HugeFan wrote:If there is no cap on paying players, that's fine for us. We are talking about 10 kids. Let's be real, the paying players is not going to be in the millions per player. $100k would be a huge number for Cheick Diallo type freshman. There are only 10-12 players on a basketball roster, so you are only talking about a million dollars per basketball school. And considering our FOX promotion and large markets, we would be able to market these kids.
At the other end of the spectrum, football would be paying 60 or so kids. That will get expensive. And are the F5 schools going to be paying the hoops kids more than they pay their football stars? Maybe Kentucky, Louisville, Kansas, Duke, Cuse and UNC, but otherwise the answer would be no way. So the hoops salaries would not sky rocket.
If paying players becomes a reality, the Big East is poised to really take advantage of that type of change. Probably moreso than any other conference. This is actually the type of landscape shift that could vault the big East from a current top 3 conference into THE premiere hoops conference in the nation.
alduflux wrote:HugeFan wrote:If there is no cap on paying players, that's fine for us. We are talking about 10 kids. Let's be real, the paying players is not going to be in the millions per player. $100k would be a huge number for Cheick Diallo type freshman. There are only 10-12 players on a basketball roster, so you are only talking about a million dollars per basketball school. And considering our FOX promotion and large markets, we would be able to market these kids.
At the other end of the spectrum, football would be paying 60 or so kids. That will get expensive. And are the F5 schools going to be paying the hoops kids more than they pay their football stars? Maybe Kentucky, Louisville, Kansas, Duke, Cuse and UNC, but otherwise the answer would be no way. So the hoops salaries would not sky rocket.
If paying players becomes a reality, the Big East is poised to really take advantage of that type of change. Probably moreso than any other conference. This is actually the type of landscape shift that could vault the big East from a current top 3 conference into THE premiere hoops conference in the nation.
I'm wondering why you think a team roster would only be around 1 mil if there is no cap? That number is extremely low.
Consider this. Of the major pro sports only MLB has no player or team cap, although it does have a luxury tax which may help suppress top end team payroll. What do all the pro sports have in common? In every instance the coach makes less then the highest paid players and most cases less money then half the team roster. In a free market the players are much more valuable then coaches. Why would college sport be any different? Additionally, coaches salaries would take a big hit. College coaches in all sports are currently overpaid in large part because the players are underpaid. Pro sports show that players are much more valuable then coaches.
If pay for play had no cap player payroll would be in the range of 40-50% of total expense as it is for most professional sports.
Unrestricted pay for play would devastate the Big East.
marquette wrote:Wow, you are assuming some pretty far-fetched facts. College coaches are more valuable than the players because 1. They will be with the program more than 4 years. 2. The best players will be on one year contracts because they want to jump to the NBA 3. The players who stay in college are looking at $100k salaries overseas, not the millions that NBA players make. 4. The revenue is not there. Combined football/basketball tv revenue is a small fraction of what even NHL teams make, so paying players that much money is simply out of the question. Football schools will have to use this limited revenue to pay every football player and every basketball player. $1 million seems kind of high to me for a basketball team.
EDIT: I'd also like to add that in my opinion paying players would destroy the atmosphere of collegiate sports as students no longer view the team as fellow students sharing the experience. That's something that the F5 will probably have to consider.
alduflux wrote:marquette wrote:Wow, you are assuming some pretty far-fetched facts. College coaches are more valuable than the players because 1. They will be with the program more than 4 years. 2. The best players will be on one year contracts because they want to jump to the NBA 3. The players who stay in college are looking at $100k salaries overseas, not the millions that NBA players make. 4. The revenue is not there. Combined football/basketball tv revenue is a small fraction of what even NHL teams make, so paying players that much money is simply out of the question. Football schools will have to use this limited revenue to pay every football player and every basketball player. $1 million seems kind of high to me for a basketball team.
EDIT: I'd also like to add that in my opinion paying players would destroy the atmosphere of collegiate sports as students no longer view the team as fellow students sharing the experience. That's something that the F5 will probably have to consider.
In a free market the payroll of a college team will represent a similar percent of total expense as a part of revenue as the pro teams experience.
The reason coaches are valuable in college is because they have a direct impact on which players choose to attend that school. When players start getting paid, the coach isn't valuable anymore because the pay determines where the player goes instead of the coach.
http://www.cnbc.com/2014/04/12/whats-a- ... arket.html
That article projects the average college basketball player value at 375,000 and that article was two years old, before the B!G and SEC get their huge pay raises.
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marquette wrote:From a basic common sense perspective that can't be true. These same players are worth $15,000-$100,000 on the open market currently (Low end D-League to mid-high Europe). The number of players who make millions on the open market (the NBA) is minuscule. If anything it is the school brand that is worth money. Furthermore, to say the average player is worth that much when you have 13 players per each of the 350+ teams in D1, and most of the athletic departments sell their return games to fund their athletic departments. Very few teams currently turn the $4.9 million dollars that average salary would require. I don't know who this Drexel professor is but there are way too many "might be" and "could be worth" statements in that report to call it anything resembling a solid source. Furthermore, using NBA and NFL revenue sharing agreements when there are Title IX implications in one and not the other is like comparing apples to black holes.
That article also relies on the assumption that Northwestern players were going to unionize. That didn't happen, and as I understand it only players at private schools even have that option. It was also prior to FCOA, which has addressed many of the common player complaints that paying players sought to fix.
DudeAnon wrote:The debate about what payers will get paid is really irrelevant. If the Big East maintains revenues similar to the P-5 than it can keep up with the arms race.
Personally, if the free market were to ensue I think players would get paid low 6 figures. Most p5 coaches are paid 1-3 million dollars. 50% of that is split among 10 scholarship players is around 100-150k. I have no problem with either.
Ultimately, I think what makes the Big East different is that we can't rely on our extensive alumni numbers for ratings. What we have to counter that is a presence in almost every major Midwest/East Coast city. I really think winning will determine whether or not we can keep up. If Georgetown were winning D.C. would be all over them. And that goes for St. John's, DePaul etc. So I think we have 9 years left with good money to turn our major market teams into winners. If that doesn't happen, the next negotiation may be a hard sell.
NJRedman wrote:Okay, for arguments sake lets say the P5 in FB decide to split off from the NCAA and start their own sports league and BBall tournament. They say we can come too. But all of their conferences are at 16 teams and they say we have to expand as well to add more teams to the BBall participant pool if we want to join them. Who would you add from all the left behinds (G5/A10/WCC) to get up to that #?
I would add UConn, Gonzaga, VCU, Dayton, UMass, Saint Mary's and Saint Louis.
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