Mama Sue Posted January 20, 2020 Posted January 20, 2020 This isn't hard tounderstand guys...AND GALS! need to be politically correct now a days.... Quote
geaux_sioux Posted January 20, 2020 Posted January 20, 2020 7 minutes ago, Mama Sue said: This isn't hard tounderstand guys...AND GALS! need to be politically correct now a days.... Guys can be gender neutral if we’re gonna split PC hairs 1 Quote
Mama Sue Posted January 20, 2020 Posted January 20, 2020 6 minutes ago, geaux_sioux said: Guys can be gender neutral if we’re gonna split PC hairs The last on-line survey I took asked gender. There were 5 answers and none were male or female. I checked other and wrote in female. I did not even recognize the 5 categories! Lots of time, effort, and money are being spent on gender issues right now....I withdraw my request!!! Quote
geaux_sioux Posted January 20, 2020 Posted January 20, 2020 54 minutes ago, Mama Sue said: The last on-line survey I took asked gender. There were 5 answers and none were male or female. I checked other and wrote in female. I did not even recognize the 5 categories! Lots of time, effort, and money are being spent on gender issues right now....I withdraw my request!!! And none of them at stuff is gonna stick for the simple fact that it makes communicating less efficient. Languages evolve in the other direction. We don’t adopt new things in language to make things more complicated. 1 Quote
Siouxphan27 Posted January 20, 2020 Posted January 20, 2020 1 hour ago, Mama Sue said: This isn't hard tounderstand guys...AND GALS! need to be politically correct now a days.... Read somewhere that we’re supposed to use ‘they’ to describe everyone now, as it would be presumptuous to assume gender. On this holiday, I really enjoy hearing Martin Luther King‘s “They have a dream” speech 1 Quote
Popular Post DeadPoets Posted January 20, 2020 Popular Post Posted January 20, 2020 First time poster, but long time lurker. Thought I would throw in a few anecdotes from a former D2 football player to illustrate just how crazy some of these rules can be. I was personally involved in the first 2, while the third was a teammate. These happened 25+ years ago. 1. Teammate and I were asked to give a short speech at end-of-year awards banquet for our former conference. Driving there, being at the banquet, and driving home took probably took around 4 hours total. They gave us each $25 as an honorarium. We had to turn that into the compliance office so they could return it to the conference. They couldn't even pay us for gas - about 100 miles worth. Obviously, we would not have been invited to speak if not for our lofty status as D2 football players, but the $25 honorarium certainly wasn't anything more than any other speaker would have received. 2. My mother was running a fundraiser for a group at my former HS. It was a dunk tank at a local carnival type event. She needed dunkees. I volunteered, not as a football player, but as an alumnus and as a son. I imagine there may have been a handful people who would know I played college football, but that was not going to be advertised. As far as most people would know, I would just be some Joe Shmoe being dunked. School said, not so fast - that may violate NCAA policy. 3. Teammate appeared in a small newspaper ad for a local store. From what I can recall, it made no mention of his status as a D2 football player. I always assumed he shopped there quite often and that is how he landed the gig. I can't imagine it paid very much, if anything. He was suspended for 1 game. To me, these are much crazier outcomes from NCAA policy than a superstar D1 athlete trying to cash in on his/her image. I realize there is a slippery slope, but there should be some allowance for athletes to do/earn what any other non-athlete could for the same work. Why should they be penalized? I suppose the now allowed stipend on top of the scholarship helps in this manner, but there is still room for improvement. One final anecdote concerning NCAA and money. I did not receive any football scholarship money until my 4th year. I had been receiving significant academic scholarships. In fact, my redshirt freshman year, my total academic scholarships (some one-time scholarships, some renewable) were greater than tuition + room/board. Yeah for me. My 4th year, coach said I would get X amount of $ from a partial football scholarship. Later this was reduced when compliance realized, that, when combined with my academic scholarship, I would have greater than a full-ride. My academic scholarship was about 80% of a full-ride. I know, I know, poor me with my full-ride scholarship, but why couldn't I fully benefit from what I earned - especially considering the academic side was so much bigger than the football side. 5 Quote
geaux_sioux Posted January 20, 2020 Posted January 20, 2020 36 minutes ago, DeadPoets said: First time poster, but long time lurker. Thought I would throw in a few anecdotes from a former D2 football player to illustrate just how crazy some of these rules can be. I was personally involved in the first 2, while the third was a teammate. These happened 25+ years ago. 1. Teammate and I were asked to give a short speech at end-of-year awards banquet for our former conference. Driving there, being at the banquet, and driving home took probably took around 4 hours total. They gave us each $25 as an honorarium. We had to turn that into the compliance office so they could return it to the conference. They couldn't even pay us for gas - about 100 miles worth. Obviously, we would not have been invited to speak if not for our lofty status as D2 football players, but the $25 honorarium certainly wasn't anything more than any other speaker would have received. 2. My mother was running a fundraiser for a group at my former HS. It was a dunk tank at a local carnival type event. She needed dunkees. I volunteered, not as a football player, but as an alumnus and as a son. I imagine there may have been a handful people who would know I played college football, but that was not going to be advertised. As far as most people would know, I would just be some Joe Shmoe being dunked. School said, not so fast - that may violate NCAA policy. 3. Teammate appeared in a small newspaper ad for a local store. From what I can recall, it made no mention of his status as a D2 football player. I always assumed he shopped there quite often and that is how he landed the gig. I can't imagine it paid very much, if anything. He was suspended for 1 game. To me, these are much crazier outcomes from NCAA policy than a superstar D1 athlete trying to cash in on his/her image. I realize there is a slippery slope, but there should be some allowance for athletes to do/earn what any other non-athlete could for the same work. Why should they be penalized? I suppose the now allowed stipend on top of the scholarship helps in this manner, but there is still room for improvement. One final anecdote concerning NCAA and money. I did not receive any football scholarship money until my 4th year. I had been receiving significant academic scholarships. In fact, my redshirt freshman year, my total academic scholarships (some one-time scholarships, some renewable) were greater than tuition + room/board. Yeah for me. My 4th year, coach said I would get X amount of $ from a partial football scholarship. Later this was reduced when compliance realized, that, when combined with my academic scholarship, I would have greater than a full-ride. My academic scholarship was about 80% of a full-ride. I know, I know, poor me with my full-ride scholarship, but why couldn't I fully benefit from what I earned - especially considering the academic side was so much bigger than the football side. It’s estimated that Johnny Football missed out on upwards of $10 million that he could have made off of his likeness while in college. Instead the school and NCAA are the only ones pulling in mountains of cash from high level guys like this. Quote
Siouxphan27 Posted January 20, 2020 Posted January 20, 2020 1 hour ago, DeadPoets said: First time poster, but long time lurker. Thought I would throw in a few anecdotes from a former D2 football player to illustrate just how crazy some of these rules can be. I was personally involved in the first 2, while the third was a teammate. These happened 25+ years ago. 1. Teammate and I were asked to give a short speech at end-of-year awards banquet for our former conference. Driving there, being at the banquet, and driving home took probably took around 4 hours total. They gave us each $25 as an honorarium. We had to turn that into the compliance office so they could return it to the conference. They couldn't even pay us for gas - about 100 miles worth. Obviously, we would not have been invited to speak if not for our lofty status as D2 football players, but the $25 honorarium certainly wasn't anything more than any other speaker would have received. 2. My mother was running a fundraiser for a group at my former HS. It was a dunk tank at a local carnival type event. She needed dunkees. I volunteered, not as a football player, but as an alumnus and as a son. I imagine there may have been a handful people who would know I played college football, but that was not going to be advertised. As far as most people would know, I would just be some Joe Shmoe being dunked. School said, not so fast - that may violate NCAA policy. 3. Teammate appeared in a small newspaper ad for a local store. From what I can recall, it made no mention of his status as a D2 football player. I always assumed he shopped there quite often and that is how he landed the gig. I can't imagine it paid very much, if anything. He was suspended for 1 game. To me, these are much crazier outcomes from NCAA policy than a superstar D1 athlete trying to cash in on his/her image. I realize there is a slippery slope, but there should be some allowance for athletes to do/earn what any other non-athlete could for the same work. Why should they be penalized? I suppose the now allowed stipend on top of the scholarship helps in this manner, but there is still room for improvement. One final anecdote concerning NCAA and money. I did not receive any football scholarship money until my 4th year. I had been receiving significant academic scholarships. In fact, my redshirt freshman year, my total academic scholarships (some one-time scholarships, some renewable) were greater than tuition + room/board. Yeah for me. My 4th year, coach said I would get X amount of $ from a partial football scholarship. Later this was reduced when compliance realized, that, when combined with my academic scholarship, I would have greater than a full-ride. My academic scholarship was about 80% of a full-ride. I know, I know, poor me with my full-ride scholarship, but why couldn't I fully benefit from what I earned - especially considering the academic side was so much bigger than the football side. Thanks for posting and sharing your thoughts and experiences. Those are some great examples to consider regarding this issue. Welcome to non-lurker status! 2 Quote
UNDhoops Posted January 20, 2020 Posted January 20, 2020 16 hours ago, JohnboyND7 said: If you are good enough to skip college to play professionally then there will be a team that wants you. This isn't hard to understand guys... Brandon Jennings was the 10th pick in the draft and didnt play a ton in Europe. A lot of leagues will take veteran guys who have played in europe for years already because they know the leagues//teams/coaches, etc. and because they dont develop guys like the NBA does, so maybe it is hard to understand for some people Quote
iramurphy Posted January 21, 2020 Posted January 21, 2020 10 hours ago, geaux_sioux said: It’s estimated that Johnny Football missed out on upwards of $10 million that he could have made off of his likeness while in college. Instead the school and NCAA are the only ones pulling in mountains of cash from high level guys like this. Manziel redshirted in 2011 but made the travel squad. He had 2 outstanding years in 2012 and 2013 including winning the Heisman and finishing runner up the next year. A full ride for an instate kid at Texas A&M is $28,000 per year. In addition he flew all over the country for 3 years. He had free hotel and free meals. Assume 6 away games per year. At the end of his RFr and Soph years he also had free trips and stays in NY. He also had trips with hotels and meals for bowl games. Clothing/shoes etc also add up. If another student does same travel/meals/stay a conservative guess would be $1000 per away game for flight/hotel/meals. I don’t know the exact number but you get the picture. In addition to a free education, he gets many other perks. He plays a game for $40,000 or more per year for 3 years. The redshirt year his isn’t yet very marketable. How much would his endorsements be worth? Could be millions but others who have entry level jobs don’t usually get to cash in on their abilities right away. Mandrill and others need the colleges and the resources of those schools including the free marketing provided by the SID’s to capitalize on their success to say nothing of the unheralded teammates who won’t get endorsements but are an important part of the success of the stars. Quote
iramurphy Posted January 21, 2020 Posted January 21, 2020 11 hours ago, DeadPoets said: First time poster, but long time lurker. Thought I would throw in a few anecdotes from a former D2 football player to illustrate just how crazy some of these rules can be. I was personally involved in the first 2, while the third was a teammate. These happened 25+ years ago. 1. Teammate and I were asked to give a short speech at end-of-year awards banquet for our former conference. Driving there, being at the banquet, and driving home took probably took around 4 hours total. They gave us each $25 as an honorarium. We had to turn that into the compliance office so they could return it to the conference. They couldn't even pay us for gas - about 100 miles worth. Obviously, we would not have been invited to speak if not for our lofty status as D2 football players, but the $25 honorarium certainly wasn't anything more than any other speaker would have received. 2. My mother was running a fundraiser for a group at my former HS. It was a dunk tank at a local carnival type event. She needed dunkees. I volunteered, not as a football player, but as an alumnus and as a son. I imagine there may have been a handful people who would know I played college football, but that was not going to be advertised. As far as most people would know, I would just be some Joe Shmoe being dunked. School said, not so fast - that may violate NCAA policy. 3. Teammate appeared in a small newspaper ad for a local store. From what I can recall, it made no mention of his status as a D2 football player. I always assumed he shopped there quite often and that is how he landed the gig. I can't imagine it paid very much, if anything. He was suspended for 1 game. To me, these are much crazier outcomes from NCAA policy than a superstar D1 athlete trying to cash in on his/her image. I realize there is a slippery slope, but there should be some allowance for athletes to do/earn what any other non-athlete could for the same work. Why should they be penalized? I suppose the now allowed stipend on top of the scholarship helps in this manner, but there is still room for improvement. One final anecdote concerning NCAA and money. I did not receive any football scholarship money until my 4th year. I had been receiving significant academic scholarships. In fact, my redshirt freshman year, my total academic scholarships (some one-time scholarships, some renewable) were greater than tuition + room/board. Yeah for me. My 4th year, coach said I would get X amount of $ from a partial football scholarship. Later this was reduced when compliance realized, that, when combined with my academic scholarship, I would have greater than a full-ride. My academic scholarship was about 80% of a full-ride. I know, I know, poor me with my full-ride scholarship, but why couldn't I fully benefit from what I earned - especially considering the academic side was so much bigger than the football side. #1 I believe you could have been reimbursed for your expenses. Athletes who are flown to Conference Media Days don’t have to pay their own expenses. Usually the Conference picks up tab for expenses but no honorarium. #2. You could have done the “dunk tank” as long as you didn’t take money or compensation. #3. I believe is a violation. Your points are well taken. We used to have to fill out a questionnaire listing all scholarship monies (regardless of where it came from) and any money we made from summer jobs or part-time jobs. The total of those funds was limited to not a lot more than the total of tuition/books/room/board/fees and estimated expenses. I believe the NCAA still requires that info. It’s complicated, but even academic scholarships for athletes are often counted against the schools total scholarship allotment. Many athletes used to work in the summer or part time during the school year for boosters. Before that was changed, that’s how the big time programs paid athletes. That is also why the NCAA changed the rules which hurt the players who are on partial scholarships and who need to work. 1 Quote
geaux_sioux Posted January 21, 2020 Posted January 21, 2020 21 minutes ago, iramurphy said: Manziel redshirted in 2011 but made the travel squad. He had 2 outstanding years in 2012 and 2013 including winning the Heisman and finishing runner up the next year. A full ride for an instate kid at Texas A&M is $28,000 per year. In addition he flew all over the country for 3 years. He had free hotel and free meals. Assume 6 away games per year. At the end of his RFr and Soph years he also had free trips and stays in NY. He also had trips with hotels and meals for bowl games. Clothing/shoes etc also add up. If another student does same travel/meals/stay a conservative guess would be $1000 per away game for flight/hotel/meals. I don’t know the exact number but you get the picture. In addition to a free education, he gets many other perks. He plays a game for $40,000 or more per year for 3 years. The redshirt year his isn’t yet very marketable. How much would his endorsements be worth? Could be millions but others who have entry level jobs don’t usually get to cash in on their abilities right away. Mandrill and others need the colleges and the resources of those schools including the free marketing provided by the SID’s to capitalize on their success to say nothing of the unheralded teammates who won’t get endorsements but are an important part of the success of the stars. Nobody shows up to watch “others who have entry level jobs” 1 Quote
iramurphy Posted January 21, 2020 Posted January 21, 2020 Just now, geaux_sioux said: Nobody shows up to watch “others who have entry level jobs” No, but entry level employees earn the employers money don’t they? Most aren’t as valuable as experienced employees but sometimes you get one who is smarter and outworks the others and interacts with your customers in a way that is noticeable early on. They are money in the bank. They may move up the pay scale quickly or be compensated with bonuses but many don’t earn what they are worth right away. I know it’s not exactly apples to apples but I think too many minimize the compensation these athletes already receive at the major programs. Same happens in others jobs, granted usually on a smaller $ scale. Quote
geaux_sioux Posted January 21, 2020 Posted January 21, 2020 10 minutes ago, iramurphy said: No, but entry level employees earn the employers money don’t they? Most aren’t as valuable as experienced employees but sometimes you get one who is smarter and outworks the others and interacts with your customers in a way that is noticeable early on. They are money in the bank. They may move up the pay scale quickly or be compensated with bonuses but many don’t earn what they are worth right away. I know it’s not exactly apples to apples but I think too many minimize the compensation these athletes already receive at the major programs. Same happens in others jobs, granted usually on a smaller $ scale. They can also negotiate for their contract. Apples and kumquats my friend. 1 Quote
iramurphy Posted January 21, 2020 Posted January 21, 2020 4 minutes ago, geaux_sioux said: They can also negotiate for their contract. Apples and kumquats my friend. Depends. I said it wasn’t apples to apples. I hadn’t thought of kumquats. Good one. Quote
bison73 Posted January 21, 2020 Posted January 21, 2020 52 minutes ago, iramurphy said: Manziel redshirted in 2011 but made the travel squad. He had 2 outstanding years in 2012 and 2013 including winning the Heisman and finishing runner up the next year. A full ride for an instate kid at Texas A&M is $28,000 per year. In addition he flew all over the country for 3 years. He had free hotel and free meals. Assume 6 away games per year. At the end of his RFr and Soph years he also had free trips and stays in NY. He also had trips with hotels and meals for bowl games. Clothing/shoes etc also add up. If another student does same travel/meals/stay a conservative guess would be $1000 per away game for flight/hotel/meals. I don’t know the exact number but you get the picture. In addition to a free education, he gets many other perks. He plays a game for $40,000 or more per year for 3 years. The redshirt year his isn’t yet very marketable. How much would his endorsements be worth? Could be millions but others who have entry level jobs don’t usually get to cash in on their abilities right away. Mandrill and others need the colleges and the resources of those schools including the free marketing provided by the SID’s to capitalize on their success to say nothing of the unheralded teammates who won’t get endorsements but are an important part of the success of the stars. Have you ever figured out the number of hours you put in training, practice, film study, meetings, travel time, game time, etc etc etc????Away games youre on the clock 24/7. If youre being paid to play football youre also being paid to go to class and study. How many hours a week does that entail? In fact you arent making minimum wage. Quote
Mama Sue Posted January 21, 2020 Posted January 21, 2020 8 hours ago, bison73 said: Have you ever figured out the number of hours you put in training, practice, film study, meetings, travel time, game time, etc etc etc????Away games youre on the clock 24/7. If youre being paid to play football youre also being paid to go to class and study. How many hours a week does that entail? In fact you arent making minimum wage. Jeopardy Question: what is pro sports? Seriously? You forgot going to the bathroom....Do you want to track hours, get paid, and submit a bill for TP too? i rest my case about unknown issues and abuses.... this statement leaves the door wide open! 1 1 Quote
geaux_sioux Posted January 21, 2020 Posted January 21, 2020 9 hours ago, bison73 said: Have you ever figured out the number of hours you put in training, practice, film study, meetings, travel time, game time, etc etc etc????Away games youre on the clock 24/7. If youre being paid to play football youre also being paid to go to class and study. How many hours a week does that entail? In fact you arent making minimum wage. Off season is limited to 8 hrs a week of contact with coaches I believe. 1 Quote
Bison06 Posted January 21, 2020 Posted January 21, 2020 7 minutes ago, geaux_sioux said: Off season is limited to 8 hrs a week of contact with coaches I believe. Does that include strength coaches? That seems low. Quote
geaux_sioux Posted January 21, 2020 Posted January 21, 2020 1 minute ago, Bison06 said: Does that include strength coaches? That seems low. It probably seems low for you because NDSU seems to find “extra time” in the day for this stuff. 2 Quote
Bison06 Posted January 21, 2020 Posted January 21, 2020 54 minutes ago, Mama Sue said: Jeopardy Question: what is pro sports? Seriously? You forgot going to the bathroom....Do you want to track hours, get paid, and submit a bill for TP too? i rest my case about unknown issues and abuses.... this statement leaves the door wide open! So because corruption of the rules is very likely, we shouldn’t push for a more equitable set of rules for all parties involved? Imagine if our law system followed this logic. People will still break speed limits so why have them at all. Etc, etc. Quote
Bison06 Posted January 21, 2020 Posted January 21, 2020 2 minutes ago, geaux_sioux said: It probably seems low for you because NDSU seems to find “extra time” in the day for this stuff. Lol, that must be it. Quote
geaux_sioux Posted January 21, 2020 Posted January 21, 2020 17 minutes ago, Bison06 said: Lol, that must be it. Quote
Bison06 Posted January 21, 2020 Posted January 21, 2020 10 minutes ago, geaux_sioux said: So captain practice, 7 on 7 without coaches present or any time on your own doesn’t count it looks like. Now the numbers are adding up. Quote
geaux_sioux Posted January 21, 2020 Posted January 21, 2020 4 minutes ago, Bison06 said: So captain practice, 7 on 7 without coaches present or any time on your own doesn’t count it looks like. Now the numbers are adding up. Yea that’s why I stipulated contact with coaches. More specifically coaching. Quote
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