Maybe one day America's minor-league basketball system wont have anytin to do wit institutions of higher learnin.
And then you will have even fewer young people today without opportunities to go to college and get a free education
And then you will have more young people being justly compensated for their talents like y'all free market advocates stress.
Cartman slave...I mean, student athlete owner
Slave??? Wow, now thats a new one. If you call getting a free education at a high tuition school like St. John's being a slave then you must be smoking the funny stuff. My daughter, who was a REAL STUDENT is still paying off her college loan. I am sure she would have preferred to have been a so called slave. Your post is way out of line pal.
I'm sure your daughter worked her way thru college - in addition to attending class. And was paid for that work. What if she'd had to work 60 hours a week at that job (in ADDITION to her schoolwork as these kids are expected to) - year round (not just while school was in session) at something that earned the masters (school and NCAA) Millions of dollars, FOR WHICH SHE WASN'T PAID? I'm betting if your daughter was say a business major, she was even free to take a job offered by some business taking advantage of her business acumen and education and getting paid for it. While if these kids did something similar, they'd be banned from participating in their area of expertise, likely even removed from the school.
I'm sorry if you feel cheated because your daughter had to pay and didn't get a full scholarship (by the way, please don't take offense, but if your daugher was one of the top 60 high school students in HER area of study IN THE ENTIRE WORLD, as these three kids are, and didn't obtain a full scholarship, that would be on YOU - because full rides for that kind kind of top percentile prosect in EVERY field of study ARE availab.e
Sorry, but I also resent that "Real Student" reference. You mean unlike Sports or Music or theater majors (which I was)? These are accredited fields of study, offered by literally thousands of colleges. Subjects the majority of college students ("real students") WOULD FAIL MISERABLY AT. I'm sorry to use your daughter as part of this response, but you brought her into it. Tho obvioulsy I know nothing about her, the stats would say, these 3 kids would have a far better chance of succeeding in HER major, than she would have trying to pursue THEIRS.
This issue is NOT cut and dried, and it is certainly NOT a "way out of line" subject for discussion.
First of all, lets get a reality check here. If my daughter did work she never made more then a measly $10 an hour, surely not enough to pay off a $50,000 a year tuition. And no, I dont feel cheated at all. Unlike many college athletes, who are pampered, and have everything given to them on a silver platter, tutors, etc. she had to work for every thing she got, and I am glad she did. Her success today may be attributed to the work ethic she acquired in those years. And guess what, she was a D1 athlete to boot in the Patriot league where there is very little money given for college schlarships, and as a track person, she worked her butt off.
Secondly, my son earned a BFA and was one of the top, actually the top jazz saxophone player in the state of New York at the time of his HS graduation. He was offered several schollie offers, but not full rides with tuition. room and board and he was top 2 or 3 in the nation at what he did, so your argument there is completely bogus.
I take issue with people who come on sites and make ridiculous statements about these "poor" schollie athletes who are being taken advantage of at universities. thats a load of crap. For one, no one is forcing them to attend college and secondly, it is widely known that they dont have to function under the same rules that the rest of us do. The fact is, they are earning a good salary for what they are doing, get treated like royalty and get everything handed to them. Save your pity for the poor families with kids who get good grades but whose families cant afford to send them to a great school due to finances, there are plenty of stories like that around.