Opinion: Some CFP Revenue Should Go to Player Safety

AthleticBusiness.com has partnered with LexisNexis to bring you this content.

Copyright 2018 The Evansville Courier Co.
All Rights Reserved

Evansville Courier & Press (Indiana)

 

When the NCAA met last month in Indianapolis, it took up some of the most pressing issues facing college sports. But there's one area outside the NCAA's purview that deserves a good public hearing - the distribution of hundreds of millions of dollars generated by the College Football Playoff.

The CFP has generated more than a billion dollars for universities' athletics programs in just four years. It should devote a portion of that lucrative revenue to address two major college football priorities identified by university presidents and college sports leaders: improving player health and safety, and increasing coaching diversity.

The CFP should follow the model of the NCAA, which devotes resources to these national challenges, using money generated by its March Madness basketball tournament.

Under a groundbreaking partnership with the U.S. Department of Defense, the NCAA has invested $27.5 million since 2014 in research and related efforts aimed at developing better concussion treatment and policy. This initiative has already led to changes in college football playing rules and in the operation of football team practices, as well as the development of concussion protocols. The NCAA will continue funding this initiative at $2 million annually.

And under a recent settlement awaiting court approval, the NCAA will spend an additional $70 million on a medical monitoring program for current and former college athletes.

The NCAA also devotes resources to develop more diversity in athletics leadership-including programs for football coaches that are funded at higher levels than those targeting other sports.

Last month, the CFP Board rejected the Knight Commission's call to use a modest portion of bowl revenues to protect player health and safety and boost coaching diversity, saying that other organizations, like the NCAA and Football Bowl Subdivision conferences and institutions, should be the ones to show leadership on these issues.

The CFP, which has generated more than $1.6 billion in its first four years of existence, operates independently of the NCAA. However, it shares a common responsibility of annually distributing hundreds of millions of dollars in postseason championship revenues.

The vast majority of the CFP revenues are directed to the 10 conferences that compete in the Football Bowl Subdivision, which in turn send the bulk of the revenue on to their member schools. Independent universities like Notre Dame also receive a cut.

While FBS schools use some of these revenues to provide medical care for their athletes, the Knight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics believes a national commitment of revenues from the football championship is needed to address the sport's serious health and safety issues, which are only becoming more urgent with the release of new peer-reviewed studies on sport-specific injuries. That commitment should not just be left up to a reliance on the NCAA's national basketball championship revenues or the choices of individual athletic programs.

The College Football Playoff's failure to devote a meaningful share of its revenues for national health and safety priorities for athletes is hard to justify, especially with schools shelling out millions for new stadiums, football coaching salaries and buyouts, private jets for recruiting, and other excesses.

At a time when 12 FBS schools are paying a whopping $70 million-plus in buyouts to fired football coaches, a small investment to make college football safer and more diverse should not be a heavy lift. An added benefit of redirecting some of these national championship revenues would be to reduce the oxygen that is fueling an unsustainable arms race in coaches' salaries and facilities.

Duncan is the former Secretary of Education and the current co-chair of the Knight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics; Myron Rolle, M.D., a former college football All-American at Florida State, is a Knight Commission member and neurosurgery resident at Harvard Medical School/Massachusetts General Hospital.

Read More of Today's AB Headlines

Subscribe to Our Daily E-Newsletter

 
February 5, 2018
 
 
 

 

Copyright © 2018 LexisNexis, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Terms and Conditions Privacy Policy
Page 1 of 466
Next Page
AB Show 2024 in New Orleans
AB Show is a solution-focused event for athletics, fitness, recreation and military professionals.
Nov. 19-22, 2024
Learn More
AB Show 2024
Buyer's Guide
Information on more than 3,000 companies, sorted by category. Listings are updated daily.
Learn More
Buyer's Guide