfeiture of previous wins, and, among other things, banned the university’s football program from BCS bowls for two years. The punishments doled out as a result of this process got us here at The Sports Debates thinking – “If the Trojans are banned from a BCS bowl game, then should the team not also be banned from the rankings?”

As of this weekend the Trojans were ranked in the top twenty teams, but the question at hand is, “Should USC be ranked at all?” It is not a matter of whether the Trojans are one of the most competitive programs in the nation, but whether they still warrant a ranking because of their bowl ban. No matter how well USC performs or who they beat, they will still not participate in a BCS – or any other – bowl at season’s end.

Which leads us to today’s debate: Should a ban from bowls include a ban from the rankings?

Loyal Homer believes it should. Obviously there is logic supporting this argument, but to win this debate he will have to prove that the team deserves a ranking ban.

Bleacher Fan, on the other hand, believes a bowl ban is not a good idea. He believes that although bowl bans are a punishment it does not actually change how well a team is playing.

Whoever wins this debate will be number one in my book, but their poll ranking may be a different story.

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The Ranking a Banned Program Debate… Post-season Ban Applies Post-Season Only

October 3, 2010

Read the opposing argument from Loyal Homer.

Six years ago, Reggie Bush (while playing at Southern Cal under then-head coach Pete Carroll) violated an NCAA eligibility rule by accepting money from a professional sports agent.

The NCAA unfortunately has a very difficult task when it comes to situations such like this, where the infractions are being addressed several years after they actually took place. The people guilty of committing infractions are no longer under the governing body’s rule. Therefore, there is very little that can be done to hold the actual guilty parties accountable.

While the NCAA does still retain the authority to penalize a program, the NCAA must also be very careful about the way punishments are implemented because the people who will be most greatly affected by the punishment are those currently in the program, who had nothing at all to do with the infractions that took place.

To avoid a situation where the children must pay too greatly for the sins of the parents, the NCAA has stripped away any recognition for what the football program did during the season infractions take place, and has banned the program from participating in post-season football for the two years following the discovery of infractions.

Although I would like to see a more aggressive partnership between the NFL and the NCAA so that guys like Reggie Bush and Pete Carroll don’t get to walk away virtually unscathed (don’t forget, Bush gave back his Heisman Trophy, it wasn’t taken from him), this is actually a very fair and just punishment to be levied on the program.

The institution suffers by missing out on the exposure and profits of playing post-season football, but the impact to the athletes and coaches CURRENTLY within the program will be extremely minimal. They will not get to play in a bowl game for the next couple of years, which is unfortunate, but they will retain every other benefit that comes from playing at a major university.

So, why take the punishment a step further by banning the program from consideration when ranking the top 25 teams in the nation?

Rankings and Bowls are Independent of Each Other

If there were only 25 bowl invitations extended every year, and those 25 invitations were offered to the top 25 teams in the nation, I would completely agree with a ban on ranking to accompany the ban on bowl eligibility. But that is simply not the case.

The national rankings serve as a gauge of which are the best 25 programs in the nation, not the best 25 bowl eligible programs. Last season there were 43 teams that played in bowl games and were not ranked in the top 25. What does USC being considered for a national ranking now have to do at all with bowl eligibility?! Absolutely nothing!

Just because a team is ineligible to play in the post-season does not mean it does not deserve consideration as being one of the best teams in the country.

If Alabama was banned from 2010 bowl eligibility it would not change the fact that it is the best team in the nation right now. Why try to ignore, cover up, or alter that fact by producing a fraudulent ranking written as though Alabama did not exist? It would completely devalue the entire ranking process.

Southern Cal, bowl eligible or not, is going to remain in contention as one of the 25 best football programs in the country. Any attempt to disregard or ignore that fact is pointless.

You Can’t Penalize the Wrong People!

It is important that the current active members of the USC organization are not penalized too harshly for the rule-breaking of the predecessors. But, there is another group that would also be unfairly punished if USC were to be banned from ranking eligibility – opponents.

That’s right. Banning USC from consideration for a national ranking is actually penalizing every single team that USC would play while they were under that ban. Why? Because there is greater prestige associated with playing and potentially beating a ranked team.

Think about what the Washington Huskies accomplished last weekend. Which sounds better – beating USC, the team banned from bowls AND rankings, or beating USC, the team ranked as the 18th best in the nation?

When the BCS rolls around, and a team that beats USC is potentially jockeying for position within the BCS standings, should they not be given full credit for defeating one of the 25 best programs in the nation? It is not their fault (nor is it their concern) that USC is banned from bowl games. But if you take away USC’s ability to be ranked, you essentially rob their opponents of the credit they deserve for competing against one of the best teams in the nation.

A Rankings Ban Adds No Value

What could possibly be gained by stripping a ranking away from USC this season?

Whether they are bowl eligible or not, they are still potentially one of the best football teams in the nation. The ONLY benefit gained by removing the ranking is that the team that is ACTUALLY the 26th best could be artificially bumped into a ranking they did not earn, nor deserve. That minor, arbitrary alteration would come at a far greater cost to USC players today (who were only 13 and 14 years old when Reggie Bush broke the rules) and their opponents (who deserve full credit for beating a major football program).

Taking away USC’s ability to earn a national ranking is the same as banning them from playing at all this season. Their opponents gain nothing by playing them, and their current athletes would have absolutely nothing to show for all of their hard work this season.

They were banned from the POST-season, not the REGULAR season. Let the regular season play out as it should, and when bowl season rolls around USC will serve its punishment accordingly.

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The Stripping USC’s Title Debate Verdict

June 2, 2010

Read the opposing arguments from Loyal Homer and Bleacher Fan.

Bleacher Fan’s argument centered on the iniquity of punishing the wrong people for crimes they did not commit. While this immediately distracted me with parallels to the A-Team’s back story, I eventually got my ADD under control long enough to focus on the issue’s importance to today’s debate. Throughout his argument Bleacher Fan pointed out that Southern Cal itself did nothing wrong with the recruitment and retention of Reggie Bush. And as far as anyone can tell USC was largely in the dark about his receipt of improper benefits. But, while it is easy to see that USC did not knowingly violate rules, the fact that NCAA policies were violated cannot completely be dismissed.

Loyal Homer’s argument was primarily focused on the guilt of Reggie Bush and the enforcement of NCAA regulations. He adeptly observed that the amateur nature of college sports makes them an entirely different ballgame from the pros. Loyal Homer made a case that the NCAA protects this amateur status of college athletics through stringent enforcement of its regulations. Citing the Connecticut men’s basketball team as a telling example, he made it abundantly clear that any wrong doing in time will come to the light of day.

As someone who usually interprets the world through a legalistic view, Loyal Homer’s point that policy and precedent were certainly not lost on me. I believe he made another excellent point that since the regulations are abundantly clear – the ones about amateur athletes not being allowed to receive illicit extra benefits from their school, those associated with a school, or even those outside the school – then certainly the benefits of living in a more than $750,000 home rent free would qualify as a rules violation. The logical connection is that the NCAA investigators will find evidence that Reggie Bush clearly violated this policy, and therefore the BCS policies implemented in 2007 leave no wiggle room and the team’s bowl appearances and subsequent titles must be vacated.

That certainly seems like a simple solution, but I am ultimately left wanting when I ponder the human cost faced by the university and Bush’s teammates who did not violate this rule – a stirring point hammered home by Bleacher Fan. I cannot help but feel empathy for those athletes who dedicated incalculable hours of training and practice throughout their lifetime, which ultimately culminated in winning the national championship. To think that the actions of one selfish individual could completely undermine the achievements of an entire program seems to be the greater injustice.

As stated in the introduction of this debate, the issue at hand is not a football matter as much as it is an ethical matter. It was a question of the morality surrounding the issue, a spirit of the law matter rather than a letter of the law matter. The ultimate question is, “Should the NCAA strip USC of their 2004 national title?”

Simply put, I cannot agree that the NCAA should punish an entire program for the actions of one individual, especially considering their alleged wrongdoing did not directly impact the outcome each game. A punishment of this magnitude would be unique in its enormity. The sweeping punitive actions of the NCAA would disproportionately penalize the innocent and there is nothing fair about that. While it is true that one of my favorite mantras is “life isn’t fair,” I believe this is one occasion where it should be, and for that reason I am awarding the victory to the Bleacher Fan.

Although I was initially torn over the issue since it does not necessarily fit with my cutthroat, “shoot’em all and let God sort it out” approach to justice, I became exponentially more comfortable with my ruling on this issue when I put myself in the Trojans shoes… or cleats, if you will. If one of the 27 World Series championships of the New York Yankees was erased from the record books because of the actions of one single player I would find it to be a huge injustice not just to the sport but to the teammates who were innocent. For example if it was proven that Roger Clemens did indeed use steroids during his stint in pinstripes, and Bud Selig sought to strip the entire franchise of titles won during his tenure, I would certainly cry foul.

The aforementioned is an example where the rules violation actually could impact the on-field outcome, while Reggie Bush’s alleged violations carried an insignificant influence on the successfulness of the program, if any at all. Therefore I cannot support a punishment of this nature. As cliché and uncomfortable as it makes me feel to say it, it just seems unfair.

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The Stripping USC’s Title Debate

June 1, 2010

Read the opposing arguments from Loyal Homer and Bleacher Fan.

Allegations of college athletes receiving money and perks to play for their respective teams have become fairly common. They are usually followed by an investigation and some sort of punishment. This process is usually pretty straight forward. A school makes a few public apologies, the NCAA puts them on probation for a while (or they discipline themselves like Michigan just did), and pretty soon life goes back to normal. But what happens when these allegations are leveled against a national championship team? More specifically, a team that won a title more than half a decade ago?

That is exactly the case for USC and the ongoing Reggie Bush debacle. The former Trojan running back is being accused of receiving improper payments and gifts. These alleged violations could prove to erase USC’s 2004 record, and the national title that goes with it.

So what can and should be done about this situation now? Is there a statute of limitations on moral issues such as this? Is it fair to punish the program and players who did nothing wrong for the actions of one player? Does the NCAA really have the grounds or authority to erase a national title?

Plenty of questions remain. That’s where The Sports Debates comes in as we attempt to provide some of the important answers surrounding this debate: Should the NCAA strip USC of their 2004 national title?

Loyal Homer will argue in favor of stripping the USC football program of a title that they may not have earned legitimately. Bleacher Fan will argue that although certain Trojans’ actions may have been morally ambiguous, there are no grounds for stripping the team of a championship they clearly won so long ago.

Bear in mind, this debate is not really a football debate as much as an ethical question. So bring your minds, and your morality, to the table.

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The Stripping USC’s Title Debate… Guilty Only of Association with Reggie Bush

June 1, 2010

Read the opposing argument from Loyal Homer.

As the NCAA draws to conclusion its four-year investigation of allegations that Bush accepted gifts and violated the NCAA laws (making him an ineligible player) while playing for USC, there is talk that the NCAA and BCS could revoke USC’s national championship from the 2004 season. The season where Reggie Bush dominated.

That would be an extremely misguided attempt to send a message by punishing all of the wrong people.

If it was determined at any point through this investigation that the university and its boosters provided illegal payments and gifts to recruit and retain players – including Reggie Bush – and that team of illegally recruited athletes then went on to win the national championship, then I would agree wholeheartedly with stripping USC of its title. But the facts of the case, as they exist today, do not indicate any wrongdoing on the part of the university.

This case appears to center solely on Reggie Bush and the alleged relationship he had with New Era Sports and Entertainment.

By all accounts, Reggie Bush did not even begin his relationship with New Era until his sophomore season. By then, Bush had already committed to playing for the Trojans, and for their part, the Trojans do not appear to be in violation of any recruiting rules. Likewise, the university does not appear to have gained anything as a result of Bush’s illegal relationship with New Era and its representatives.

Reggie Bush, after playing a full season of college football, was allegedly approached by Michael Michaels and Lloyd Lake of New Era, and illegally offered money and gifts for the promise of future representation.

It is to this point that the air needs to be cleared: USC fairly and ethically recruited and fielded Reggie Bush. As such, the university is not guilty of committing any infractions.

Think about the situation – Reggie Bush was an eligible athlete when recruited WITHIN the confines of the rules by USC. Then, a full year AFTER being recruited, Bush SECRETLY lost his eligibility in a PRIVATE arrangement with people that had absolutely no affiliation with the university. At what point in that series of events does USC violate any rules?

This does not appear to have involved any other players on the USC team, nor does it involve official representatives of the university itself. It simply involves one kid who broke the rules of the game. While Reggie Bush and the representatives of New Era should be punished if the allegations are proven to be true, that does not mean that the university, its coaches, or the other 100 athletes who committed their ENTIRE effort to FAIRLY (this is an appropriate use of the term “fair”) win a national championship deserve to have their records tarnished, and their accomplishments nullified, just because hindsight has proven that one guy on their team broke the rules.

That would be like finding out that one player on a team used steroids, then labeling the ENTIRE TEAM as cheaters and negating all of the TEAM’S accomplishments.

If it is ever determined that the university willingly and knowingly participated in the violation of NCAA rules, then it deserves to have the title stripped away. Because that does not appear to be the case at this time, punishment in the matter should be reserved strictly for Bush, Michaels, and Lake. And while the NCAA may be tempted to send a very strong message out to the rest of the college athletic world that rule violations are unacceptable, it would come at the expense of a group of hard-working, fair-playing, INNOCENT people.

The problem of NCAA rule violations is a very serious one, and I fully support any measure that is taken in the interest of preventing these violations in the future. Punishing the innocent, though – simply for wearing the same jersey as the guilty party – is not the answer.

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The Best Decision About A Coach Debate – The Burden of Success, USC Does What It Must

January 18, 2010

Read the arguments from Loyal Homer and Bleacher Fan about which football organization/program made the best decision about its head coaching position.



It was a normal feeling morning on campus in Los Angeles. The morning winter air was brisk, but temperatures would warm some later. No worries, right? Good weather, good location, good times.

Then Southern Cal head coach Pete Carroll took a call from the Seattle Seahawks organization, an organization that wished to break promises and fire its current coach, Jim Mora. All of a sudden there was an intense need to move in a different direction, and Pete Carroll was squarely in the team’s sites.

Normally Carroll would dismiss the opportunity out of hand. But, with allegations of recruiting violations and the specter of inconsistencies surrounding the tenure of Reggie Bush, Carroll felt if there ever was a time to leave the university for another position, it was now. And in a blink of an eye, overnight, Carroll was gone. Goodbye sunshine, hello rain (perhaps a metaphor for the decision?).

Coming off a poor season, USC found itself in another strange position – coachless. The situation was so dire and uncertain that recruits were taking the initiative to hold the recruiting class together. One free safety USC commit even started a group on Facebook called “Let’s keep the 2010 USC Football recruiting class together!!”

The school was in a real lurch. All of the necessary steps were taken by the university, with no stop left unpulled. Chris Peterson was called, but unwilling to budge from Boise State. Talks with Steve Mariucci never materialized into anything serious. Jack Del Rio ultimately decided to keep his home address in Jacksonville (for some reason).

The phone system within the USC athletic department probably started smoking with the volume of phone calls made and received over the few days of uncertainty that followed the sudden departure of Pete Carroll. Then USC did something that seemed impossible. A very vocal coach who was already mixing things up in the SEC and engrained at a university with a long and storied football history agreed to speak about the head coaching position at USC. Southern Cal used its leverage made a call upon history to Lane Kiffin.

No matter what fans and media think of Lane Kiffin’s character (which I happen to think is without integrity), USC acted quickly and decisively, saving both the 2010 recruiting class, the hope of the 2010 season, and, of course, the reputation of the university’s football program. Tennessee had such a publically difficult time both retaining Kiffin and attracting new coaching talent that the program no longer appears as the elite head coaching job it once did.

USC was not done, either. Kiffin, who brings his famously successful defensive coaching dad Monte with him, nearly lured UCLA offensive coordinator Norm Chow back to Troy. USC turned a vacancy into real, believable momentum.

The quick action to get Kiffin to campus also created an environment that star running back C.J. Gable believes he can thrive in… after nearly turning professional. Southern Cal now sits poised for a competitive season in 2010 with a coach experienced at the school and a top tier recruiting class on its way. It sounds as though not much has changed in Troy… just the name of the desk in the head football coach’s office. Credit the fast-acting athletic department in creating an environment for success regardless of suddenly difficult circumstances. No matter how we feel about Lane Kiffin and his integrity – or lack thereof – and poor treatment of Tennessee, its program and its fans, USC did what was right in the near-term for its program in the face of sudden and difficult events.

It is obvious that USC’s goals were short term preservation in order to keep the university moving forward. Who knows what the long term plans are for USC… or Lane Kiffin. Kiffin may simply be a short term fix while USC quietly seeks out a more stable long-term coach. Or perhaps Kiffin proves he is a short term fix and long term solution – he will have the chance to prove it. Regardless of what USC’s long term plans are, or the overall direction of the major college football coaching landscape (and, yes, I do agree with Jay Paterno), the athletic department did an excellent job at holding the football program together in the near term with the aggressiveness that was necessary.

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The Best Game of THIS Weekend Debate – Forget the NFL, College Has the Best Matchup of the Weekend!

September 11, 2009

Read Sports Geek and Loyal Homer’s arguments on which football game this weekend will be the best to watch.



Recently, The Sports Debates discussed the topic of which 2009 college football game would be the most important of the season. My opinion then (and still today) was that the matchup in Columbus between the USC Trojans and The Ohio State Buckeyes would be the most important game for the entire year.

That game takes place this weekend, and is THE game that you simply CANNOT miss!

Sure, the NFL kicks off this weekend, but let’s be honest… the implications from the outcome of a game during week one of the NFL season are minimal. Every team still has 15 more games to prove they deserve to be in the playoffs.

That is not the case for Ohio State or USC. This game for the Buckeyes and the Trojans is essentially the same as a playoff game, with the entire season on the line for BOTH of these teams when they take the field on Saturday evening. The team that wins will be rocketed into BCS National Championship discussions (especially following Oklahoma’s loss to Brigham Young last weekend). For the team that loses, all National Championship hopes are lost, and the BEST they can hope for is a conference championship and a BCS appearance in the Rose Bowl.

The games during the first weekend helped to set the stage for a very interesting matchup. Southern Cal, behind true freshman quarterback Matt Barkley, completely dominated their opponents, the San Jose State Spartans, with a final score of 56-3. The Buckeyes, on the other hand, were involved in a nail-biter against the Midshipmen from Navy, which had the opportunity to tie the game in Columbus with less than three minutes to go. The Buckeyes did manage to escape the game against Navy with a ‘W,’ but it raised questions in many minds about how they would fare against a much more talented USC team.

When the rankings came out this week, they reflected those sentiments exactly, with USC moving up to the number three spot and Ohio State dropping to number eight, despite their win.

There is a lot at stake for both teams in this game, and both need this win badly.

The matchup at quarterback will also be very interesting to watch. It is not often that a sophomore is considered the veteran quarterback in a top-ten matchup, but such is the case for Terrelle Pryor and Ohio State. Having played as a true freshman last season, Pryor knows exactly the pressure that Barkley will be under in Columbus.

Will Pryor’s “experience” be enough to give him and his Buckeyes the edge they need, or will the talent of the USC star-in-the-making be too much for The Ohio State defense to handle? Will the Buckeyes be able to break their recent streak of losses against top-five teams, or will USC march into the Horseshoe and prove that they can win outside of the comfy confines of the Coliseum? Which team will carry the pride of their conference? Who is the contender, and who is the pretender?

I will definitely enjoy the kickoff to the NFL season, but I am most looking forward to the playoff atmosphere of the college season in Columbus on Saturday!

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The 2009 BCS Championship Sleeper Debate – They Call Them ‘Golden ‘ For A Reason

August 28, 2009

Read Sports Geek and Loyal Homer’s arguments on which teams they feel could be a surprise contender for the BCS Title Game.



All good things must come to an end, and for head coach Pete Carroll and his USC Trojans, the curtain may be falling on what has been one of the most impressive (and dominant) performances in college football over the past decade. The Trojans, who have won at least a share of the Pac-10 title for seven consecutive seasons, could be in danger of seeing that streak come to an end in 2009.

After losing 11 players from last season’s team in the NFL draft (including quarterback Mark Sanchez and the entire linebacking corps of Rey Maualuga, Brian Cushing, Clay Matthews Jr, and Kaluka Maiava), the Trojans will be putting a lot of young and inexperienced players on the field in several critical positions. Most notably, Carroll announced earlier this week that true freshman Matt Barkley is starting at the quarterback position. While Barkley’s performance in training camp was strong enough to make him the first ever true freshman to start a season opener at USC, that does not mean it will be strong enough to claim an eighth consecutive Pac-10 crown.

The two teams most likely to challenge USC’s supremacy in the Pac-10 this year are Oregon and California. While Oregon returns two very dangerous offensive threats to the highest scoring team in the conference from a year ago, senior running back LeGarrette Blount and junior quarterback Jeremiah Masoli, they have a new head coach in Chip Kelly and may have some early struggles before finally settling in.

The California Golden Bears are a team full of upside and pose the most serious threat to finally ending USC’s streak at the top. Cal’s most exciting player to watch this season will be junior running back Jahvid Best. My pick as the dark horse for the 2009 Heisman Trophy, Best is an explosive playmaker that becomes a threat to score every time he is handed the ball. He finished second in total yards in the NCAA last year, rushing for 1,580 yards and 15 touchdowns along the way, and should at least match those totals this season.

Best, however, is not the only bright spot for Cal in 2009. The Bears are bringing back a very experienced group of players at wide receiver, including seniors Nyan Boateng and Verran Tucker. Junior Kevin Riley will also be returning behind center for his first full season at quarterback, after throwing for more than 1,300 yards, 14 touchdowns, and only six interceptions while splitting time with Nate Longshore in 2008.

Defense should be the strongest point for the Golden Bears in 2009. Eight of last year’s 11 defensive starters are returning to the field this season. Leading the defense is senior cornerback Syd’Quan Thompson, who last year racked up 70 tackles, two sacks, and four interceptions (on special teams, Thompson also had 344 punt return yards with a touchdown). Thompson anchors a defense that ranked in the top 15 in the nation for sacks in 2008, and ranked third overall for interceptions (picking off 24 passes, three of which were returned for touchdowns).

Also leaning in Cal’s favor this season is their schedule. During the 2009 season, the only road game that really poses a challenge for Cal is the September 26th matchup at Oregon (keep in mind that Cal has not lost to Oregon since 2005, including a win in Eugene in 2007). The rest of their road schedule includes games at UCLA, Arizona State, Stanford, and Washington. They get to play the “tougher” teams of USC, Oregon State, Arizona, and Washington State all at home, and their non-conference schedule includes Maryland and Eastern Washington at home, and a trip to Minnesota (who started 4-0 last season before losing six of their remaining nine games and do not look to be much improved for 2009).

Conditions seem right for California to make a strong run to the top of the Pac-10. Sure, they will need some help from Florida, Texas, or Oklahoma if they are going to push for the National Championship, but so will every other team in the nation! If Cal can finish the season as the Pac-10 champs, having beaten USC and Oregon, and with no more than one loss (which is entirely possible when you consider their returning talent and their 2009 schedule), look for them to be right in the thick of the National Championship conversation.

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The Should the NCAA Pay Athletes Debate – Risk Must Equal Reward For College Athletes

July 28, 2009

Read the debate intro and Bleacher Fan’s argument that NCAA student-athletes should not be paid.



College athletes already get paid, just look at the definition of a “full ride” – the informal term currently used for describing NCAA student-athletes payment structure. Average college tuition for 2009 is $6,585 per year. Tack on more cash for academic fees, room and board, in addition to the money needed for books and the value of a full ride increases. Student-athletes also get a meal stipend in cash, though the sum is usually nothing substantial. Other benefits exist for athletes, including free tutoring and free medical care. The numbers aren’t that big when added together, but they likely hover around $10,000 a year from school to school.

The reality of college sports (especially college football) is big, big business. Huge business. There are multi-million dollar television contracts, season-ticket packages, the gate from each home game, exclusive apparel deals (that do not include shoes… which are an entirely separate deal), and the list goes on… and on… and on. The variance between the amount of money generated per student-athlete and the roughly $10,000 each student gets to attend school (which is in the best interest of the university anyway) is large. So, despite what students are “paid,” on the record, in the form of a full ride, the “payments” still fall well short of the revenue they generate for their respective schools. It also falls short in another important way.

Normally in the business world workers are paid according to the level of risk they incur on behalf of a business. This is already a truth in the NCAA for student-athletes. However, while the “full ride” concept has existed for eons, the level of risk incurred by student-athletes has grown monumentally, especially in the last two decades. Players are stronger and faster than ever before… meaning they hit harder and more powerfully than ever before. The chances of injury – especially long-term, career-threatening injury – has increased a great deal in the last two decades. For a quick example, contemplate the rash of knee injuries seen in football in the past 20 years, a combination of bigger bodies sitting on top of knee ligaments and aggressive hitting around the legs from defenders. The risk of injury while playing college football is large and the system is not equipped to recognize that in a meaningful way.

Beyond the overt payment of a “full ride,” plenty happens below the tables at the off-campus restaurants that pepper the nation’s college towns. Consider Michigan’s “Fab Five” in the 1990s. Their story includes law suits and a lot of speculation about gifts and other illegal activity to ensure those players made the decision to play at Michigan. Former Southern Cal basketball head coach Tim Floyd recently resigned amid allegations that he actually paid recruit O.J. Mayo thousands of dollars to play basketball at USC (undoubtedly aware of the cash windfall that comes when the university’s profile is raised – even if it’s at the expense of the player). I have personally witnessed conspicuous activity while covering college sports, but was unable to uncover any evidence of explicit wrong doing. I can say, however, that it is strange to see a freshman college baseball player driving around in a paid off luxury SUV complete with video game systems and video screens. It is even more conspicuous when the player is a left-handed pitcher who stands 6-feet 5-inches and is known for a tailing 96 mile-an-hour fastball that scouts fawn over at each home game.

To formalize the much-speculated illicit payments that take place in college athletics is not realistic. But, modest increases in the already approved stipend help cover the increasing in danger for the athlete.

An important caveat – amateur players do not need to be paid according to the same pay scale that exists for professional athletes. Formalizing additional payments can prevent abuse to the overly-stringent rules governing how student-athletes are treated. Whole-scale rule changes aren’t necessary, but an understanding of the existing marketplace, and requisite adjustment in favor of the players, makes for a system that is more balanced and fair.

The question for this debate is centered squarely whether or not student-athletes should be paid, not how much a student athlete should be paid. Frankly, I have no clue how much they should be paid in addition to what they already receive. But, I know it should be something. Money for food and for school is enough to keep a player eligible, not enough to compensate them for their risk. With all the money the NCAA invests in medical care and facilities (not to mention on-site staff during games) it is logical to invest to preserve the future of the players. In fact, they are morally obligated to invest in the long-term success of the student-athlete. Otherwise, it is all too obvious that the system is designed to protect short-term assets for a limited amount of time while banking large sums of money based on a player’s success.

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