This is what makes me think CFB is dead. When players can come and go any time to the highest bidder without repercussions, that isnt college ball. That is pro ball or at worst, semi-pro ball. Practically guarantees the athlete isnt attending classes because the school isnt going to boot out a star player who they just paid millions of dollars for. And if they arent attending classes, they arent college students.
Not necessarily disagreeing, but this is not on the players. In truth at most of these schools they really aren’t going to class and haven’t been for decades now, nor are they encouraged to. It’s the adults, from the Universities, to the coaching staffs, to the bowl committees, to the alum and subway alum, everyone is either getting paid or pushing this financial model. At some point there was a choice where they could have insisted that these kids be student athletes but maybe damage the CFB product a little. They chose the product, and to keep getting paid. Now their conscience has them feeling they need to spread the wealth a little bit…finally..to the actual players.
I would love for it to be the other way, I think Universities should be in the business of educating all those enrolled there, but that is not the focus for most. I think the best coaching, nutrition, competition, platform, plus an education in whatever your backup plan is, should be enough, but only if the schools actually provide that. I agree it is killing CFB, (if it isn’t already dead) but its not the athletes doing it. Seriously they can’t even find a way to hold a bunch of cheaters who undermine the whole concept of sport accountable. Money corrupted CFB a long time ago, it just finally made it’s way down to the people who actually play it.