{"id":23904,"date":"2021-01-26T13:49:53","date_gmt":"2021-01-26T13:49:53","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.currentaffairs.org\/2021\/01\/the-ncaas-compromises-on-paying-athletes-are-bullshit\/"},"modified":"2021-02-03T10:01:58","modified_gmt":"2021-02-03T10:01:58","slug":"the-ncaas-compromises-on-paying-athletes-are-bullshit","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/2021\/01\/26\/the-ncaas-compromises-on-paying-athletes-are-bullshit\/","title":{"rendered":"The NCAA\u2019s \u2018Compromises\u2019 on Paying Athletes Are Bullshit"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
Like so many of our nation\u2019s beloved institutions, in recent years the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) has proven much less stable than previously thought. For the better part of a century, the NCAA has robbed its workers, the athletes who participate in \u201camateur\u201d college sports, of all the immense wealth that they create. A recent heightening of this system\u2019s inherent contradictions, exacerbated by the choice to send unpaid athletes to work<\/a> in the midst of the pandemic, has forced the NCAA to admit that some type of reform is necessary. But what will that reform be?<\/p>\n\n\n\n In the last two years, legislators across the country have finally come around on the idea that college athletes should be allowed to profit from their labor. Lawmakers in California<\/a>, Florida<\/a>, Colorado<\/a>, and elsewhere have already passed laws to this effect, the earliest of which will come into force on July 1 of this year. Many more state legislatures are considering similar bills. The NCAA has asked Congress to weigh in<\/a>, fearing an unenforceable \u201cpatchwork\u201d of state laws, and several bills have appeared at the federal level as well. Within the next year, it seems likely that most, if not all, college athletes will be legally entitled to earn money from playing sports.<\/p>\n\n\n\n This situation feels unprecedented\u2014unpaid labor in college sports is as American as the flyover before an NFL game<\/a>\u2014but it\u2019s playing out in a predictably American way. Having realized that some <\/em>regulation is going to happen and some <\/em>athletes are going to make money, the representatives of those currently profiting have set about turning their own, limited vision for change into legislation. NCAA bureaucrats, conference officials, university administrations, and athletic directors now seek to put the issue to bed while minimizing the threat to their own bottom line. <\/p>\n\n\n\n Broadly speaking, every recently-passed or pending bill on this issue falls into one of two buckets: those that recognize that players are entitled to the wealth they create, and those that do not. The NCAA and its Republican allies are willing to allow players to make money off advertising deals and sponsorships, creating new side-hustles for athletes without redirecting any of the money that currently flows into college sports\u2014the NCAA reports<\/a> that its members took in $18.9 billion in revenue in 2019. Other lawmakers, like Senators Cory Booker and Richard Blumenthal, want to force schools to take a percentage of their sports-related income and share it with the athletes whose labor created it, guaranteeing athletes compensation rather than simply removing the barriers.* The difference between these two approaches, between allowing college athletes to make money and actually<\/em> paying college athletes<\/em>, is profound. It\u2019s the difference between \u201caccess to healthcare for all\u201d and Medicare for All, between quietly acknowledging an injustice and actually correcting it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Every single piece of legislation that has been passed or proposed on this issue allows some degree of \u201cNIL\u201d rights; that is, it grants players the right to profit from the use of their name, image, and likeness. It should go without saying that these rights are inalienable, but giving them up is part of the deal when you agree to play an NCAA sport. Before the issue arrived at a statehouse near you, the fight over compensating college athletes raged in the courts. Lawsuits lodged by UCLA basketball player Ed O\u2019Bannon led to some high-profile wins for athletes: in 2014, O\u2019Bannon\u2019s class-action suit<\/a> against EA Sports for the unlawful use of players\u2019 images in the NCAA Football <\/em>video game franchise resulted in a settlement of over $40 million and the discontinuation of the game. (The prospect of reviving the series is a suspiciously big<\/a> part of Cory Booker\u2019s messaging on this issue). The following year, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled<\/a> in favor of O\u2019Bannon and other players, deciding that the NCAA violated antitrust laws by denying athletes NIL rights. <\/p>\n\n\n\n (We should note that the Supreme Court recently decided to take up a different case, National Collegiate Athletic Association v. Alston<\/a>, which centers not around NIL rights but around the question of whether or not the NCAA can limit the extent to which schools compensate athletes. It\u2019s theoretically possible that SCOTUS could topple the NCAA in one fell swoop with its decision in this matter, but given that this court is more <\/em>conservative than the one that ruled in Janus and Citizens United, I\u2019m not predicting a win for the NCAA\u2019s workers.)<\/p>\n\n\n\n The NCAA has accepted, in principle, the idea that college athletes will get compensation for the use of their name, image, and likeness. That may sound like a watershed moment for an organization dedicated to amateurism, but it should surprise no one that the NCAA\u2019s proposal<\/a> for how best to enshrine NIL rights in law is chock full of restrictions that would prevent athletes from actually getting paid. Chief among them: the NCAA, as well as an athlete\u2019s school, would be able to bar athletes from signing deals that conflict with their own sponsorship deals, involve products or services that the NCAA doesn\u2019t approve of (alcohol and gambling, to name two), or undermine \u201cschool values.\u201d <\/p>\n\n\n\n In practice, that means broad powers for the NCAA and individual schools to stop athletes from making money. Under Armour wants to sign you, but you play at a school that partners with Nike? Too bad. DraftKings, the online sports betting company, want to put you in one of their ubiquitous commercials? Sorry, but gambling doesn\u2019t align with NCAA values. You\u2019ve worked out a deal to promote beard oil on your Instagram feed, but you just committed to BYU? Forget about it\u2014school policy prohibits facial hair<\/a>. More to the point, the NCAA also seeks to cap the amount of money players could make off ads, creating a committee that would determine what a \u201cfair\u201d rate for such deals is and prohibiting athletes from earning more than that.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Bills like the one recently passed in Colorado grant players NIL rights \u201cexcept as may be required by the rules or requirements of an athletic association of which an institution is a member,\u201d meaning that the NCAA can intervene in all the ways mentioned above. And even as it carefully, haltingly opens one door, the NCAA hopes to close another: bills like the one Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed<\/a> in June grant limited NIL rights but explicitly prohibit schools from paying athletes. <\/p>\n\n\n\n The NCAA loves to make hay over the issue of recruiting, insisting that NIL-granting legislation must also ensure that colleges cannot lure athletes to their programs with promises of financial compensation. But the notion that the recruiting process could ever not <\/em>involve financial calculations is absurd. Choosing a college is a financial decision for everyone, particularly those who are pinning their hopes for a long and prosperous professional career on a successful stint as a college athlete. Moreover, schools and their boosters have been using financial compensation<\/a> and expensive gifts like cars<\/a> to lure athletes to their campuses since long before the NCAA banned the practice, and it continues to this day. If college athletes are allowed to sign advertising deals, of course their choice of college will affect how much money they make, but that would be nothing new. Nevertheless, people like South Carolina Republican Rep. Jeff Duncan parrot<\/a> the NCAA\u2019s language as they promote compromise bills like the Student Athlete Level Playing Field Act, saying that Congress must maintain \u201cthe integrity and distinctiveness of college sports.\u201d The \u201cdistinctiveness\u201d in question is amateurism, the NCAA\u2019s word for unpaid labor.<\/p>\n\n\n\n The Level Playing Field Act, like the Florida law, explicitly stipulates<\/a> that athletes cannot be considered employees of their universities. Bills of this nature are not only inadequate, they are unjust. Labor is entitled to all that it creates, not merely whatever it can glean from side-hustles. As the wonks at FiveThirtyEight<\/em> have demonstrated<\/a>, some college athletes could get rich immediately if allowed to monetize their social media properties, but others, probably the huge majority, would barely be able to make a pittance. Whatever your views on influencer culture, it\u2019s a way for people to make money (interestingly, college cheerleaders<\/a> are already among those who do so), and the NCAA has no right to prevent college athletes from participating. Acknowledging that college athletes are people with the right to profit from their work would be a step in the right direction, but it\u2019s not the same as acknowledging that college athletes work for their schools. That would make them employees, entitled to the benefits that companies owe their workers by law, and that is what really scares the NCAA.<\/p>\n\n\n\n The NCAA holds that, while players should be allowed to profit off their own images, they cannot band together to license their images (as NFL and NBA players do, which is why their names and faces appear in EA\u2019s games) without a union<\/a>. A natural follow-up question would be, \u201cOk, then why can\u2019t they form a union?\u201d The NCAA\u2019s response would almost certainly involve some sort of patronizing paean to the glory of amateurism, but the real answer is that a union of college athletes would threaten the current system in a way that no single player ever could. A player like Clemson quarterback Trevor Lawrence, one of the most recognizable athletes in America, could probably make millions off of endorsement deals and social media partnerships, but he could not single-handedly win a cut of the $277 million<\/a> his conference, the ACC, made by selling its broadcasting rights in 2018-2019. <\/p>\n\n\n\n