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Sports talk
College sports is dead
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<blockquote data-quote="Mescalero" data-source="post: 5132680" data-attributes="member: 21439"><p>Let's say you got a "full-ride" academic scholarship. You could still receive a free laptop, paid internship in the Summer, and other benefits. Your classmates on the football, basketball, and fencing teams couldn't per NCAA rules. And per NCAA rules, most athletes can't get jobs in the off-season. They can only play ball, go to class, and make billions for the NCAA and it's member institutions, but can't get a dime of it. That's what the US Supreme Court case was about, and that case now stands for the rule of law that the NCAA doesn't have an antitrust exemption.</p><p></p><p>Name, image, and likeness is separate. 98.5% of this site proclaims to be free market Republicans, yet profess horror at the thought of a 20 year old maximizing profits on his or her NIL.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Mescalero, post: 5132680, member: 21439"] Let’s say you got a “full-ride” academic scholarship. You could still receive a free laptop, paid internship in the Summer, and other benefits. Your classmates on the football, basketball, and fencing teams couldn’t per NCAA rules. And per NCAA rules, most athletes can’t get jobs in the off-season. They can only play ball, go to class, and make billions for the NCAA and it’s member institutions, but can’t get a dime of it. That’s what the US Supreme Court case was about, and that case now stands for the rule of law that the NCAA doesn’t have an antitrust exemption. Name, image, and likeness is separate. 98.5% of this site proclaims to be free market Republicans, yet profess horror at the thought of a 20 year old maximizing profits on his or her NIL. [/QUOTE]
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College sports is dead
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