- April 10th, 2013, 1:48 pm
#426973
I didn't read the article in full but I would like to comment on the general premise of a guaranteed 4/5 year scholarship. As many may or may not know when a prospective student athlete is being "courted" from high school to college to play sports, generally, most recruiting coaches will inform the player and parents that it is a "one year" renewable scholarship. Many people who are not acquainted with this think that a scholarship is automatically 4 years and have never heard of a one-year renewable since that was the way it was prior to the early 80's, maybe the late 70's.
Back then a student had a guaranteed 4 year ride (pending academics, policy, etc...); however many student/athletes were not "giving their all" because they had that 4 year guarantee; hence the birth of one-year renewable scholarships. If a Coach felt that a student/athlete wasn't giving their all, or not attending practices, etc... now they can threaten and/or initiate not renewing the scholarship. This worked well for many years; however Coaches today have taken that situation and added a few more "under the radar" caveats to it. Some of those caveats is "finding better talent". If an athlete just isn't as good as the coaches thought he/she would be there are many instances where they will not renew because they (the Coaches) have found someone better. This I believe is unfair IF the athlete is doing everything they can and are being told. To continue IMO if the athlete is doing everything that is told to him/her, and is academically passing all classes and keeps their noses clean then the college/University has to honor the entire 4/5 year scholarship. IF the athlete does poorly in class, breaks team policy, doesn't show up for practice then yes, that person doesn't deserve to keep a scholarship and the school should give it to a more deserving individual. This is also true when a Coach "singles out" a weaker player and make it so miserable and embarrassing that an athlete will quit the team. I have NEVER heard of this at LU but there are several articles stating that this happens all the time. Sonny Vaccaro, some know him as working at Nike, has had several lawsuit pending over this exact situation with the NCAA along with paying athlete stipends. There is a lot of Internet material out there on him and the lawsuit.
Lastly, regarding stipends I do believe that players should be compensated extra for their athletic talents. Regardless of sport a student athletes schedule completely revolves around school and their perspective sport. Rarely, especially at the D1 level does an athlete have a lot of "free time". Additionally practices, much of the time, will interfere with cafeteria hours, etc... forcing an athlete to use their own money to pay for meals, extra gasoline if living off-campus, etc... These are just couple of examples of why I feel an athlete should get a "small" stipend.
Sorry for rambling; but just my .02 worth for those looking for an opinion (lol)...