College isn't for everyone, particularly, as an example, first-round NFL draft picks like Oklahoma tight end Jermaine Gresham.Gresham learned on Tuesday that his senior season was over before it started. Surgeons who operated on Gresham's right knee that day said it would need five months to heal. So instead of leaning on crutches on the sidelines for some NFL team this season-opening week and weekend, with a few million in signing-bonus dollars in the bank and another million or so dollars in paychecks rolling in, Gresham will lean on crutches on the Sooners' sidelines for nothing, except that "free" college education student-athletes are afforded.
Whoopee.
In other words, Gresham really could not have significantly improved his immediate future -- his draft status, i.e. earning ability -- by coming back to school this year. Now, he may even have lost income by staying in school, if you believe the long-held adage in economics that a dollar today is worth more than a dollar tomorrow.
Gresham wasn't alone last season in hanging around for a final year of college when it appeared he'd maximized his worth as an amateur. One-time Heisman-winning quarterback Tim Tebow of Florida and the prodigious slinger Colt McCoy of Texas also opted to stay for their senior seasons. They were joined by USC safety Taylor Mays, Florida linebacker Brandon Spikes, Mississippi defensive end Greg Hardy, and one of Gresham's teammates, defensive tackle Gerald McCoy, a redshirt junior. All were considered first-round picks, and Mays and McCoy, like Gresham, were called the top prospects at their positions.
One underclassman who was among 41 who decided to bolt college early after last season for the kind of salary his college coach was making was Alabama offensive tackle Andre Smith, who won last season's Outland Trophy that recognizes the country's best lineman. He'd been suspended at the end of last season under suspicions that he had improper dealings with an agent. That could have rendered him ineligible for a senior campaign. Others may have departed early because of rumors that the NFL was considering a rookie wage scale similar to what the NBA instituted and would keep rookie salaries down. But NFL boss Roger Goodell said a rookie wage scale would not be instituted until at least 2011.
But here's the kicker for Smith: he broke his left foot last week and, like Gresham, will be sidelined.
Smith won't be able to play for a few weeks. He won't be lost for the season. But in the meantime he'll at least have $21 million guaranteed dollars to soothe him plus the paychecks from a multimillion-dollar four-year contract. The Bengals gave him that much after making him the sixth pick in the draft last April.
For Gresham's loyalty to OU, or love for college or whatever was his reason for not taking the money this year and running with it, he will have little more than a sideline pass to show for it. If for some horrific reason, unforeseen by his doctors at the moment, Gresham can't return to play and reap some of the millions he was headed to collect, he can cash in an NCAA insurance policy if he took one out. Oklahoma officials I queried Wednesday didn't know whether Gresham had availed himself of the near 20-year-old program the NCAA runs to insure top draft picks against injury in college. The premiums as recently as 2005 ran upwards of $20,000 for a year and paid out as much as $3 million for a football player.

I'm not advocating dropping out of school. Gresham and other athletes like him who choose to stay a final year rather than bite the lure of so much money have chosen a noble path. Guys can always finish up their degree work, and more and more are doing so every year. A mind truly is a terrible thing to waste. And for a few who decide to stay on it can work in their favor.
I recall wide receiver Roy Williams decided to hold off the NFL Draft after his junior season despite being one of the top receivers in the nation, if not the No. 1. Williams explained that he doubted his readiness for the pros and wanted to stay at Texas his senior year to sharpen his route running and refine his blocking technique.
Williams didn't intend in his explanation to underscore that major sports at big schools like Texas are nothing less than minor leagues for the pros, but he did. So when the pros have decided by draft projection that a college athlete like Gresham has mastered all he can at the college level, he should go.
It just doesn't make economic sense for most top-notch athletes like Gresham to stay in school, because at the end of the day, making a living is the reason in our capitalist society we are in college at all.
The idea that we go to college to expand our intellect is mostly based in romanticism. Sure we want to be exposed to different ideas that may change the way we think about the world. Of course we hope to gain some knowledge that may lead us to find a cure to some affliction or a newer, faster and better way of doing something critical.
But truth is that most of us go to college to hone our skills -- those we already possess, or those we seek to gain -- in order to realize the most comfortable way for us to make a living. That usually means realizing the line of work that remunerates us the most.
Gresham and other would-be first-round draft picks like him have already achieved that. Hanging around to help Bob Stoops and his Sooners win a national championship was a refreshing gesture in our all-about-me world, but it's bankrupt.











Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
9-10-2009 @ 7:02AM
Murph said...
Maybe he didn’t want to leave his girl friend? maybe he didn’t think he was adult enough to handle the pressure that goes with being a top draft pick or an adult for that matter. And maybejust maybe he wanted to set an example to all those kids out there with dreams of a Pro career that school is important?
“But truth is that most of us go to college to hone our skills -- those we already possess, or those we seek to gain -- in order to realize the most comfortable way for us to make a living. That usually means realizing the line of work that remunerates us the most.”
What skills did you hone Kevin?
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9-10-2009 @ 4:34PM
greatqb44 said...
College is a 80,000 waste of time for most people but romantic libs like Kevin entertain me
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9-10-2009 @ 5:51PM
jack3342 said...
This exact same thing happened to a lesser extent to Michael Bush of Louisville. He could have been one of the top running backs picked in the draft, and instead he came back to try to win a national championship with Brian Brohm at Louisville under Bobby Petrino (which the Cardinals could have won if Bush did not get hurt). Bush ended up snapping his leg in the first game against Kentucky and his career as well as Louisville's season did not live up to its potential. Now he plays for the Raiders, which is arguably a worse team than the Louisville team he played for in college...poor guy
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9-10-2009 @ 10:09PM
Bob said...
*A typically lame effort from the "great" Blackistone. And what was the point of this? Gee, if Gresham had e.s.p., he would've known that staying in school didn't make financial sense, huh. God forbid we should encourage some intelligence or morals in our "student" athletes, huh, Kevin. There are so many bad role models out there, might as well have some more, right? This article is as pathetic as your usual race-baiting stuff.
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9-11-2009 @ 9:37AM
Chris said...
Kevin I usually agree with your opinion, but I think this is a direct fire into the problems with paying college atheletes. While I completely agree that the hunkydory college degree argument is as superficial as the quick buck - you have to consider how ready a player actually is for the NFL.
The wear and tear on Gresham's knee was already significant enough sideline him in college, yet if you transfered his position to the NFL then he might have felt pressure to rush a comeback and risk even more serious injury in a faster and stronger league. If he had entered the draft and began collecting paychecks on the bench, where do you think the money will come from? There is a reason ticket prices and concessions have risen consistently and your recommendation directly feeds the adjustments.
Every pro athlete has some sort of story, if Greshman can make it back into the NFL then he will have his own - but this time with a college degree (albeit from OU).
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9-14-2009 @ 5:07PM
TIMOTHY said...
I believe if your a first rounder the player has to go to the NFL. If they are projected in lower rounds they could up there draft stock. Most of the college players know that is how far they are going to go. But 10 percent or less really can go to the next level. With the way the NFL treat contracts they should get the money while they can.
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9-15-2009 @ 11:51AM
walkerhds said...
wahhh. you mean he doesn't get to spend 21-22 surrounded by hangers-on, scum, posses, and other ridiculous crap (national level, I am sure the local booster-level stuff will still go on)? Let me call the waaaahmulance for that.
Better he learn failure now than come to the end of his career at 40 and either spend a few years trying to recapture his youth (Fa-coughcoughcough-rve)(and yes, the misspell is intentional) or chasing psychotic almost-underage barmaids...
Hey.. where's Tony Mandarich? or that other explosive, gonna-change-the-definition-of-the-position Katzenmoyer?
I don't think they are wearing houndstooth-checked polyester jackets trying to move used lemons on a lot in West Bumf&^**... This kid will be taken care of, or at least will have to do what 95% of kids his age do: go out, and grind it out.
Hopefully that will make him a better person in the long run than the pampered, world-is-yours-because-you-can-play-a-game crap most athletes turning pro expect.
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9-28-2009 @ 6:56PM
gogator44 said...
I went to college for 1 reason. I hoped that I would make more $'s after graduating. That is what every guidance counselor tells every high school kid? If you go to college you will make $200,000 over your lifetime on average.
Would you tell a Frosh or Soph IT major that they need to stay in college if Bill Gates wanted personally hire them. NO. If someone would have offered me the $'s as an underclassman - GONE. If college was important to me/them then I/they would find a way to finish. Plus, I would have had the $’s to do so.
Troy Aikman went back and finished.
How about this? Anyone that comes out early gets 70% of the contract. If they finish in 10 years then get the other 30%. If not, it goes back equally to all division 1 schools.
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10-18-2009 @ 10:59PM
pugman51 said...
Kevin you're a flake.
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