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Insurance policies for returning players ...
Posted on 3/7/13 at 5:17 pm
Posted on 3/7/13 at 5:17 pm
For them or against them?
It was just announced that Jadeveon Clowney's family has successfully purchased a five million dollar policy covering his arse, just encase, this coming season.
They were able to do so with the help of the NCAA. It is the largest policy of its kind yet contracted for a student athlete.
It should be encouraged more often imho.
It was just announced that Jadeveon Clowney's family has successfully purchased a five million dollar policy covering his arse, just encase, this coming season.
They were able to do so with the help of the NCAA. It is the largest policy of its kind yet contracted for a student athlete.
It should be encouraged more often imho.
Posted on 3/7/13 at 5:18 pm to sorantable
Get rich or die trying ... is what I say.
Posted on 3/7/13 at 5:18 pm to scrooster
Yep. I agree with them. What happened to Willis McGehee and Marcus Lattimore should be proof enough to anyone that could present a counterpoint to that argument.
Posted on 3/7/13 at 5:20 pm to sorantable
Never have understood why this was not mandatory as a benefit of NCAA. If they are not paying the kids seems like the NCAA should do this for all players.
Posted on 3/7/13 at 5:21 pm to scrooster
Insurance is a fricking racket and the whole concept of it pisses me off... But yes, I am for this.

Posted on 3/7/13 at 5:32 pm to Cheese Grits
quote:
Never have understood why this was not mandatory as a benefit of NCAA. If they are not paying the kids seems like the NCAA should do this for all players.
Excellent point and I'm genuinely surprised that this is the firs time I can recall anyone suggesting this
Posted on 3/7/13 at 5:48 pm to undecided
yeah, it's a good idea. I wonder if the SEC could pool money to do it for our athletes. NCAA would probably consider it an illicit benefit though
Posted on 3/7/13 at 5:50 pm to tmc94
quote:
yeah, it's a good idea. I wonder if the SEC could pool money to do it for our athletes. NCAA would probably consider it an illicit benefit though
But if the B1G did it they would say it was "progressive" and "a step in the right direction."
Posted on 3/7/13 at 5:51 pm to scrooster
Their money, their future, their decision. I'm fine with it and nobody has the right to tell them otherwise.
Posted on 3/7/13 at 5:52 pm to tmc94
quote:
NCAA would probably consider it an illicit benefit though
The more I read about the Ed O'Bannon lawsuit, the more I think big changes are coming anyway. IF the plaintiffs win that case, the NCAA could become a thing of the past. The "superconferences" could develop their own organization.
It's going to be really interesting watching that all play out.
Posted on 3/7/13 at 5:52 pm to tmc94
The thing with insurance is the bigger the pool the lower the individual cost. If the NCAA did a blanket policy for all athletes it would be cheaper. The other benefit would be actual hard numbers on the debate of kids going pro early. If the NCAA was the data pool you would have hard numbers on what the actual reality was.
Posted on 3/7/13 at 6:02 pm to semotruman
quote:
The more I read about the Ed O'Bannon lawsuit, the more I think big changes are coming anyway. IF the plaintiffs win that case, the NCAA could become a thing of the past. The "superconferences" could develop their own organization.
It's going to be really interesting watching that all play out.
I've been following this also and I could see Insurance Policies for all NCAA athletes being one of the outcomes
FYI: Jon Solomon covers this for the Birmingham News/al.com and usually provides detailed articles from legit sources if your looking for someone to follow
Posted on 3/7/13 at 6:05 pm to Cheese Grits
sure but the money for insurance comes out of the member institutions pockets and the NCAA is made up of a bunch of poors. That's why I suggested the SEC. The cost per school would be minimal really compared to our budgets but asking Tulane to make an equal payment...well, that might not go well. The SEC could just take it out of our increased Sugar Bowl payout or something instead of giving us more money in the future. No one would even notice but the players would all be protected.
Posted on 3/7/13 at 6:23 pm to Bama54
I'm surprised that no one has yet asked the question ... "but who decides if a player is big time NFL material?"
Seems like this is where things could get dicey.
Anyone here ever think Tony Romo would do what he did, or Jeff Saturday, or Wes Welker, Jason Peters, Antonio Gates, James Harrison, Priest Holmes, Rod Smith, John Randall or ... especially Kurt Warner? Were any of those guys even drafted? Would any of those guys have qualified for one penny of NCAA insurance?
Therein lies the conundrum IMHO.
But hell yes, I am all for it - Marcus Lattimore is a prime example.
Seems like this is where things could get dicey.
Anyone here ever think Tony Romo would do what he did, or Jeff Saturday, or Wes Welker, Jason Peters, Antonio Gates, James Harrison, Priest Holmes, Rod Smith, John Randall or ... especially Kurt Warner? Were any of those guys even drafted? Would any of those guys have qualified for one penny of NCAA insurance?
Therein lies the conundrum IMHO.
But hell yes, I am all for it - Marcus Lattimore is a prime example.
Posted on 3/7/13 at 6:59 pm to undecided
quote:
I've been following this also and I could see Insurance Policies for all NCAA athletes being one of the outcomes
FYI: Jon Solomon covers this for the Birmingham News/al.com and usually provides detailed articles from legit sources if your looking for someone to follow
Thanks, I'll check him out. I just have a feeling that if that suit is successful, it's going to cause major upheaval. The NCAA and its member schools make a lot of money off using player images. And while TV spots, posters and apparel are one thing - video game usage is on a whole different level.
Like I said - it'll be interesting to watch it play out. The NCAA is afraid of this one.
Posted on 3/7/13 at 9:04 pm to semotruman
Someone on ESPN, discussing Noel's (I think it was Bilas), said that no insurance policy like these taken out has ever paid out a thin red dime. Not one. McGahee took out $2.5M and didn't get a penny.
It seem like peeing up a rope, if true.
It seem like peeing up a rope, if true.
Posted on 3/7/13 at 9:08 pm to the808bass
I don't see how these damn things can be afforded. The risk is just ridiculously high. And for stars who spend more time on the field/court than average players? It has to outweigh the odds of a car wreck by a factor of 10 at least.
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