The term “student-athlete” is at best inaccurate and at worst a fiction. Once upon a time college football was organized and run by and for students. Maybe it’s time to return to that by starting all over.
Which institution of higher learning in America will one day become the University of Chicago of the twenty-first century? We don’t know yet. But there will be one. There almost has to be. In truth, there likely will be more than one. After all, the potential candidates are legion. Who knows, there may even be a race to determine which such institution will be first.
First in what—or the first to do what, you ask? Hint: The race in question concerns sports. Sports?? Hmmm… maybe it will be the first university to apply Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) to all of its varsity teams, thereby assuring that the composition of each squad will be nearly as precise a reflection of the racial and ethnic proportions of American society as is humanly possible to measure. Wait a minute! No university would ever leap into that race to the bottom for its football or basketball teams.
Well then, how about becoming the first university to field varsity sports teams for transgendered athletes? No, but that isn’t a bad guess, not to mention an ideologically inspired one.
That leaves open a few possibilities for individual sports. Maybe there will be a race to be the first school to have a transgendered man (meaning a woman) win a men’s swimming event, thereby proving once and for all that there really is no difference between a male and a female. No, that’s as unlikely as a transgendered woman (meaning a man) losing in a woman’s swimming competition.
Maybe it’s time for hint number two: This sports related issue has everything to do with money and next to nothing to do with education. Ah, now were finally getting warmer.
Well then, it must be the first school to jettison any number of varsity sports in the name of assuring a full roster of players for the one varsity sport that reigns over all the others. No, a number of schools have already done just that, including my own alma mater of the University of Minnesota. But now we are not just warm. We’re near to boiling instead.
Think back to the University of Chicago and its 1937 decision to abandon intercollegiate football. That would be the same university that produced the first Heisman trophy winner in running back Jay Berwanger. It would also be the first school to pay its football coach more than it paid its president. In other words, intercollegiate football was a big deal at the University of Chicago when it decided to get out of the business of college football.
Yes, even then college football was already well on its way to becoming a business. And today? It’s big business. Just ask any number of our multi-million dollar coaches.
Of course, it’s not big business on the order of John D. Rockefeller, whose money created the University of Chicago in the first place. Nor is it big business on the order of an Andrew Carnegie. Let’s be honest. The modern business model for college football is neither Rockefeller’s nor Carnegie’s, each of whom was determined to drive competition out of business. Whether the tactic was to cut prices, demand rebates, or employ various economies, the idea was to eliminate competitors.
Not so for college football. This big business needs competitors, most of which could be otherwise defined as patsies. How else to better ensure getting to that no longer lofty status of becoming “bowl eligible?”
To be sure, there are bowls (Weed-Eater) and there are bowls (Rose). Just as there are conferences (the Pac Ten or what’s left of it) and there are conferences (the Big Ten and the SEC, each of which is now on the verge of mushrooming beyond unwieldy proportions). And they all have a role to play. At least for the moment.
But for how long? The Wild West of college football that the NCAA was created to contain has returned. It was 1906 when the NCAA came into being at the behest of President Theodore Roosevelt. Injuries were rampant. Players were dying. And what were then called “tramp athletes” were forever on the move from school to school.
Roosevelt’s progressive era was determined to create order out of chaos, including football chaos on and off the field. And it did—at least insofar as football was concerned. As a result, an NCAA-imposed order reigned supreme for decades. But no more.
Thanks to the innocuously-named “transfer portal,” the “tramp athlete” has returned. But no tramps need apply. These vagabonds are full bore entrepreneurs. And why not? If coaches can bail on their contracts, (while dipping into their ample bank accounts to satisfy buy out provisions), why shouldn’t players be able to move from school to school without sitting out a year, but with a better NIL (name-image-likeness) contract stuffed in a different jersey.
So what about those NIL contracts? Why not? A case can be made that an athletic scholarship is quite valuable in and of itself. But another case can be made that these student-athletes are being exploited, given the size of the economic pie that is big time college football.
In many respects the current version of football chaos makes good, if not necessarily perfect, sense. Everybody wins—at least money-wise. There is a certain irony to it as well. The NCAA that came into existence to create order is now an NCAA that is presiding (?) over a great deal of disorder.
It may also find itself presiding over a declining number of member schools with big-time athletic programs. Unlike Rockefeller and Carnegie, the really big time programs may well be indirectly driving their “competitors” out of business as well.
What’s also true is that the term “student-athlete” is at best inaccurate and at worst a fiction. Once upon a time college football was organized and run by and for students. Maybe it’s time to return to that by starting all over.
Higher education in America is currently under fire on many fronts for many good reasons. Therefore, it’s high time–and maybe even past time—to get back to the basics on many fronts within these institutions. Football is surely one of them.
Nonetheless, it might still take a courageous college president, or three (these presidents seem to be making news in threesomes these days, to abandon an enterprise that increasingly has little to do with education. But it likely will—and certainly should—happen. And who knows? Maybe once this ball starts rolling there will be an evolution toward European-style club sports instead of college-driven sport.
These clubs could then become feeders for the NFL. Heck, they could eventually provide some real competition for the smug and stodgy N(o) F(un) L(eague). And, as we know, competition is a good thing, even if the Rockefellers and Carnegies might vehemently disagree.
Such a scenario could leave the SEC sitting there all by itself—with perhaps the likes of Ohio State and Michigan on the outside looking in. Here’s the solution to that. Let them all play each other on a round robin basis throughout the fall. Head to head, maybe even twice—and without any patsies along the way or in between.
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The featured image is a photograph of the Pomona College football team, 1911, which is in the public domain, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
Truth be told!
create order out of chaos — this is needed now in the whole world.
The effects on middle school and high school students are even worse. Perhaps one football player from an entire school will attend a D-1 school to play football. (It’s more likely that one won’t.)
But every one of the other 60 players on the team will not. They have literally sacrificed their high school education to be a practice squad for that one.
And the majority cannot read, write, or perform math at an 8th grade level. (“Proficient” at the end of high school is really performance at the 8th grade level.)
Yes. They made that choice.
Yes. Their parents supported that choice. But that choice will relegate them to the lower class (perhaps lower middle class) for life.
Seems like a bad gamble to me…
The original idea of a student-athlete still thrives at many schools, just not those with huge budgets. The graduate school I attended, St. John’s College – Annapolis, had (and still has) a thriving intramural program behind a handful of varsity sports. My undergraduate school, MIT, “supports a broad intercollegiate athletic program offering 33 varsity sports, the largest NCAA Division III program in the nation” as well as a thriving intramural program. The sports philosophy at both of those institutions, and I venture to guess the majority of Division III schools, is radically different. Should we end college football, as the headline opines? Feel free to do so at institutions where money rules over education.
“Such a scenario could leave the SEC sitting there all by itself—with perhaps the likes of Ohio State and Michigan on the outside looking in. Here’s the solution to that. Let them all play each other on a round robin basis throughout the fall. Head to head, maybe even twice—and without any patsies along the way or in between.”
Amen!!
Fortunately, there is a well-functioning existing model for this type of organization: The English Football (soccer, in America) Leagues.
These leagues have multiple divisions distinguished principally by performance; the teams in the top division (Premier League) are by and large more proficient than the teams in the B league, who are in turn better than those in the C league.
At the end of every season, the four best teams in each division are elevated to the next higher division, and the four worst teams are “relegated” to the next lower division. Teams play solely within their division. The net effect of this organization is that virtually every game is competitive, and this basic axiom is one of the major factors that causes English football to maintain the continued interest of its fans.
Compare that to US College Football. It’s truly pathetic to see Ohio State compete every year against Youngstown State or Akron — and ALWAYS in Columbus — just so the visiting teams can take home a truckload of money along with their lopsided loss.
Moving US College Football to the English league system, in which each division has 26 teams where the odd-numbered teams (ranked from their performance the prior year) play each other and the even-numbered teams do the same — for a 12-game regular season — would greatly add to the competitiveness of the system and render every game, in every division, interesting.
We can continue to maintain the playoff system (top 4 teams in the top division), the other major bowls (non-playoff teams in the top division), and minor bowls (high-ranking teams in the lower divisions). Again, every game is virtually assured to be competitive.
The big stumbling block towards the achievement of this sensible organization is the conference system. Conferences rake in an enormous amount of television money from the networks, and there’s no way that they’ll abandon the gravy train without an epic battle. What we’re seeing now (in slow motion) is the dissolution of the regional conference system; it is ludicrous for the Big Ten to contain teams in both Piscataway, NJ and Westwood, CA.
I would imagine that there would have to be some external influence that finally eliminates the conference system in college football, but moving its organization to something similar to English League Football would be the best thing for the players, the fans, the schools, and (incidentally), the NFL.
The 1937 decision by the University of Chicago to drop its football program did not have money as a factor. Currently the $$ are so huge that no University would take this step. I like your idea of more head-to-head competition between the “powerhouse” teams during the regular season.
What about establishing a college football landscape without scholarships, nil, or transfer portals like the Ivy league where actual student athletes play football for the fun of the game and the pride of the school? Eliminate the semi-pro status of the present system. Support a college athletic system whereby the college aspect is emphasized for students to attend college and achieve academic excellence – which is what college is all about – isn’t it. But a concept such as this would abandon a magnitude of athletes who attend universities to play ball as a stepping stone to get hired in the NFL. This would be a national tragedy for many of the athletes who have an opportunity to navigate out from an economically disadvantaged culture. Perhaps for this group of athletes, a Junior College system of intercollegiate sports could provide for an adequate level of education, provide a shortened path to an NFL paycheck, and allow for showcasing an athlete’s athletic skills to entertain fans, and provide sports agents with adequate exposure for signing contracts?
I can’t agree with this piece too much. I am appalled at what is happening in the college football enterprise in this country; why it is operating under the auspices of supposed institutions of higher learning, the exploitation of athletes (not student athletes), and obscene coaching contracts just to name a few head-scratchers. Former Texas A&M head coach Jimbo Fisher was recently shown the door but not before being handed a guarantee of some $76M over the next 7 years…for being fired. What! Consider as well the recent implementation of the transfer portal and NIL and one has to wonder where the corruption will finally end.
I have little hope however that the system will change or go away for two reasons. First, there is simply too much money and prestige flowing through the system. Secondly, college football fans in the US are too rabid to see objectively the rot and so pull back their support.
College football has attracted me since Tv came to my home in the 1950’s.
And I have enjoyed it on TV and in person since that time.
But the era of NIL is testing my loyalty.
But wait, where can I learn what college football teams actually play WITHOUT the big NIL payrolls?
I would appreciate any suggestions.