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Thread: Future of NCAA basketball

  1. #1
    Senior Member Mark Miller's Avatar
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    Future of NCAA basketball

    Hard to know for sure at this point what the news of autonomy for the "big five" conferences will mean for the future of NCAA basketball.

    However, I could see basketball breaking into a sort of football setup in the future where you would have the top 125-150 programs in what amounts to the FBS, another 150 or so programs in what amounts to the FCS, followed by DII and DIII.

    I would prefer the current setup because the NCAA Tournament is great in large part because of upsets like the one Mercer pulled off over Duke last season.

    It does appear to me the Big East is poised to remain at the highest level, thanks in large part to the TV contract from FoxSports 1 and the commitment level of the 10 schools in the league.

  2. #2
    I can't help wondering if the ruling in the Obannon case might have a greater impact on schools/programs than the autonomy vote.

    I don't understand the potential ramifications of the $5,000 per year per athlete trust fund. Does that apply to every athlete in every sport? Does it apply only to football and basketball players?

    What are the criteria for receiving payment?

    It seems to me that this ruling could prove to be more expensive for universities than the increased stipend of roughly $3,000 per year per athlete.

    Does this mean that combined it will cost schools at roughly $8,000 per year per athlete?

    I'm so confused!

    (And I still don't understand if all D-1 athletes will get an increased stipend of just football and basketball players.)

  3. #3
    Phantom, I think you are correct that the OB ruling has a larger effect.

    However as I understand it, the players wouldn't be paid by the University directly, but though licensing, advertising, etc. paid by a third party. One of the proposals is that the money would be held in trust and distributed every year. I might be completely wrong about this.

    It would be open to all athletes, but my guess is that only those with the highest profile could benefit. So for instance, the local booster who owns a car dealership could have Duane Wilson appear in a couple of his ads and gets paid (eventually) $5,000 for it. That same opportunity will likely not be available to the back up volleyball player.

  4. #4
    Sultan,

    If that's the case - that a third party would provide the money - then I'm not sure I get why all the hullabaloo. The articles I read mentioned video games. Well, very, very few of these college athletes will ever have their images appear in video games.

    But the articles also mentioned "broadcast" of "broadcasts." Does that mean that any athlete who appears on a national - or even local - telecast is entitled to reimbursement? ESPN said the ruling does affect them financially, that the networks don't have to pay into these trust funds, but that it will involve solely the schools and the athletes.

    What about athletes' pictures being in game programs that are sold at the games?

    I understand your car dealership example, but the ruling, it seems to me, has to have a much greater impact than that.

    It is all very murky to me.

  5. #5
    Yeah you are probably right...and I honestly don't know.

  6. #6
    The OB ruling is the death knell for college sports. What will prevent T Boon from paying OSU players outrageous sums for personal appearances, ads, etc?

    Edited to add:
    Saw the $5k minimum, but how soon does the Big 5 vote to raise the limit to an amount unattainable for the rest of the schools?
    TBoon could pay each and every football, bball player a ton.
    Last edited by pbiflyer; 08-09-2014 at 10:18 AM.
    "I'll say it again...Dwyane Wade is the 3rd best SG of all-time...right behind Jordan and Bryant." - Mark Jackson

  7. #7
    I don't think schools can raise that sum as it was set as the maximum by the court. Now the plaintiffs may appeal that limit, but they might not. But if they don't, and the decision is not overturned at some point, then the Ego 5 conferences can't mess with it.

  8. #8
    Quote Originally Posted by Phantom Warrior View Post
    I don't think schools can raise that sum as it was set as the maximum by the court. Now the plaintiffs may appeal that limit, but they might not. But if they don't, and the decision is not overturned at some point, then the Ego 5 conferences can't mess with it.
    I guess the NCAA's new Division I (P5) could unilaterally increase that sum? The judge just added something that was not there before.

  9. #9
    The court said the NCAA could set those limits. The Power 5, through their new voting power, might vote to do so. But I doubt it. They need a 60% threshold and my guess is that even within the Power 5, 40% of the schools wouldn't want it raised for the reasons that pbi state.

  10. #10

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