Most would presume that he already does pay his kids but now Calipari wants do secede from the NCAA so he can legally do it.
http://www.businessinsider.com/this-...players-2011-6
The minute that players become employees I will lose all interest in college sports.
Says in there he wants to pay them a "living wage." WTF is that? They already have housing covered and the last time I checked, a pack of ramen noodles still costs about 15 cents.
So he wants to create the NBDL with a bunch more teams? What a tool.
It shows what he thinks of the education and experience his players get. I mean, if you could get a full ride degree, major life lessons from the greatest coaches on the planet, the best preparations for the next level, be that basketball or life, wouldn't that be "payment" enough?
Oh but then you'd be at Duke, not the Greater Lexington Point Guard Development League.
Calipayme will be the death of this program. This is the last straw for me. I just threw away my UK hoodie and popped my mini wildcat ball. The fries just aint worth that much grease anymore.
“Those two kids, they’re champions,” Krzyzewski said of his senior leaders. “They’re trying to teach the other kids how to become that, and it’s a long road to become that.”
At least $33,000, apparently.
i don't understand the antipathy towards changing the rules to give players a 20K salary. They generate a TON of revenue and its not exactly going to charity, is it?
I don't think there's a ton of antipathy towards discussions, but people don't want it become a highest bidding school game. While it's true that the men's basketball team generates a ton of revenue for the school, the athletic departments of the VAST majority of schools LOSE money (including Duke). In fact, the last report I saw said Duke basketball on its own lost money, with expenses exceeding certain BCS teams by 5x as much (although it was said it was an accounting issue, I'm not really sure).
If you pay basketball players, some argue that you have to pay other athletes which would put the athletic department even more in the hole than it already is. On top of that, it's not like basketball players aren't getting anything out of it. They get a FREE education with ALL EXPENSES paid. And they get admitted to a school like Duke which has very high standards academically for its students. (I'm not arguing they're not deserving of admission; simply stating that typical academic standards are relaxed.) Graduating from such a school will provide them opportunities they probably wouldn't have had had they not been a basketball player. The players on the men's basketball team have an INSANE number of food points which they can use to buy food from off campus eateries (as long as they get it delivered on campus). They really should have no expenses unless they want a car.
Compared to a Duke student paying full freight, the basketball players are getting $55k a year or so in tuition, room, board, merchandise. Duke also (understandably) spends a large sum on travel expenses and other perks (which is $15k per individual for the summer trip to Beijing/Dubai alone). On top of that, they get preferred class scheduling, free tutoring, access to athlete-only facilities and academic resources, etc. Athletes are not treated poorly by any stretch.
Having said that, I do believe there is an unreasonable cap of income earned from summer work, but I understand that the NCAA is trying to prevent a school from employing its athletes in a non-existent summer job and then paying them $20k for the work. But if an athlete gets a job at a Wall Street bank over the summer (I believe Melchionni did that prior to his senior year), they should be able to get the full internship money.
In any event, I think the people above just don't want to see NCAA basketball become a minor league. It's main purpose is NOT to prepare its athletes for the NBA. Nor is it to provide for the livelihood through sports. Rather, schools provide a free education and opportunity for a lifetime of success while providing a highly competitive athletic atmosphere and opportunities for growth.
Let's look at who Cal impresses with all this talk about players' salaries for college players: COLLEGE RECRUITS.
You need look no further. Foremost, Cal will use anything to get an "edge" on other coaches. Look at the players he has already brought to Kentucky by blowing up kids' egos. This is just another piece of candy from the Candy Man.
Man, if your Mom made you wear that color when you were a baby, and you're still wearing it, it's time to grow up!
You mean aside from offering true student-athletes a chance compete and develop their athletic skills?
Students, who often attend events in non-revenue sports, would not be expected to pay to watch any sport. So, your question implies the statement (is this the contrapositive?), "the only purpose of collegiate athletics is to sell tickets to people not enrolled in the university." Which is likely to get a universal "hunh?"
Your question is a reasonable one to ask from time to time.
sagegrouse
Non-revenue sports help define college life. But, even sticking within revenue sports, not every basketball program generates tons of dollars from their basketball programs. Do you suggest having teams like Duke and UNC pay their players while schools like VCU and Butler, who have far smaller athletic budgets, don't pay theirs?
My Quick Smells Like French Toast.
Becca ward was an olympian before she came to duke. She has a coach outside of the duke coach. I think she would have been just fine whether fencing was an NCAA sport or not. There are tons of sports which aren't NCAA sanctioned and athletes manage to excel at them.
That said, I think athletics serve a vitally important vein to the culture of a university. Simply the idea that one can and should succeed in things besides academics is a very important lesson (something that a lot of students at colleges like Duke often forget).
I'm just pointing out that the fact that athletes try to excel at what they do is not necessarily a strong justification for non revenue sports (if it was, then why don't we have every sport available? underwater basket weaving anyone?)
April 1