Simple, I don't think that word means what you think it means.
JFC ... "the solution is simple, the execution is complex but it is also doable."
You seriously went from:
just let teams pay players, put them under contract and put a cap in place. It is that simple.
To:
The answer is simple: treat college football as a professional league and acknowledge what we have created.
1. Write the rules at the NCAA and conference level to allow this.
2. You will have to more than likely move mens football and mens basketball to other entities that are independent of the University to get around title IX.
and ...
So what needs to happen:
1. P5 conferences need to break away and form their own organization to replace the NCAA because what is going to work for them is definitely not going to work for non P5 teams.
2. The new organization is going to be a semi-pro league (if you like it or not)
3. New league will need to do the following:
- Put the kids under contract and pay them
- Have a salary cap for the teams
- Kids can still have independent NIL deals but I'm betting most advertisers and money people will contribute to the schools
In this one thread, less than one page, you went from simple to complex as you evolved.
You went from the simplicity of simply putting them under contract (as if that were simple) to:
- Rewriting that rules of the NCAA, and the rules of the 10 conferences. Never mind this is a billion dollar organization that is 112 years old. And, the practical finding in Alston basically means the conferences will have to run their own operations and rules. How the hell do you do that when the NCAA can't control it, and the conferences can't meet to coordinate what each is going to do. That's the whole anti-trust aspect of this. Each conference likely has to be it's own entity in order to avoid anti-trust implications.
- Splitting out sports as independent entities ... yeah, that's simple to do ... lol. And, have you ever thought for a moment that the schools don't want to "get around" Title IX? That the expansion of women's sports is desirable?
- You mention the difference between P5 and G5. Imagine how hard that will be ... then think that there is really a Big Two and Little Three in the P5. But I am sure the resolution to that is "simple."
- Finally, all this has to be done whether the fan "likes or not." Yeah, let's do something that the fans have said they won't watch - see Alston - quickly and simply, because hey, who the hell cares what the customer actually wants.
We do agree that something has to be done. I am not denying that. No one would. But you basically gave up the argument when you said the "solution is simple, the execution is complex." What the fuck are you even talking about? It's the execution that matters and as you admit, it's really, really hard and complex.