Sports Daily: College Athletes Granted Union Rights

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  • RaychelSnr
    Executive Editor
    • Jan 2007
    • 4845

    #1

    Sports Daily: College Athletes Granted Union Rights


    A court ruling came across the news wire yesterday that probably didn't catch your attention for too long, but it could have big implications on the way you watch college football and other NCAA sports in the future.

    The ruling handed down by the Chicago district of the National Labor Relations Board: College athletes now qualify as employees of their university.

    According to ESPN:
    Quote:
    <table border="0" cellpadding="6" cellspacing="0" width="100%"> <tbody><tr> <td class="alt2" style="border:1px inset"> NLRB regional director Peter Sung Ohr cited the players' time commitment to their sport and the fact that their scholarships were tied directly to their performance on the field as reasons for granting them union rights. </td> </tr> </tbody></table>
    While it's all conjecture at this point, if the ruling is upheld, we could see things such as player strikes or lockouts by entire athletic departments. Or even more extreme -- players receiving additional pay for the success of their team or individual performance. In other words, College Football/NFL-D-League season is just around the corner.

    Sound Off: Do you believe college athletes should be recognized as employees of their universities with full labor rights?

    Sports Headlines for March 27, 2014
    OS Executive Editor
    Check out my blog here at OS. Add me on Twitter.
  • braves_94
    Rookie
    • Jul 2013
    • 275

    #2
    This is crazy. They have no leverage. Labor unions in professional sports work because without them, the league has nothing. The league depends on players for viability. College is a little more complicated. You have a built in base from alumni and students. Players accepted scholarships knowing full well they weren't going to get pay. So what, they're going to strike. Mighty hard to align a labor force when it gets recycled every 4 years. So what will we have left? Look at baseball in it's modern state. 2/3 of all prospects are prep kids from upper to middle class families. The game is drawing better numbers than ever. So who will this ultimately effect, the urban kids. Strike long enough, and the college would probably take back the scholarships. I don't like this move. And I don't see anything good coming out of it. One, players strike and lose their ride. Or for some crazy reason, heads of athletic departments are going to bend to the will of players who will only represent the college for at most 4 years on the field. Then increase prices on everything from tickets, concessions, and parking. Then by paying them, they're also responsible for the liabilities that come with paying players to play football. More expenses will have to be met by higher revenues. Goodbye student section. Goodbye atmosphere.

    Comment

    • Junior Moe
      MVP
      • Jul 2009
      • 3869

      #3
      I don't think that this is a wise move. Sure, the NCAA is greedy and have exploited the "student-athlete" in a sense. But when you consider the fact that 99% of these kids go on to live in the real world, a 4 year degree and no debt is pretty good. Especially for the impoverished kids from rough areas. An education is the surest way to break that cycle.

      The NCAA needs to guarantee at least an academic scholarship. Give the kids a stipend that equals 40 hours a week subsidized by the NCAA with their hundred million dollar tv contracts. That would keep the small schools on an even playing field with the big boys.

      Finally, let the kids make a little money off their names. If someone wants to pay Johnny Football 5 grand for an autograph, let them. Give them a small portion of what's left off their jersey sales after the school and apparel company get their cuts. That would give the Tebow's and Clowney's of the world a chance to have a little extra cash for their heroics on the field and it is the free market at work. Most players would receive very little from jersey sales, but at least its something extra. As it stands now, the NCAA is hoarding and controlling all the money. Open it up a little and let these kids get in on it. They have a cash cow right now, don't ruin it by being greedy and tightfisted.

      Comment

      • RandyBass
        MVP
        • Dec 2009
        • 1179

        #4
        From ESPN article:

        "For now, the push is to unionize athletes at private schools, such as Northwestern, because the federal labor agency does not have jurisdiction over public universities."

        This is going to keep the ruling from from having any teeth.
        Last edited by RandyBass; 03-27-2014, 06:11 PM. Reason: post fixed

        Comment

        • XXstormmXX
          MVP
          • Aug 2013
          • 1751

          #5
          Re: Sports Daily: College Athletes Granted Union Rights

          Good for college players but the NCAA will probably just pass a rule saying if you unionize you lose your eligibility. IDK how this could actually work unless all the players did some sort of lockout type protest.
          INACTIVE

          Comment

          • GLASS87
            Banned
            • Nov 2013
            • 149

            #6
            Sorry, but this is bad for college players. The overwhelming majority of all collegiate athletes never play professionally which means they will trade their time for a working wage. College football is a game - not a job. Athletes on a scholarship are being paid very well for playing a game anyways. These athletes need representation from their parents and family... not business agents.

            The major issue is not whether they would receive monetary compensation or not but how negative unions are in general. The individual in a union literally has no say and has no self-worth. The union itself as a whole gains control over young children so the union as a whole benefits while the child is enslaved.

            Who cares how much money the school makes from these athletes? They are playing a game and no one is forcing them to play. If we were to reach a point where athletes are paid... we would never see a change in the top 10 teams. Then we would have to put in salary caps? I mean really... where would it end?

            Comment

            • Profit89
              Banned
              • Feb 2006
              • 612

              #7
              Schools have been exploiting them for years.

              Comment

              • Atax1s
                Rookie
                • Aug 2012
                • 79

                #8
                Nobody is discussing an important aspect of college athletes unionizing. Under federal law, their scholarships become taxable. Now maybe for the elite athletes it won't be an issue but for a volleyball player or a lacrosse player these scholarships, which can run well over 20k annually, will carry heavy taxation. The regular student athlete is going to pay for the perks that the top athletes get. This will turn out awfully.

                Comment

                • gausec
                  MVP
                  • Aug 2011
                  • 1034

                  #9
                  I feel like this is a good move for players, I'm not saying hey lets pay them a ton of money, but enough to buy some minor stuff, If you ever did college athletics you will know its impossible to balance school, and workouts, you can't get a job. Then you see the NCAA is bringing in all this money, yes I get it you get free schooling but the top atheltes who are the ones bringing the NCAA money don't care about the schooling and delaying there time till they join the league, and also tend to be the ones who come from lower socioeconomic backgrounds. However these players are the way the NCAA can give scholarships to other players and other sports. So in summary the system is flawed but needs some sort of change.
                  Cal is turning more guys into millionaires than wall-street.

                  Everyone went pro from the 2012 Kentucky team even the ball boy!

                  Comment

                  • Josam27o7
                    Pro
                    • Sep 2009
                    • 605

                    #10
                    This is great! College athletes and workers have been pillaged by corporate domination for too long. Unions are an important way for them to gain power against their corporate overloads who know only exploitation of the athlete/worker/environment in the name of profit.

                    @Glass87
                    Politely, I have to say you are wrong on this. As other sports and society have shown, the individual is powerless against the corporation without a union. Corporate management can just pick you off one by one and seize the lion's share of the money (college athletes have been dealing with this for too long!) With a union, as baseball players have shown, you can gain power together as a group.

                    @MMChrisS
                    I have to take issue with the way you presented part of this story. Why call athletes striking or receiving pay "extreme"? Why don't you call what athletes have to deal with today "extreme"? Be careful with your language as you can mistakenly frame things in an inappropriate manner.

                    Comment

                    • zanner
                      Pro
                      • Feb 2005
                      • 686

                      #11
                      Re: Sports Daily: College Athletes Granted Union Rights

                      Originally posted by Atax1s
                      Nobody is discussing an important aspect of college athletes unionizing. Under federal law, their scholarships become taxable. Now maybe for the elite athletes it won't be an issue but for a volleyball player or a lacrosse player these scholarships, which can run well over 20k annually, will carry heavy taxation. The regular student athlete is going to pay for the perks that the top athletes get. This will turn out awfully.
                      I believe Scholarships are taxable now but the burden is negligible when you talking about them being dependents.

                      Sent from my DROID RAZR using Tapatalk

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