Nick Saban believes that the present college football business cannot support ‘purchasing athletes’
Nick Saban, the head coach of Alabama football, said that buying players is not a long-term practice in college football.
Everyone, including Alabama’s Nick Saban, is attempting to make sense of the enormous changes in college football during the previous few years.
The head coach of a team that won the national championship said he was worried about how people’s names, images, and likenesses have changed recently.
Saban told the Associated Press, “I don’t think what we’re doing right now is a sustainable paradigm.” The existing model creates a system in which players may essentially be bought. It’s possible to accomplish it in recruiting. I don’t know if that’s what we want college football to be. “
According to Nick Saban, “buying athletes,” as he puts it, is not a viable strategy for college football
Let’s get the witty retort out of the way first: For almost a century, college football programs have been accused of “buying players.” Everything is now out in the open.
Saban has made a strong argument about sustainability as a result of this. One of them was made by Lincoln Riley of USC, Lane Kiffin of Ole Miss, Dabo Swinney of Clemson, and other people who had said the same thing before him.
The problem isn’t that players aren’t getting compensated. The entire setting has a Wild West feel to it. There appear to be no rules or organization in place. It’s a feeding frenzy, and it’s not good for the sport’s long-term viability. The NCAA had been so resistant to change for so long that they were completely unprepared for it to come crashing down the hill.
It’s fine if players get paid. That’s something I’m all for. That is something I am not opposed to. However, there must be some kind of accountability on both sides, which may be referred to as a contract. So you have the potential to develop people in ways that will help them succeed, “Saban explained.
Saban has his heart set on a specific model.
“We provide the same medical care, academic support, and food service to everyone.” The scholarship is the same. As a result, if we do this, everyone will benefit equally. “In our squad, I’m not going to create a caste system,” Saban added.
On that one, the cat is most likely out of the bag. When quarterbacks like Bryce Young can command a million dollars on the open market, it will be difficult to persuade players to support Saban’s program.
Someone must, however, take the initiative and establish some type of organization. It’s becoming more and more clear that college football needs a commissioner or someone else who can control the conversation.
Until then, it will just be coaches talking about a system they’re trying to figure out as best they can.
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