This week, Johnny Manziel's career in Cleveland is getting ready to take off. Before that, Johnny Football was lighting up the college gridiron for Texas A & M. Manziel stands in the pocket and fires a pass in this image from Sports Illustrated.
Sports are about so much more than athletic ability. Sports make us feel. They make us think.
The Left Fielder
Showing posts with label NCAA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NCAA. Show all posts
Monday, December 1, 2014
Tuesday, September 9, 2014
September 9th: More Than Football
We, as sports fans, spend so much time watching, critiquing, and arguing about college students. We talk Heisman trophies, March Madness, College World Series, and more. These 18 to 22 year old men and women provide us with all of the entertainment we could possibly need, each of us living vicariously through them as they try to squeeze as much as they can out of the sports they love.
Sometimes, though, it is too easy to forget that these are students, young people who are betting everything on college. For some, this can come at personal expense. Not all student athletes are on scholarship at the schools they represent.
ESPN ran a great story about college football walk-ons who, through hard work and dedication, earned scholarships to play for their teams. It detailed the difficulties of having to pay their way when their teammates and friends had their experiences paid for.
Having watched it, it is remarkable how these young men were willing to give so much to follow a dream of theirs, and were so overjoyed by getting the opportunity to go to school and play the game they love on scholarship. They are getting the opportunity of a lifetime, allowing their skills on the field to not only provide them with a chance to play their sport, but also to pursue a world-class education..
It may be easy to judge football players as athletes when watching on ESPN. Every once and a while, though, we get the chance to remember that these student athletes are working for so much more than just a victory every week.
It may be easy to judge football players as athletes when watching on ESPN. Every once and a while, though, we get the chance to remember that these student athletes are working for so much more than just a victory every week.
Friday, January 31, 2014
January 31st: Northwestern Union
The world of college sports was changed forever on Tuesday.
For the first time in history, members of the Northwestern University football
team filed to join a workers’ union.
Led by quarterback Kain Colter, the movement attempts to get
the players recognized as school employees and receive certain benefits that
have, to this point, been unattainable for most college athletes. Colter cited healthcare
for injuries beyond an athlete’s playing days as one such benefit the players
were pursuing.
In their response, the NCAA declared their disappointment at
the action, stating that playing college sports doesn’t make someone an
employee and that the experience is meant to be about learning, something
Colter and the group are failing to understand.
This is, though, quite the opposite of what is happening. Colter
and his group are making an incredible education for themselves. They are
looking at the way things are and critically thinking about what can be done to
make things better.
In addition to better medical care, Colter’s action for
unionization includes 10 additional goals, ranging from better graduation rates
and more scholarship money for players. In each of the goals, the focus moves
drastically from treating these people as athletic resources and instead
treating them as students, employees, and valued individuals in the school
community.
This all comes at a culminating moment in the growing
movement to protect the rights of college athletes. For several years, analysts
have argued the merits of paying college players for the use of their name.
Why, after all, should the school rake in dollars because of the fame and
respect brought in by an individual, while leaving that person out in the cold.
At the beginning of this college season, reining Heisman
Trophy winner Johnny Manziel was accused of being paid to sign autographs which
would have violated NCAA rules. After a long investigation, it became pretty clear
that there was a problem. If Manziel was suspended, his school would suffer
huge losses, both athletic and financial. If they didn’t suspend him, the NCAA
would come away looking totally impotent, incapable of policing their policies
as necessary. In the end, the half-game suspension Manziel served was seen as a
copout, and the issue only gained intensity.
All things considered, the Northwestern representatives are
demanding action in a way that is constructive, rather than simply defying
authority. They are attempting to find a spot at the table, rather than ignore
the structure of leadership altogether.
It doesn’t really matter if you agree that college players
should unionize or not. That isn’t the point. This isn’t meant to be an answer,
it’s meant to get the ball rolling on the discussion. Northwestern University’s
players took the action they deemed necessary to defend their rights as student-athletes,
not with the attitude of defiance but focusing on debate.
While the NCAA may not like it, accusing the students of
failing to see the learning opportunities in the situation is downright
ludicrous. There is a lot of learning that happens on a college campus. If Kain
Colter and his teammates can walk away from NU knowing how to stand up for what
they believe in a respectful yet decisive way, then the school and NCAA have
done their jobs.
Labels:
America,
Football,
Heisman,
Kain Colter,
Manziel,
NCAA,
Northwestern,
union
Friday, January 24, 2014
January 24th: Full Court Press
My biggest complaint about basketball was always that it is emotionally
abusive. The flow of momentum is so temporary that it is nearly impossible to
know the trajectory of the game based on the first quarter, or even the third.
The old saying “the last two minutes are all that matters,” is even more
extreme. It isn’t an oddity to see a 20 point lead evaporate, only to be
regained.
January, though, can do strange things to sports fans. With
baseball’s slowest off-season in recent memory and the impossibility of finding
hockey on national television, the only weekday sports option is to be found on
the hardwood. I’ve begun to follow the NBA as well as college basketball a
little more intensely. More so than the NCAA, professional basketball is like
nothing else in the sporting world.
In any team sport, there are superstars who define the organization.
In the NBA, those superstars often transcend their team. In most sports, fans
follow a team primarily, with one or two players who catch some extra
attention. Basketball sees team fans, sure, but more importantly, you’re a Kobe
fan, a LeBron fan, a Durant fan. Following a player is more possible because,
with only 5 players at a time, an individual has more of an impact on the
outcome of the game.
For all of their challenges, though, the NBA’s marketing
department has made quite a bold statement, especially recently. It is
enormously difficult to maintain fan excitement over the course of an 82 game
season. To solve the problem, the NBA marketing department comes up with
countless ways to make individual games more exciting.
On Christmas day, the league used new jerseys with sleeves
in an attempt to give the players a new look. It was recently released that the
All-star game would also feature similar jerseys. Earlier this month, the Heat
and Nets played a game while wearing nickname jerseys, an event that also will
repeat throughout the year. While both
of these promotions focus primarily on attempting to sell more basketball swag,
it demonstrates a kind of promotional mojo that should serve the league well,
at least from the creativity standpoint. The caveat to that is, of course,
ensuring that the intent is to offer a unique fan experience, rather than
simply turning into a purely money driven operation.
Even with the promotions, though, the challenge of making an
82 game regular season exciting is one that will continue to cause fans to walk
away, to get lazy during the year. Once April rolls around, though, being an NBA
fan becomes contagious. The playoffs add the intensity that becomes a scarcity
during the regular season. Funny how the threat of going home can make the game
come alive.
Some of the challenges that professional basketball faces
are unique to the NBA, while some are present in all major sports. The league
has made significant attempts to find solutions and have varying levels of
success. The commitment itself will, hopefully, help professional basketball
continue to be relevant and exciting for fans.
As a relatively newly minted NBA fan, I have plenty more to
learn. At the very least, the league succeeded at getting my attention.
- Follow "ZP: Left Fielder" on Twitter at @ZPLeftFielder or "The Zoot Perspective" at @ZootPerspective for more from ZPMedia
- Follow "ZP: Left Fielder" on Twitter at @ZPLeftFielder or "The Zoot Perspective" at @ZootPerspective for more from ZPMedia
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