I remember in the past there was always a worry about basketball players being eligible for the spring semester after fall grades came out. It's not even a thought any more.Do student athletes still receive scholarships to attend school? Do they even attend school? Also, are there still minimum GPAs to play? It has been a long time since I've heard of an athlete being academically ineligible.
Back in the 70s my BIL was a tutor, he said they were some dumb guys and they had people take their tests.
There is a former FB player who no lives with the woman who was his tutor, so love may even blossom from it
I had a friend who was a starting backer when I was in school and he said he got 3 PE credits for being on the football team.I had a HS friend that went to ISU the same time we had issues on the MBB team with eligibility with guys like Pratt and Bankhead. He had a class with Cato and he was asked to read out loud in class one day and he apparently really struggled to read a complete sentence. Remember Andy Katzenmoyer who played LB at Ohio State in the late 90's? He to take some cushy summer classes 1 time just to stay eligible and they were some joke classes on top of that where even university professors were saying it was turning their academics into a joke: https://vault.si.com/vault/1999/06/...ate-kept-linebacker-andy-katzenmoyer-eligible
It's because Hawkeye fans are just usually slime balls......Hawkeye fan on twitter today found Blum's salary with WeWill and posted it. Not sure if it's supposed to be a gotcha or what. I don't know why it matters to Hawk fans what kind of money Blum is making.
They could be armaturs againJust the confluence of the truth that these are big-business employees and our delusion it is amateurism
As if any of this has to do with actual appearances or value.It shouldn’t be that difficult. If these deals are for endorsements and advertising as they should be, just write it in that they will be paid for appearances throughout the season. Autograph signings during the week or something. If they transfer, they can’t be at the appearances.
Stop giving the money upfront. Give it in installments based on those appearances.
The existing professional unions were formed in totally different time periods and with totally different circumstances, not to mention before specific right to work laws were in place in certain states.You could use that same agruement in professional sports that the NFLPA or MLBPA doesn't really benefit guys like Mahomes or Judge vs. the average player- but they still exist.
With over 6000 P4 college football players the benefit to many will override the benefit to the few.
And it the case of the blue-chip guys. How long before the NFL or NBA is required to lift their age restrictions? IMO the Diego Pavia court decision opens the door for athletes jumping to the pro leagues earlier. Some lawyer will push the issue.
Agree.You could use that same agruement in professional sports that the NFLPA or MLBPA doesn't really benefit guys like Mahomes or Judge vs. the average player- but they still exist.
With over 6000 P4 college football players the benefit to many will override the benefit to the few.
And it the case of the blue-chip guys. How long before the NFL or NBA is required to lift their age restrictions? IMO the Diego Pavia court decision opens the door for athletes jumping to the pro leagues earlier. Some lawyer will push the issue.
Hopefully he’s being well compensated. That cannot be an easy job.Hawkeye fan on twitter today found Blum's salary with WeWill and posted it. Not sure if it's supposed to be a gotcha or what. I don't know why it matters to Hawk fans what kind of money Blum is making.
Hawkeye fan on twitter today found Blum's salary with WeWill and posted it. Not sure if it's supposed to be a gotcha or what. I don't know why it matters to Hawk fans what kind of money Blum is making.
Was that the same thread that showed the Iowa NIL collective being $825k in the red?
Are they? When the NFLPA was formed, it was at a time when ownership had all of the power. The players advocated for base pay and healthcare coverage. In the current environment with college sports, the players already have much more power, and are already receiving many of the "basic" needs. And the general attitude of the country towards unions, as well as the power of unions in general, was much much higher in the 50's than it is now. Throw in that college sports are a temporary step on the path to the bigger leagues for the best players, and many of the benefits of union membership lose some importance, at least for the best players.Agree.
The dynamics are similarly conducive to union formation as when the NFLPA and MLBPA formed
Particularly in college football in which big rosters and short careers means each individual player has little leverage. College football is very much a next man in sport. As we know, you can go 11-2 with walk on LBs from Iowa.
Once the market removes the profit-wasting prisoners dilemma in which schools and conferences engage in an arms race spending, players will need to unionize and get a CBA imo
And there’s never been a better time for the interests of the leadership of big business to get what they want in terms of regulation or laws
There is no power in a players union currently because there is no one entity that they can collectively bargain towards. Courts have been clear that the NCAA governs the rules of their sports but those do not extend to control of the players or their earnings. Until the NCAA has an antitrust exemption to govern all aspects of participation in college athletics, or an exemption maybe limited to a sport like CFB, any player's union has no one to bargain with or enforce any agreements made.Are they? When the NFLPA was formed, it was at a time when ownership had all of the power. The players advocated for base pay and healthcare coverage. In the current environment with college sports, the players already have much more power, and are already receiving many of the "basic" needs. And the general attitude of the country towards unions, as well as the power of unions in general, was much much higher in the 50's than it is now. Throw in that college sports are a temporary step on the path to the bigger leagues for the best players, and many of the benefits of union membership lose some importance, at least for the best players.
The formation of a college players union is not a slam dunk by any means. When people are making some of their suggestions for changes to college sports, they're just assuming that one will be formed, and there's no guarantee at all that one will come into being, right now.
Are they? When the NFLPA was formed, it was at a time when ownership had all of the power. The players advocated for base pay and healthcare coverage. In the current environment with college sports, the players already have much more power, and are already receiving many of the "basic" needs. And the general attitude of the country towards unions, as well as the power of unions in general, was much much higher in the 50's than it is now. Throw in that college sports are a temporary step on the path to the bigger leagues for the best players, and many of the benefits of union membership lose some importance, at least for the best players.
The formation of a college players union is not a slam dunk by any means. When people are making some of their suggestions for changes to college sports, they're just assuming that one will be formed, and there's no guarantee at all that one will come into being, right now.
So, if this had to be split evenly this would result in a payment of ~ $36,000 to every athlete at Iowa State. Feels a bit unfair as a golf player makes very little money for the department.Pretty interesting ruling that Title IX rules will apply to the $20M revenue sharing monies. So it doesn't look like schools will be able to pay FB players 80% of that money.
Title IX Applies to Revenue Split
Quick Summary
It seems like the $20.5M payments have to be equally split by gender. But since FB has highest roster size, let's say 25% of athlete population, it would allow for some flexibility to pay elite football players big $'s, but not close to the levels some AD's (TT) were anticipating.
- School direct payments of $20.5M in NIL deals would fall under Title IX rules.
- The Dept of Educ statement was less clear on NIL payments from Collectives. Here is quote from above article: It states that the department does not consider money provided by a third party in an NIL deal as athletic financial assistance like the future revenue sharing payments or scholarship dollars. But if money from private sources ends up creating a disparity in an athletic program, it is possible that NIL agreements could "trigger a school's Title IX obligations."
Not sure what to think of bullet #2. Does it mean Athletic Departments have to make sure they are equal in sport facilities & training/development, but NIL $ from Collectives can be unequal since those are personal monies?
Its not necessarily a ruling, but a memo by current admin. Very well could be viewed differently in a few days under a new administration.Pretty interesting ruling that Title IX rules will apply to the $20M revenue sharing monies. So it doesn't look like schools will be able to pay FB players 80% of that money.
Title IX Applies to Revenue Split
Quick Summary
It seems like the $20.5M payments have to be equally split by gender. But since FB has highest roster size, let's say 25% of athlete population, it would allow for some flexibility to pay elite football players big $'s, but not close to the levels some AD's (TT) were anticipating.
- School direct payments of $20.5M in NIL deals would fall under Title IX rules.
- The Dept of Educ statement was less clear on NIL payments from Collectives. Here is quote from above article: It states that the department does not consider money provided by a third party in an NIL deal as athletic financial assistance like the future revenue sharing payments or scholarship dollars. But if money from private sources ends up creating a disparity in an athletic program, it is possible that NIL agreements could "trigger a school's Title IX obligations."
Not sure what to think of bullet #2. Does it mean Athletic Departments have to make sure they are equal in sport facilities & training/development, but NIL $ from Collectives can be unequal since those are personal monies?