If you are on the side that everything is “FAIR” in college athletics and the money that student athletes receive in the form of scholarship money is fair compensation for the product they put on the field for the 3 or 4 years that they play…Than what about the time and activity post graduation where the NCAA and the associated Universities use that athlete’s image and likeness in order to promote the NCAA or the University’s agenda?
You know…Denard Robinson’s image on 110,000 tickets for the
home opener? What about Nick Stauskas
all over the season opening program?
Yeah…that stuff. Not
to mention the video games and whatever else the NCAA or University can
license, sell or make a buck off of.
This is where Wilkensen is really digging in…Which is her
area of expertise:
…Whether NCAA athletes like the plaintiff, former UCLA
All-American Ed O’Bannon, have signed away the rights to their names, images,
and likenesses to the NCAA based on its purported code of amateurism, and
whether, by enforcing that purported code — even after athletes’ eligibility
has ended — the NCAA has been acting in restraint
of trade and in violation of antitrust laws. Wilken was curious about one
point.“Are you saying,” she asked Heckman, skepticism edging every word like a razor, “that being paid for your name, image, and likeness is the same as being paid for the activity itself?”
If Wilken believes that payment for an athlete’s name, image, and likeness is something different from being paid simply for playing the game — that it constitutes something not in violation of the rules regarding amateurism, but rather something outside of them — then that’s the ballgame.
In short, you can’t take a person or their image for the “Rest of their life” if they’ve given you 3-4 years in the athletic arena. Not only that, but if Wilkensen rules that the individual owns their own likeness….That person should be able to take that image and make money on it whatever way they can – period.
Which, if you’ve been paying attention to the MMQ:
THAT’S WHAT I’VE BEEN SAYING!!! LET THE KIDS MAKE MONEY WHERE EVER OR HOWEVER
THEY CAN!!! Whether they are playing or long after they leave....
In fact, I think the NCAA and the Universities simply haven’t
thought it through, which is really sad.
What I mean is, if you let the athlete use the “Image” he created at
your university (jersey) and he makes a Nike shoe ad, the University will be
getting a lot of free advertising from that student athlete. And per
DB, who doesn’t want free advertising? This could be the easiest "Win-Win" no brainer out there.....
This ruling is going to dramatically change the way athletes
are dealt with in Division 1 College athletics, especially Football and
Basketball. And the Universities better
start figuring out a way to get on board with it. The NCAA may already be gone and they might
not know it yet.
It’s going to be an interesting summer….
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