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In Sports Blogs
Top college players deserve a piece of the pie
O.J. Mayo played one year at USC and is headed to the pros.  
By Steve Haywood
Special to OnMilwaukee.com

E-mail author | Author bio
More articles by Steve Haywood

What is a blog?  For us it is a short blurb that we write when the mood strikes us.  It can be first person, funny or informative. In short, a blog is whatever we want it to be. Published May 14, 2008 at 6:53 p.m.
Tags: oj mayo, steve haywood, college athletics, ncaa, reggie bush

I could tell a lie ... but I'm not going to be politically correct.

At the highest level, college athletics is the most immoral, hypocritical, self-serving business in this country. That being said, I will make my point clearly so there is no confusion.

If you are a high-end student-athlete that can take advantage of any scenario on your college campus and benefit from it, I don't look down on you for doing so (unless you gamble or throw games).

The noble idea of fair amateur competition does exist on some campuses, but look at major universities in major conferences with major money coming in from boosters, shoe contracts and radio-television contracts.

The student-athlete gets access to educational opportunities at the school, but the big beneficiaries are the NCAA, coaches who make six- and seven-figure contracts, the TV networks, school administrators and alums who get to brag about their teams. (I wish T. Boone Pickens was a UW-Whitewater alum).

The reason I blog about this is the recent tales of Reggie Bush, the former USC star and Heisman Trophy winner, and O.J. Mayo, the USC basketball star who is ditching college after one year to head for the NBA.

The stories are similar and sound like all these rumors or whispers you hear about the best athletes at the major colleges. They have "associates," who get them under the table money from agents in exchange for a future piece of the pie.

I find it hard to begrudge athletes for taking a piece of the pie when they can go to the campus bookstore and see their jerseys sell for $75 a pop when they only have 75 cents in their pocket. The star athletes turn on ESPN and see their names featured promoting big games. They see rich boosters bending over backward to accommodate their desires. They see slick-talking coaches bolt for bigger contracts, while players are locked into schools by red tape.

I know it is not the norm, but there are times when players get hurt, run out of eligibility or under perform and get thrown to the curb while the next recruiting class receives the red carpet treatment. I know there are people who say "But, they get this free education," but I counter by saying that athletes deserve a percentage of what they generate for the university.

I could tell a lie, but I won't. If you want to clean up the seedy side of college athletics, give these young people some of the big pot; stop hiding behind traditions that are out-dated and unjustifiable.



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Steve Haywood is host of "That Being Said," which airs most weekdays at 6 p.m. on 540 ESPN.

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Posted by diesel1976 on May 15, 2008 at 12:26 p.m. (report)

I do agree the university uses these athletes with no expectation for them to actually graduate. They could careless about that as long as they bring the university big money and recognition which brings in even more students to their school. Dont get me wrong I dont feel sorry for these players who get a free ride in college and then offered millions to enter the NBA. Its all about athletics not academics. Why do you think a head coach gets paid millions and the professors do not?

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Posted by Undatone on May 14, 2008 at 2:56 p.m. (report)

Here's an idea. Figure out what the athlete's fair share of the pie ought to be, then deduct expenses. Once the tuition, housing, meals and everything else the athlete gets from the school at no cost is paid back, athlete boy can get what's left. Considering the cost of college at places like Marquette, I can't imagine most of these guys would walk away with much more money than they're getting now. Boo hoo poor student athletes. What about the hard-working kids struggling every day to pay for their educations?

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