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As a lawyer, in a situation with no NCAA how would

Posted on: July 28, 2021 at 11:52:47 CT
FIJItiger MU
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this work? Wouldn't this be very problematic to college football if it went away?

https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2011/10/the-shame-of-college-sports/308643/

Today, much of the NCAA’s moral authority—indeed much of the justification for its existence—is vested in its claim to protect what it calls the “student-athlete.” The term is meant to conjure the nobility of amateurism, and the precedence of scholarship over athletic endeavor. But the origins of the “student-athlete” lie not in a disinterested ideal but in a sophistic formulation designed, as the sports economist Andrew Zimbalist has written, to help the NCAA in its “fight against workmen’s compensation insurance claims for injured football players.”

“We crafted the term student-athlete,” Walter Byers himself wrote, “and soon it was embedded in all NCAA rules and interpretations.” The term came into play in the 1950s, when the widow of Ray Dennison, who had died from a head injury received while playing football in Colorado for the Fort Lewis A&M Aggies, filed for workmen’s-compensation death benefits. Did his football scholarship make the fatal collision a “work-related” accident? Was he a school employee, like his peers who worked part-time as teaching assistants and bookstore cashiers? Or was he a fluke victim of extracurricular pursuits? Given the hundreds of incapacitating injuries to college athletes each year, the answers to these questions had enormous consequences. The Colorado Supreme Court ultimately agreed with the school’s contention that he was not eligible for benefits, since the college was “not in the football business.”

The term student-athlete was deliberately ambiguous. College players were not students at play (which might understate their athletic obligations), nor were they just athletes in college (which might imply they were professionals). That they were high-performance athletes meant they could be forgiven for not meeting the academic standards of their peers; that they were students meant they did not have to be compensated, ever, for anything more than the cost of their studies. Student-athlete became the NCAA’s signature term, repeated constantly in and out of courtrooms.
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NCAA - TigerLawyer MU - 7/28 11:43:06
     NCAA is dead man walking IMO - jumbo73 MU - 7/28 15:19:18
     sec revenue with ou and tx added equals ncaa revenue(nm) - tmcats KSU - 7/28 13:19:13
          Nobody believes anything you post you POS LIAR. GTFO - Gary P. MU - 7/28 14:19:14
     RE: NCAA - wtk UT - 7/28 12:09:12
          So are you UTenn, or UTex? (nm) - TigerJackSwartz MU - 7/28 13:19:04
               Put your cursor on the UT(nm) - Fool on the Hill MU - 7/28 13:25:02
                    got it. Is interesting, though, the logos are the same - TigerJackSwartz MU - 7/28 13:42:19
     As a lawyer, in a situation with no NCAA how would - FIJItiger MU - 7/28 11:52:47
          Im not sure workmans comp is part of athletics now - STLTIGER MU - 7/28 12:07:22
               It exists-this link explains it fairly well - miz_zou MU - 7/28 12:44:13
          RE: As a lawyer, in a situation with no NCAA how would - TigerLawyer MU - 7/28 12:05:53
               I'm definitely of the opinion the NCAA is the definative - FIJItiger MU - 7/28 12:27:17
                    The famous Tark the Shark quote is the best summation of - DHighlander NWMSU - 7/28 13:00:21
                    Quite possible. But assuming there would never be - GA Tiger MU - 7/28 12:36:19
     Yep. The NCAA is completely unnecessary, and biased (nm) - zoomer 99 - 7/28 11:52:15




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