Anonymous wrote:Will ECNL stay relevant. It’s becoming an expensive pain and I wonder if it’s worth it.
Anonymous wrote:Will ECNL stay relevant. It’s becoming an expensive pain and I wonder if it’s worth it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There should be caps. Imagine going to a school and not playing. Stupid. 22 rostered is more than enough.
Lots of players in every college sport will never play. Football carries 85 (some teams have even more players not officially on the team)- lots will never see the field
Yes college takes way too many players. It waters down the sport. Maybe 1% of NCAA players will make a professional team and stay in the roster for over 2 years. College soccer takes 90% of the girl ECNL.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There should be caps. Imagine going to a school and not playing. Stupid. 22 rostered is more than enough.
Lots of players in every college sport will never play. Football carries 85 (some teams have even more players not officially on the team)- lots will never see the field
Anonymous wrote:Give it a few years and those caps will be the focus of another anti-trust suit that the NCAA will lose just like it lost all of the others
Anonymous wrote:There should be caps. Imagine going to a school and not playing. Stupid. 22 rostered is more than enough.
Anonymous wrote:There should be caps. Imagine going to a school and not playing. Stupid. 22 rostered is more than enough.
Plaintiff attorneys confirm that no sport will experience a reduction in scholarship slots. The agreement states that roster limits must be set at or more than current scholarship restrictions for each sport. But the truth is, not all programs can afford to add so many additional scholarships.
The solution? Some programs have begun “tiering” their sports. Other programs will be forced to make staff and salary cuts, and reduce scholarships from Olympic sports, such as swimming, that generate little to no revenue.
Regarding Title IX, any scholarship increases in a men’s sport will likely require replication to a women’s sport, resulting in additional costs. Additional women’s scholarships may be necessary to maintain compliance with Title IX requirements in the new revenue-sharing model…
Current Roster Limit Restrictions:
Football – 85
Baseball – 11.7
Softball – 12
Volleyball- 12
New Roster Limit Increases:
Football – 105
Baseball – 34
Softball – 25
Volleyball – 18
…
As athletic departments anxiously await the final approval of the House settlement terms, they brace for the financial impact that will come alongside the business of NCAA athletics. They are also evaluating potential cost-cutting measures to make these new implementations possible.