He's eligible to play in 26. This is why Congress needs to act.
Fixed that for you....He's eligible to play in 26. This is whyCongress needs to actwe need collective bargaining.
Nope, it wont be any better at all when a localFixed that for you....
I don't want any part of the push away from amateurism. I don't think ya'll will like where collective bargaining and 'employment' ultimately take us. It's not going to be anywhere with actual rules, because the schools are still divided. And it's not going to look anything like it has in the past. At least now we can still halfway call it college.Fixed that for you....
Well, that and have a crooked as 17 local judge that cares more about his school’s football team and/or bribe payment than actually upholding the integrity of our lawsSo I guess you can do whatever the 17 you want, and then as long as you cry and say it's a mental health issue and not getting what you want will greatly affect your mental health, then you're good?
The only ones I can remember the NCAA winning was Bediako (after he played five games) and the Tennessee quarterback Aguilar.So it doesn't matter that he broke the law by placing over 2,900 bets while at Indiana, (40 involving his own team), he only had to say he would "suffer a probable, imminent, and irreparable injury if this Court does not issue this temporary injunction because he will be unable to participate as a member of Texas Tech University's 2026 Football season." SO FUC-KIN what, you broke the law, man up and live with the consequences MFer.
Has the NCAA won any court battles of any kind in recent years? They are useless, time to replace them
Yep, and you know what pisses me off more than anything about this case? I’d bet that nearly every poster on this board has been impacted in some way by mental health during the last decade. Depression, anxiety, friend/family suicides, or at the very least… challenges at work/school or with raising kids due to the long list of side effects stemming from this growing, legitimate disease.College football has been my fall Saturdays for decades. It didn't matter if we were good or not, I watched it all, all day long. This stuff is changing that fast.
Exactly, I understand to some degree why courts can use commerce laws to say you can't deny someone making money off of themselves during the time they play college football. But why and how does a court get to decide basic eligibility? Like, why does a court get to randomly decide that a guy gets a 6th year without any medical documentation that he warrants a medical redshirt? And why can a court decide that a gambling addict who is betting on college football get to retain eligibility when the player clearly knew the rule about gambling from the beginning? Next, I feel there will be a case where a player appeals to be eligible to play for a school where he is not even an enrolled student. I mean, why not, the NCAA apparently has no authority to make any rules or any decisions on who is eligible and who is not. Why should someone actually have to be a student at the college to play for that college? Its unfair!Nope, it wont be any better at all when a local
Judge can just throw the agreement out at will for his team. It's going to take actual laws from Congress to rein in the judges. An anti-trust waiver would be a start. THEN you can talk about collective bargaining.
Replace them with what?So it doesn't matter that he broke the law by placing over 2,900 bets while at Indiana, (40 involving his own team), he only had to say he would "suffer a probable, imminent, and irreparable injury if this Court does not issue this temporary injunction because he will be unable to participate as a member of Texas Tech University's 2026 Football season." SO FUC-KIN what, you broke the law, man up and live with the consequences MFer.
Has the NCAA won any court battles of any kind in recent years? They are useless, time to replace them
Why would a judge be able to throw out a collectively bargained agreement?Nope, it wont be any better at all when a local
Judge can just throw the agreement out at will for his team. It's going to take actual laws from Congress to rein in the judges. An anti-trust waiver would be a start. THEN you can talk about collective bargaining.
But why would the players collectively bargain when they already have everything they could possibly want?Fixed that for you....
The schools dont have much to bargsin with, but they could make things more desirable with guaranteed minimum salaries tied to revenue, health and education benefits extending beyond player eligibility, collective NIL deals for thinMy question on CBA is why would the players agree to any changes without some kind of federal framework? The players are the ones benefiting right now with no caps on salaries, no rules, etc. Why would they voluntarily give that up? And I agree, CBA is the most likely end game here, but without some kind of stick to get the players to the table, why would they agree to hurt themselves?
Why can a judge throw out the rules of a voluntarily joined organization?Why would a judge be able to throw out a collectively bargained agreement?
I mean, I'm not real clear on how we get to a valid collective bargaining agreement without unions and the like. But if they did reach the point of collectively bargaining, and the athletes agreed to harsh penalties for gambling, how could a court just throw that out?
There is not better way to force change than an empty stadium. If the Ole Miss opponents wanted to flex their muscles, they should do the same as long as Trinidad is eligible.A couple of Big 12 AD’s are openly talking about not playing Texas Tech in football this season. That would be awesome if the whole conference refused to play them, but I’m sure it won’t happen. Georgia’s AD also said Georgia won’t schedule Texas Tech for anything until further notice.
Nebraska is doing the same thing.A couple of Big 12 AD’s are openly talking about not playing Texas Tech in football this season. That would be awesome if the whole conference refused to play them, but I’m sure it won’t happen. Georgia’s AD also said Georgia won’t schedule Texas Tech for anything until further notice.
Big Ten say FAFO
I like thatThe easiest fix is the playoff committee to just not put them in the rankings no matter how good of a record they have
Years of litigation has paved the way.Why can a judge throw out the rules of a voluntarily joined organization?
They'll just sue in a Lubbock County court.The easiest fix is the playoff committee to just not put them in the rankings no matter how good of a record they have
Think that would hold now? The first time Ole Miss is denied they get Lafayette County Judge Earl Van Dorn V to throw the agreement out. The next step is signing cut NFL players. You can bet that's coming.Years of litigation has paved the way.
But a collective bargaining agreement would require arbitration and a jurisdictional agreement keeping the issues out of local state courts.
Im not sure what you're arguing, but, yes, I am confident a collective bargaining agreement would be honored by the courts. There may be loopholes, but the agreement would be enforced.Think that would hold now? The first time Ole Miss is denied they get Lafayette County Judge Earl Van Dorn V to throw the agreement out. The next step is signing cut NFL players. You can bet that's coming.