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re: Josh Pate talks about how college football will be unrecognizable in 5-10 years

Posted on 4/27/22 at 8:32 am to
Posted by WG_Dawg
Hoover
Member since Jun 2004
86552 posts
Posted on 4/27/22 at 8:32 am to
quote:

Players have a right to earn money


says who? It is most certainly not a right.

quote:

if you don't like it, choose another sport to get into, or am NFL team to cheer for.



do you not realize that one of the main reasons people prefer cfb over NFL is BECAUSE cfb didn't have corporate shite like this going on? Why the frick would someone all of a sudden become an NFL fan because they are unhappy that college is becoming more NFL-like?
Posted by so_comfort
Atlanta
Member since Oct 2014
725 posts
Posted on 4/27/22 at 12:10 pm to
quote:

says who? It is most certainly not a right.


Keg-stand Kavanaugh for one:

"The NCAA acknowledges that it controls the market for college athletes. The NCAA concedes that its compensation rules set the price of student athlete labor at a below-market rate. And the NCAA recognizes that student athletes currently have no meaningful ability to negotiate with the NCAA over the compensation rules.

The NCAA nonetheless asserts that its compensation rules are procompetitive because those rules help define the product of college sports. Specifically, the NCAA says that colleges may decline to pay student athletes because the defining feature of college sports, according to the NCAA, is that the student athletes are not paid.

In my view, that argument is circular and unpersuasive. The NCAA couches its arguments for not paying student athletes in innocuous labels. But the labels cannot disguise the reality: The NCAA’s business model would be flatly illegal in almost any other industry in America. All of the restaurants in a region cannot come together to cut cooks’ wages on the theory that “customers prefer” to eat food from low-paid cooks. Law firms cannot conspire to cabin lawyers’ salaries in the name of providing legal services out of a “love of the law.” Hospitals cannot agree to cap nurses’ income in order to create a “purer” form of helping the sick. News organizations cannot join forces to curtail pay to reporters to preserve a “tradition” of public-minded journalism. Movie studios cannot collude to slash benefits to camera crews to kindle a “spirit of amateurism” in Hollywood.

Price-fixing labor is price-fixing labor. And price-fixing labor is ordinarily a textbook antitrust problem because it extinguishes the free market in which individuals can otherwise obtain fair compensation for their work. See, e.g., Texaco Inc. v. Dagher, 547 U. S. 1, 5 (2006). Businesses like the NCAA cannot avoid the consequences of price-fixing labor by incorporating price-fixed labor into the definition of the product. Or to put it in more doctrinal terms, a monopsony cannot launder its price-fixing of labor by calling it product definition."
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