Minnesota_husker
New member
While I get where you are going, I also think you are missing some of the point.To maximize how much money ends up in a student's hands I think the athletic departments could hire a couple of agents to handle all of the players. This would probably be the most efficient way of funneling fan money to our purchased players. Maybe the university has Adidas provide this service as part of their contract. Probably the simplest way is no agent and just have people take a selfie with the players and hand them $2000 if they scored a touchdown or made a sack that weekend. Once players get paid there is no way the NCAA can restrict how much they get paid. It's going to be the wild west! Thanks California!
When this goes through fans should drop their season tickets and use the money to buy the players. The players shouldn't mind playing in empty stadiums as long as they get paid. CFB attendance has been dropping anyway so schools may want to stop maintaining their stadiums and just play on soccer fields or local high school fields. TV networks can use CGI to give the appearance that they're playing in one of those old timey stadiums.
Not all players will be monetizing based on their likeness but the higher level will and some will simply for being in things like video games. It wont be large money, but some schools might feel the brunt. That doesnt stop them from continuing to just print jerseys with no names on the back.
I dont think it snow balls the way you suggest it will. It will just now allow a player to sign hi jersey and sell said jersey and make money. While yes, it could create an issue where a booster buys that jersey for 200K, i think that already happens. It will be up to the NCAA to control that(I actually dont even know if selling a jersey would be allowed with the new potential rule).
The issue is that in the current day, these kids likeness makes schools millions of dollars and they dont see that. I get that they get scholarships, but when you look at what NBA/NFL players make or even what colleges make, that doesnt even began to even it out.