I'm all for a system that creates parity. The NFL has it figured out. Smaller roster limits, a salary cap with freedom for teams to allocate to their players how they use their cap, draft positioning, player contractual obligations and sort of guaranteed regional representation in the tournament. CFB could emulate the NFL but seems to be trending away from what makes the NFL more successful. Players move freely with no obligation to the school. Conference are no longer regional and there are vast swaths of the country from which there will never be a national champion again. The NIL system guarantees the haves will have more and the have nots will have less. The lousy teams have little to no hope of improving with influx of talent.
I don't know how CFB could institute anything like a draft. I don't see the schools as being willing to eliminate a student athlete's choice of institution either as a freshman or any year thereafter. NIL will always be a problem. Advertisers hire NFL talent to endorse their products on the basis of a reasonable business decision. Except for a few collegiate athletes, NIL is based in home team sycophancy. But CFB could return to regionalization although it won't at this point. It could devote resources to teams commensurate with revenue to play players and establish roster caps. That would disburse the talent.
The equity crowd would squeal but the revenue ought to be allocated to the sports that earn it. CFB should be getting the lion's share of the revenue and 1/2 of that should go to the players. Let the coach decide how much to throw at each player (like NAIA). Those would be real dollars and while a Minnesota won't have the NIL to supplement, it would get a foot in the door with good players and from their, traditional recruiting would find its way back to the game, i.e., coach, academics, etc.
What's being proposed does nothing for a Minnesota. So $30,000 goes to each athlete. Good for the athletes although if I'm a football player, I wonder then as I would now, why is my skull being used to pay a softball player or a rower.
I don't know how CFB could institute anything like a draft. I don't see the schools as being willing to eliminate a student athlete's choice of institution either as a freshman or any year thereafter. NIL will always be a problem. Advertisers hire NFL talent to endorse their products on the basis of a reasonable business decision. Except for a few collegiate athletes, NIL is based in home team sycophancy. But CFB could return to regionalization although it won't at this point. It could devote resources to teams commensurate with revenue to play players and establish roster caps. That would disburse the talent.
The equity crowd would squeal but the revenue ought to be allocated to the sports that earn it. CFB should be getting the lion's share of the revenue and 1/2 of that should go to the players. Let the coach decide how much to throw at each player (like NAIA). Those would be real dollars and while a Minnesota won't have the NIL to supplement, it would get a foot in the door with good players and from their, traditional recruiting would find its way back to the game, i.e., coach, academics, etc.
What's being proposed does nothing for a Minnesota. So $30,000 goes to each athlete. Good for the athletes although if I'm a football player, I wonder then as I would now, why is my skull being used to pay a softball player or a rower.