Windsor Star

WHY NOT BOW OUT OF BOWLS?

Many NCAA players have little to gain and everything to lose in these games

- SCOTT STINSON sstinson@postmedia.com twitter.com/Scott_Stinson

The news that a U.S. college football star has decided to skip bowl season to prepare for the draft is both surprising and a long time coming.

Running back Christian McCaffrey’s choice was no doubt made easier by the fact his Stanford team is having a disappoint­ing 9-3 season and will play in the Sun Bowl later this month. It’s not quite on the lowest rung of such games among the Dollar General Bowl or the Advo Care V100 Texas Bowl — actual things! — but it’s fair to say not too many young kids go to sleep at night dreaming of one day being the hero of the Sun Bowl. Whether Stanford wins or loses is of minor consequenc­e to both McCaffrey’s team and the college football championsh­ip picture.

Those same reasons apply to Leonard Fournette, who will not join his 7-4 LSU Tigers at the Buffalo Wild Wings Citrus Bowl. He’s also recovering from an injury that caused him to miss most of his junior season, so his decision was easier still. Fournette was so good as a sophomore, piling up almost 2,000 yards on the ground, there was speculatio­n he might skip his junior season entirely to avoid the exact thing that ended up happening. Fournette hurt his ankle in August and never fully recovered, missing four games at various points in the season.

So while the reasons to sit out meaningles­s bowl games are obvious — why risk an injury that could jeopardize draft stock and cost the player millions of dollars? — the surprise is that these decisions are made in the face of an industry that constantly preaches the team over the individual.

You don’t have to turn on the various sports-chat shows to know someone is blasting these players for letting down their teammates in what will be the final game of many of their careers. Bear Bryant wouldn’t stand for such nonsense!

The self-benchings, though, highlight the dirty non-secret that underpins the whole multibilli­on-dollar U.S. college football industry: These athletes are forced to play in a system that is at once the only way to advance to a profession­al career and one that offers exactly no protection from a catastroph­ic injury that could end that career before it begins.

Only because McCaffrey and Fournette have demonstrat­ed their ability so well to this point in their careers — McCaffrey ran for more than 3,600 yards in his last two seasons alone — have they gained enough leverage to turn the exploitati­on of the college system on its ear. They have proven they will be significan­tly attractive in the NFL draft whether or not they play another game.

In Canada, where our student athletes really are more student than athlete — compared to the farm system that is the NCAA — there’s no comparison to be made with what McCaffrey and Fournette are doing. But there is one parallel. Our best male hockey players are funnelled into a major junior system that both prepares them for a profession­al career and forces them to work on the cheap for a few years while at risk of an injury that could have long-reaching consequenc­es. The logical extension of what is being seen in this U.S. bowl season is that eventually a hockey player, with his draft stock assured, will end his junior career early rather than put himself at further risk.

Pish, you might say: Such things are just not done. But the same thing would have been said of college bowl season last year and every year before that. Here in the waning days of 2016, the taboo has been broken. Would Connor McDavid have seen his draft prospects damaged in 2015, after he had scored 120 points in 47 games with the Erie Otters of the Ontario Hockey League and helped Canada to a gold medal at the world juniors, if passed on the OHL playoffs? Oh, the hot takes would have been fiery and there might have been a team or two who had questions about his attitude and decided to take someone else at the top of the draft. And then those teams would look like right morons now that McDavid is demonstrat­ing what seemed obvious two years ago: He is the biggest talent to hit the National Hockey League since Sidney Crosby.

McDavid did break a bone in his hand — in a fight, no less — in his final junior year, but what if that injury had instead been a blow to the head? Would he have been vilified if he had bailed early on a junior career? It didn’t hurt Auston Matthews when he opted to skip the junior system entirely.

The NCAA and Canada’s major junior system make a point of insisting their players are amateur athletes, full stop, even though everyone knows the best of them are just biding their time until they can turn profession­al. In the interim, they are valuable parts of a system that makes lots of money for everyone but the players. We probably shouldn’t be surprised when some of those players realize they no longer have to continue the charade.

 ?? JONATHAN BACHMAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES ?? LSU running back Leonard Fournette has chosen to skip the Citrus Bowl on New Year’s Eve.
JONATHAN BACHMAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES LSU running back Leonard Fournette has chosen to skip the Citrus Bowl on New Year’s Eve.
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