Morning Sun

Two cheers for the first college football national championsh­ip of the name-image-likeness era

- George Will’s email address is georgewill@washpost.com.

WASHINGTON » Monday night’s national championsh­ip game is the maraschino cherry atop the sundae of postseason college football. The nation’s highest-paid government employee — coach Nick Saban, $9.75 million — will lead the University of Alabama’s student-athletes against their counterpar­ts from the University of Georgia. They are coached by Kirby Smart, whose salary ($7.13 million) ranks only fifth among Southeaste­rn Conference coaches, but is 40 times larger than that of Georgia’s governor.

The game will be watched by perhaps 20 million potential purchasers of beer and trucks and other stuff that corporatio­ns pay broadcast entities to advertise. ESPN reportedly pays about $470 million annually under a 12-year, $5.64 billion agreement for the right to broadcast major postseason games.

There always are, however, solemn warnings that the appeal of high-revenue college sports — football and basketball — is jeopardize­d by any departures from the “revered tradition of amateurism in college sports.” Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens wrote those words in a 1984 case that came from the University of Oklahoma. (One of OU’S wittier presidents, when a state legislator asked why the school needed more money, answered, “I would like to build a university of which the football team would be proud.”) The 1984 court weakened the NCAA’S grip on schools’ football television arrangemen­ts, but the court’s rhetoric strengthen­ed the lucrative myth that sustains the business model of the academia-entertainm­ent complex: Amateurism is beautiful, so don’t pay the talent.

Andrew Perloff, writing in Education Next, says “student athlete” entered academia’s lexicon in 1957 when a widow lost a claim for workmen’s compensati­on death benefits from Fort Lewis A&M College for fatal injuries her husband suffered playing football. The school said the player was not an employee because the school was not in the “football business.” The NCAA adopted the “student athlete” mantra, but Perloff says: “Between long daily practices, ongoing physical conditioni­ng, and cross-country travel, playing on a team can stand in for a fulltime job.”

The supposedly precious aura of amateurism is supposedly imperiled by new rules that allow those who make $9 million coaches possible — the players — to earn a comparativ­e pittance. Last summer, the NCAA (2019 athletics revenue: $18.9 billion), having uneasily watched more than two dozen states pass laws to give college athletes some rights to market themselves, faced this fact of federalism: Schools in states where athletes cannot be punished for monetizing their fame will have an advantage in recruiting blue-chip prospects.

So, welcome to the NIL era: Increasing­ly, an athlete can earn money from his or her name, image and likeness. A few football and basketball players will benefit a lot; volleyball and field hockey players not so much.

Gender disparitie­s will energize the “equity” police. And what boosters used to do by passing cash under the table can now be done on the top of the table, which might be progress, of sorts. But if you graft a multibilli­on industry onto higher education, some awkwardnes­s is unavoidabl­e.

In most states, the highestpai­d government employee is a state university football or basketball coach. Louisiana State University recently gave its (now-former) football coach Ed Orgeron — he won the national championsh­ip game just two years ago — a $16.9 million severance payment to go away. (This was less than the $21.45 million Auburn paid in order to fire coach Gus Malzahn in 2020.) Orgeron’s replacemen­t, Brian Kelly, was lured from Notre Dame by a contract worth $9 million per year, plus a $500,000 “longevity” bonus every July. Plus $500,000 if LSU wins half of its regular-season games: Inflation has lifted the price of mediocrity.

In 2018, Georgia spent $2.6 million recruiting players. Given the likely return — in money, and in prestige, which has monetary value — from getting the Bulldogs into Monday night’s game, this was a good investment. As is Saban’s compensati­on, which is scheduled to soon pass $10 million per year.

Schools increasing­ly compete for customers, a.k.a. students, by emphasizin­g the college “experience.” This is enhanced by decreasing academic demands: There is less studying — Education Next reports that students spent 27 hours a week on studies in 2003, down from 40 hours in the 1960s — and more grade inflation. In “The Debt Trap: How Student Loans Became a National Catastroph­e,” the Wall Street Journal’s Josh Mitchell reports that one school’s experience includes “amenities like a state-of-the-art recreation center with a climbing wall and a ‘lazy river’ pool complex with a 30-foot water slide . . . . A campus dining hall served steak cooked to order.” Which school? Roll Tide!

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