I applaud this very entertaining and informative story. I really do. Gives you some insight to college players. However, my original point stands. Ask any regular joe who is sattled with around $30,000 in student debt, if not more, and see which deal they prefer. I know friends that are working 40 hours a week while in college and still are $40,000 in debt(which they also never get to see their families, friends, or have free time because they are having to always work). Also, stipends have gone up a little since you left my friend. MSU gave $5,156 per player in 2015. That was 3 years ago. No telling what it is now. We can agree to disagree on this whole, “good life” matter.
You changed your narrative. Look at what you type earlier. "There’s nothing you can say that tells me they aren’t living an easier life in college and thereafter due to the advantages given to them while playing."
My entire post was addressing your opinion of an athlete living an "easy" life. Sure you get perks but by no means is it easy. Unless you played football in college yourself, I'd still consider you naive.
I work full time now, have a 7 month old, and also am working on my second masters degree. And taking out student loans. This life is ten times easier than the student athlete life.
For other readers - I'm by no means complaining of all the work it took. Some of my best memories came from that experience. Just addressing ignorance to someone that would claim that being a student athlete is any easier than a regular student. Also, I'm not saying that regular students do not have it hard.