Some rebuttals to their demands:
1. Minimize college athletes’ brain trauma risks.
I believe they have been pretty pro-active about this with the rule changes. I don't think practice regulations are necessary.
2. Raise the scholarship amount.
If they want to raise the stipend for ALL athletes EQUALLY, then I'm all for this.
3. Prevent players from being stuck paying sports-related medical expenses.
Agreed - the institution should pay for these. Basically how it works was that you had to put your insurance as primary, then the University as secondary. Whatever your insurance didn't cover, the university did.
4. Increase graduation rates.
That is emphasized at nearly every single institution. I don't even know why that's a demand. There are all kind of programs set up to help players. It's a matter of the players wanting to do it.
5. Protect educational opportunities for student-athletes in good standing.
If a coach eliminates the scholarship of a student-athlete that abides by academic, athletic, and conduct requirements, the athletic program should replace it with a non-athletic scholarship to allow the student-athletes to continue his/her education.
Assuming the athlete maintains good grades that meets an academic scholarship standard, then I agree.
6. Prohibit universities from using a permanent injury suffered during athletics as a reason to reduce/eliminate a scholarship.
Same as above - give him an academic scholarship.
7. Establish and enforce uniform safety guidelines in all sports to help prevent serious injuries and avoidable deaths.
Several deaths in the college football off-season have highlighted the need for year round safety requirements that provide an adequate level of protections for college athletes from all sports. College athletes and athletic staff should be given the means to anonymously report breaches in such safety requirements.
I can just see every tough workout or punishment run getting reported by cry baby players. haha
8. Eliminate restrictions on legitimate employment and players ability to directly benefit from commercial opportunities.
College athletes should have the same rights to secure employment and generate commercial revenue as other students and US citizens. Such a measure could be designed to increase graduation rates and allow universities to retain the most talented athletes for the duration of their eligibility.
This is where it gets slippery. Athletes will choose schools based on how much money/endorsements/exposure they can get instead of choosing the school based on the merits of the football program and of the university. This will certainly make the playing field uneven.
9. Prohibit the punishment of college athletes that have not committed a violation.
It is an injustice to punish college athletes for actions that they did not commit i.e. suspending a team's post-season eligibility for the inappropriate actions of boosters. Such punishments have significant negative impacts on the short college experience of many college athletes. Alternative forms of punishment are available and should be utilized to allow an adequate policing of the rules.
So you can violate all the scholarship restrictions and money restrictions you want and not miss the post season? Yeah, that sounds reasonable.
10. Guarantee that college athletes are granted an athletic release from their university if they wish to transfer schools.
Schools should not have the power to refuse to release college athletes that choose to transfer. Under NCAA rules, players that transfer without a release not only have to sit out a year, they cannot receive an athletic scholarship for a year. This contradicts the educational mission and principle of sportsmanship that the NCAA is supposed to uphold.
11. Allow college athletes of all sports the ability to transfer schools one time without punishment.
College athletes that participate in football, basketball, baseball, and ice hockey should not be denied the one-time no-penalty transfer option that is afforded to college athletes of other sports. Such a policy is coercive and discriminatory. All college athletes should have this freedom to ensure that they realize their academic, social, and athletic pursuits.
This sounds like a good idea in theory... but this will enable other college coaches to recruit at other universities. You'll see guys jumping ship to the good teams all the time.