It is football day. Families crowd TV rooms, people get together at bars, bets are placed for the big game coming up. However to some you may think it is NFL Sunday, but it is college football Saturday. The difference of the two, a day apart, a couple of years in between the players, and millions of dollars paid out versus not a cent. For as long as college football has been played the debate over whether or not the players should be paid still rages even to this day. Any attempt of athletes or their unions has been denied by the school or the legal system such as Northwestern University who had this exact thing happen. However, due to the fact that the athletes are the only people not making a profit from this entire industry and the fact …show more content…
To start let us look at the heads of these programs being the head coaches. From reviewing this head position they are the people who probably take the highest cut if there was to be a players profit. According to all 3 sources they all say the head coach makes an extreme profit with by far the largest paycheck with it reaching $7 million with top tier coaches (“The NCAA’s Fishy…”) and that is just one person on a coaching staff. Although they manage the players what really matters in a game is how the players perform and putting themselves on the field and working. However it is not just the coaching staff and front office who act like they are above the players it is also TV networks. They promote …show more content…
When you look at the time and dedication these athletes give to their sports it really shows why it is a job due to the way the college sports industry is set up. To start let us look at why kids go to college in the first place and that is the academics. Michigan State law professor, Amy McCormick, claims that "Athletes don't have free choice of what major they take if the classes conflict with practice schedules." She followed with, “That's one fact that flies in the face of the idea that they're primarily students and secondarily athletes." So if the athletes can not choose their courses how they be students first when there is such a commitment in front of them. It is a job and jobs deserve a pay. So what makes this difference? The answer is relatively nothing you have a boss being the coach. He is entitled to give you that promotion and move up in playing time or used more and he has the power to say “You’re fired” (“Should College Athletes..”). So if all the players agree it seems as a job then why is there not any change? It is because the voice of the players is unheard. However, in 2014 on a spring day in April on the campus of Northwestern University the players needed this change. They were attempting to form a union to help get their voice in about player benefits and payments. Star quarterback Kain Colter who was heavily for the unionization spoke out and said, "No one