We have examples of what this could look like.Also, this sounds like the "Who the Hell ever needs High School?" scenario. What in the world (other than education laws) would ever stop a huge number of potential pro/college (no difference now) athletes from only being parts of Pro-Prep teams without even the illusion of attending school? It is my out-of-date belief that going to school markedly helps certain people with Life and social-integrating skills and a touch of reality. .... but who the hell cares, I guess. Hey, baby, it's MONEY.
MLS teams have been running academies for....I wanna say a decade. European soccer clubs have been doing it for decades. Here is an article about how it works.
Where MLS academies are in 2021 – and how they're fueling Canada, USA ambitions | MLSSoccer.com
There are only eight countries to have ever won the World Cup. Every single one of them had two things in common: 1. They had a well-supported domestic league, and 2. That domestic league churned out talent for the national team. Forget about winning the World Cup: If you even
www.mlssoccer.com
Consider this, the NCAA college athletics system is built on the foundation that a college education is fair compensation for the athlete. We know that for the vast majority of college athletes this is a great deal. But for a significant number of athletes, this is a poor deal. The amount of money their work generates far outstrips the cost of an education. Compound that onto the reality that the NCAA has severely restrict or prohibited from developing revenue streams and it's not hard to see the appeal of "who the hell needs school". Especially when school will always be there, the ability to play high level sports won't (unless you are a freak like Brady, Lebron, or Kareem).
