USA TODAY International Edition

Pay the players, and start with Lawrence

Clemson freshman QB will become new face of old debate

- Nancy Armour Columnist USA TODAY

Trevor Lawrence might finally be the NCAA’s undoing.

The freshman has already led Clemson to one national title and is likely to add one or two more before he’s done. He’ll give the Tigers an untold amount of positive PR, to say nothing of the actual millions he’ll generate for the school, coach Dabo Swinney and his staff, the ACC, and, of course the NCAA.

And Lawrence won’t get a dime. Yes, he’s getting a free education, no small thing given that the tab for out-ofstate students at Clemson is about $50,000 a year. But multiply that by four, throw in another $100,000 or so to cover the costs of coaching, training and medical care, and it’s still peanuts compared to what Clemson gets in return.

The drumbeat for college athletes getting paid in some fashion has gotten louder in recent years, and it’s about to become a roar with Lawrence. For the next three years, every game Clemson plays, every spectacula­r play Lawrence makes will be a reminder that while the adults in the NCAA system are getting rich, the kids who make it possible are not.

Even those who recoil at the idea of paying college athletes are going to be very uncomforta­ble at the idea of Swinney getting $6 million-plus a year while his telegenic quarterbac­k can’t even get royalties from the No. 19 jerseys that will become a staple in the wardrobe of every Tigers fan.

This isn’t an argument for the NFL to open its doors to underclass­men. That’s a non-starter, and the courts have shown no inclinatio­n to force the NFL to change its rule.

Besides, unlike the NBA or Major League Baseball, there are physiologi­cal reasons for players to stay in college through their junior year. Most, Lawrence included, simply aren’t big or strong enough yet to contend with the day in, day out physicalit­y of the NFL.

But that’s not an excuse for the NCAA and its member institutio­ns to take advantage of the “student-athletes.” Which is exactly what they are doing.

Swinney got a $250,000 bonus for winning Monday night’s title game, bringing his total for the season to at least $875,000. In the past three years alone, he has earned $2.9 million in bonuses. His players have gotten souvenir T-shirts and bowl swag that, if they’re lucky, includes some gift cards and electronic­s.

The Alabama players did get personaliz­ed bobblehead­s at the Orange Bowl, according to SportsBusi­ness Daily. But god forbid any of them put theirs on Ebay to try to make a couple of bucks.

The inequity in the current NCAA system has always been glaring, but Lawrence is going to make it impossible to ignore. Whether he wants to leave Clemson early or not is irrelevant. As the quarterbac­k, he’s both the force and the face of the Tigers, and there must be a way to reflect that worth financially.

This isn’t hard to do, either. Allow players to profit off their names, images and likenesses. Give players an annuity, based on the number of years they play, and allow them to collect it when they’re, say, 30. Make their scholarshi­ps open-ended and transferab­le so they can go to graduate school, or get a degree they might actually use, even after their eligibilit­y has been exhausted.

These are just a few of the ideas that have been thrown out, and roundly rejected by the NCAA. But either it gets with the times or some judge is going to do it for them.

The so-called purists will howl about amateurism and destroying the wholesome environmen­t of college athletics. Please.

Those days went out the window when bowl games began selling naming rights and schools started building athletic facilities that rival the Taj Mahal.

College athletics is a business, and a big one at that.

It’s time the players get a piece of the pie.

 ?? MATTHEW EMMONS/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Trevor Lawrence could win another national title or two while at Clemson, but the quarterbac­k will not benefit financially from it.
MATTHEW EMMONS/USA TODAY SPORTS Trevor Lawrence could win another national title or two while at Clemson, but the quarterbac­k will not benefit financially from it.
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