Texarkana Gazette

Amateur sports myths

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Going for gold has taken on a different connotatio­n since the Supreme Court ruled college athletes can be paid by parties not directly affiliated with their schools. Now, another ideal this nation once embraced — the scholar-athlete — appears headed to the dustbin.

The court ruled last year in a case brought by three students that it was illegal for the NCAA to restrict “education-related benefits.” That freed athletes to be paid for any use of their name, image, or likeness.

Some of the biggest beneficiar­ies of the court ruling have been female athletes. University of Connecticu­t basketball star Paige Bueckers has endorsemen­t deals with Gatorade and other companies worth up to $1 million a year. That’s more than the average pay of most profession­al women’s basketball players.

The court ruling is worth noting for what it says about an America that once believed a college athlete’s biggest reward should be an education.

America was satisfied with perpetuati­ng the myth that college athletes just want to win one for the team, and maybe get a degree in the process. America bought the myth that scholar-athletes don’t mind risking career-ending injuries while making their coaches and schools millions of dollars they may never get a chance to earn.

Some myths are hard to give up. We were well into the 20th century before history teachers stopped routinely bringing up the fairy tale that cherry tree-chopping George Washington never lied. That myth first spun by biographer Mason Locke “Parson” Weems prodded a young nation to consider honesty a prerequisi­te for the presidency.

That has changed greatly in recent years. America is much more cynical after the presidenci­es of Bill “I did not have sexual relations with that woman” Clinton and Donald “The presidenti­al election was rigged and stolen” Trump.

The Supreme Court says college athletes should get some of the money they generate. That’s fair, but why should athletes good enough to go pro be required to spend a year or two in college? They could earn a degree after going pro, and many do. Let’s resuscitat­e the “scholar-athlete” ideal by providing additional classroom slots for students more academical­ly than athletical­ly gifted. Colleges can do that without a court decision.

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