coldnjl

August 4th, 2013 at 6:27 PM ^

I hate the NCAA and many believe that rule (forbidding him from profiting from his status as an NCAA athlete) is rediculous, however its a rule and while he is part of the NCAA umbrella, he needs to obey the rules, especially now when he is under one of the hottest burning spotlights that i can remember.

coldnjl

August 4th, 2013 at 8:52 PM ^

I see...sorry about misconstruing your point. My point was not to blame the NCAA, since the NCAA didn't cause Manziel to break the rule that every athlete knows exist. Now...blaming the NCAA for lack of enforcement (or uneven administration of those rules) or the rules themselves is fair game.

oriental andrew

August 4th, 2013 at 11:10 PM ^

Interestingly, I was chatting with a guy last night who used to be an assistant bball coach at a D-III school who attended several camps in Michigan (at UM and MSU) in the late 90s/early 00's.  Anyway, he said it's shocking how much crazy stuff goes on at the D-I level in terms of recruiting and keeping current players happy, even at the cleaner programs.  He's a bit out of the loop since he stopped coaching (now officiates at the D-III level), but still has a lot of connections.  I won't repeat the stories, but he did mention a few names and stories from a couple of the Big Ten schools, as well as local Chicago athletes who went elsewhere (especially the SEC).  

On topic, he hates that the NCAA rulebook is ridiculously long and arcane, but believes it's almost necessary because people are always finding creative ways around the rules.  For instance, he suggests that burner phones and calling cards are still used fairly extensively by recruiters to get around some of the calling restrictions, although less so now that they've amended the texting rules.  

Part of the problem, though, is that the rules are very specific and almost always reactionary.  Not unexpected in an organization like that, but really hinders the mission.  

So I agree that the way they go about business isn't the best way, but they are necessary in concept as an institution to level the playing field.  

thisisme08

August 5th, 2013 at 9:22 AM ^

This is why it would be better if the NCAA simply sanctioned or performed clearinghouse duties on a lot of the small stuff. 

Let schools hold their own camps (1-3 a year) rather than letting these AAU style 7v7 tourneys go on unchecked (read: team principles paying for items, runners etc.).  Let a player hold autograph signings and the money is held in trust. Let a musician have sell their songs on iTunes.     

There is a difference between a $1000 handshake and the washing the car on campus but to the NCAA they are of equal status.   

The FannMan

August 5th, 2013 at 12:49 PM ^

If you let a player sell autographs (or his jersey or anything else), then he can sell one to a booster for $1,000.  It is the same as a $1,000 handshake - except it would be legal if you let it happen.  Also, a school could tell a recurit that a booster or two wants to buy his autograph for $10,000 once he is a player at the school.  To the booster, the thing purchased is secondary - it is getting money to the player/recruit that is the point.

I gues you could cap the price at $5.00 an autograph right?  Fine, then Mr. Booster will take 200 (or 2000) of them.  

Ok, only two per customer, right?  Then please meet Mr. Booster's 100 (or 1000) friends who all happen to be employees at his company.  They all want two autographs and each have ten bucks that they may, or may not, have gotten from Mr. Booster.

The only way to stop all of the possible abuses is to just say no selling autographs, jerseys, socks, etc.   The alternative would mean that the better players in college would make a ton of money off of memorabilia, while their teammates do not.  It would also open up all kinds of stuff on the recruiting trail.

turtleboy

August 4th, 2013 at 5:38 PM ^

So when are we officially gonna change his name to Johnny Trainwreck? Seems like he's just a few short steps away from turning into the honey badger.

sum1valiant

August 4th, 2013 at 7:10 PM ^

I think that's a pretty ignorant statement. Have you really put any thought into this kids "transgressions" over the last few months? He's gone to major sporting events, overslept because he was probably drunk the night prior, and possibly took a cut of the millions of dollars people are making off of him. Something tells me the Honey Badger was up to a little more, and he was not evenly remotely close to the microscope that Manziel is currently under.

taistreetsmyhero

August 4th, 2013 at 8:23 PM ^

if we're ignoring the fact that "transgressions" are against NCAA rules, then I say honey badger's issues aren't a big deal at all either, because smoking weed is no more morally reprehensible than drinking (or especially underrage drinking).

Not really sure what you mean when you say, " Something tells me the Honey Badger was up to a little more." But for now, I'll assume that whatever you mean, it has to do with "pretty ignorant" assumptions.

So, point of my post? If we're ignoring the fact that the two broke NCAA rules repeadly and squandered (and are squandering) an unreal opportunity, then there's really nothing wrong that either are doing. But to ignore that fact is to ignore that some people just suck at making decisions more than regular humans...it is what it is.

sum1valiant

August 4th, 2013 at 9:43 PM ^

I'll concede that the Honey Badger comment was an "ignorant assumption", as I know nothing more than he failed a bunch of drug tests.  However, I can't yet say that Manziel sucks at making decisions more than regular humans.  Thus far, his transgressions don't warrant the amount of scrutiny he's receiving.  He's a superstar athlete/celebrity, but he's also a 20 year old kid.  

taistreetsmyhero

August 4th, 2013 at 10:10 PM ^

I guess I'm throwing Manziel under the bus because he seems to have the makings of a professional d-bag, and Honey Badger always gets thrown under the bus too, but he seems like a nice guy who just really loved weed. The biggest tragedy here (to me) is that he loved it so much that he resorted to synthetic weed (ew) and still got caught. Guy's story is sad, Manziel's is annoying.

FGB

August 4th, 2013 at 11:05 PM ^

of the "he's only 20 years old" argument.

That is bullshit, it's not an excuse to be a punk or breaking the law.  A million 20 year olds go through undergrad every year without getting into a brawl in a bar, not showing for work because they're drunk, or failing drug tests for work.  And those that do more often than not face an actual consequence for that.

Maybe these kids don't deserve any special scrutiny, but they do deserve an average amount of scrutiny for really bad judgment. 

sum1valiant

August 4th, 2013 at 11:15 PM ^

You're right, a million 20 year olds do exactly that, and an equal amount do the same type of things that he is doing now.  At this point, I think his age and the inordinate amount of scrutiny he receives is more to blame than his character or upbringing.  

FGB

August 4th, 2013 at 11:45 PM ^

think that an equal amount of 20 year college undergrads get arrested for bar brawls as do not, then I think we're at an impasse.

And those that do get arrested, even if it were a million, I would say they have a character flaw, and no, they don't get to blame it on them only being 20.  That's not an excuse.  It may be a reason, but it's not an excuse.

And don't get me started on the low character of wearing a Tim Tebow Jets jersey.

saveferris

August 5th, 2013 at 10:59 AM ^

The "he's only 20 years old" argument isn't any more tired than the holier than now attitude that many on the internet take when a high-profile college athlete is caught misbehaving.  I imagine if any of us were submitted to the same level of public scrutiny that we impose upon college football and basketball players, I'm guessing we probably wouldn't meet the standards that we set for them either.

cbs650

August 4th, 2013 at 10:17 PM ^

Manziel is is drinking under age which is illegal and honey badger was smoking weed which is illegal. Honey Badger had a substance abuse issue ans Manziel father believe he's developing a drinking problem. The comparisons seem just about right to me.

Section 1

August 4th, 2013 at 7:35 PM ^

He represented everything I adore about LSU football.

 

 

College men, from LSU;

went in dumb, come out dumb too.

Hustlin 'round Atlanta

in their alligator shoes.

Gettin' drunk every weekend at the barbecues.

 ~ Randy Newman

 

exmtroj

August 4th, 2013 at 8:21 PM ^

Well, if he isn't satisfied, he's more than welcome to leave and get a job that will pay him money, or join the military, go to trade school or community college, or anything else. Otherwise you suck it up for 2 or 3 years and go on to make your millions in the pros, if he even gets drafted at this point.

MaizeAndBlueWahoo

August 4th, 2013 at 8:41 PM ^

I know what you're getting at, but my point is, Google's fancypants building (and the name you get to put on your resume) makes it a coveted internship.  Since there's a reason people actively desire a Google internship over just any internship, there must be compensation involved, even if it's not in the form of a paycheck.

Likewise, athletes that claim the facilities at Oregon (or any other school) as part of the reason they went there can't really also make the claim that they're uncompensated.  Non-athletes don't get to hang out in the palace, after all.

MaizeAndBlueWahoo

August 4th, 2013 at 9:59 PM ^

That's one possible way of looking at it, but I think there's a different reason for each.  In Google's case, no amount of money can convince a salaried worker to stay at work for overtime, but a fancypants campus could.  And does, in fact.  Google's main motivation is to incentivize their workers to stick around.

As for Oregon, actually I think it'd be much more cost-effective to pay the players directly.  For the amount of money we've seen that players can be bought for (like, four or five figures, tops) Oregon could've taken the $68 million and paid thousands of players.  If they get a $10,000 stipend per season - way above what's being talked about - Phil Knight could've paid Oregon's share of stipends for 800 years.