Pretty good site...
"Porter goes on to make it clear that he understands now that football is just a business at LSU (see his comments after the jump). The fact that these kids are being conditioned to think that college football is just a business is only going to lead to further problems down the road. College football is not supposed to be a business, at least not according to the NCAA:
The NCAA espouses a collegiate model of athletics in which student-athletes participate in varsity sports as an avocation, balancing their academic, social and athletics experiences.
The NCAA is committed to the highest levels of integrity and sportsmanship, diversity and inclusion, amateurism, competitive equity and excellence in the classroom. The Association also believes in presidential leadership as the guiding force in operating athletics programs.
Sorry but we don't see anything in there about college athletics being a business.
Note to the NCAA: Elliott Porter was screwed out of his scholarship because of the loophole in
YOUR by-laws that allows coaches to accept more signed letters of intent then they legitimately have room for under the 85 scholarship limit.
YOUR loophole allows coaches to hedge their bets against academic attrition and injuries, essentially giving coaches free rein to gamble with the scholarship numbers."
BUT....
The author of the article uses the NCAA vision statement (or whatever that dribble is) as proof that LSU is not in step with NCAA philosophy when, in fact, it exposes the highest hypocracy of the NCAA when their statement refers to the "highest levels of integrity" or sports as an "avocation".
This is the same NCAA corporation that bends over making rules and changing rules that insure that athletes receive absolutely no compensation from the billions of dollars that their efforts produce in direct and indirect revenue.
NCAA football IS a business....for NCAA,inc. , the sports networks, the merchandizers, the ticket brokering websites, recruiting websites, etc...
...for everybody that is but the players; whom NCAA bylaws legislate into economic slavery or, as they put it " a collegial avocation that balances their academic, social and athletic experiences.
Click to expand...