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Posted (edited)
24 minutes ago, buddha said:

its funny because its osu, but it goes on everywhere.  the idea that most bball or football players go to michigan for the academics is silly.

osu has so many university wide scandals right now theyre beginning to rival michigan!  

TBF, schools do make a huge effort in recent years to help athletes go to school if they want to, I'm sure that is as true at OSU as at UM. But while you can lead a horse to water....

Edited by gehringer_2
Posted
1 hour ago, gehringer_2 said:

TBF, schools do make a huge effort in recent years to help athletes go to school if they want to, I'm sure that is as true at OSU as at UM. But while you can lead a horse to water....

you can lead a horse to taking advanced CPR and 5 independent study courses, but you cant make him drink!

  • Haha 1
  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

Even if he can get eligible, does Texas Tech really plan on letting him play and paying him $5M to do so.   This sport is slimy but this would be a new low.  Fortunately, I don’t think there’s any way the NCAA lets him play.  

Posted

New tax filings show college sports’ financial arms race has new winners — and losers

Quote

Total revenues for the Big Ten, SEC, ACC, Big 12 and Pac-12

∎ Big Ten (18 members): $1.47 billion, according to its tax form released May 1.

∎ SEC (16 members): $1.11 billion, according to its tax form released in February.

∎ ACC (18 members): $826.5 million according to its tax form released May 22.

∎ Big 12 (16 members): $610.9 million, according to its tax form, also released May 22.

∎ Pac-12 (two members): $111.5 million, according to its tax form released May 15.

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Minimum distribution to each league member

∎ Big Ten: $76 million, not including new members Oregon and Washington, which received $46-48 million.

∎ SEC: $70.3 million, not including new members Oklahoma and Texas, which received $2.6 million and $12.1 million

∎ ACC: $42.8 million, not including Notre Dame or new members Cal, Stanford and SMU, which received $17-23 million.

∎ Big 12: $37.9 million, not including new members BYU, Houston, UCF and Cincinnati, which received $19-23 million.

∎ Pac-12: $29 million to both Oregon State and Washington State.

Quote

Highest distribution amounts per conference

∎ Big Ten: Ohio State, $91.6 million (football national champion in fiscal 2025)

∎ SEC: Georgia, $74.5 million

∎ACC: Clemson, $55.1 million

∎ Big 12: Arizona State, $43 million

Note: Schools receive different amounts because of College Football Playoff participation and other factors.

 

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