I fully grant this the point of this film isn't to create a "conversation" or provide commentary on what college athletics has become, but I found myself comparing and contrasting the story of this historic college athletic team to the current state of American college athletics.
"The Boys in the Boat" tells the true story of the 1936 Washington Husky "JV" rowing team that won the national championship and the gold medal at Hitler's Olympics.
The interesting thing about that team is that they were kids from the backwater of the US that were raised during the depression. They had zero money and zero privilege. But they came together under a great coach, worked hard, beat the odds, represented UW and represented the United States. The poor kids beat the Yale kids.
It's a true story. Much of the story surrounds the plights of one particular guy who didn't have two pennies to rub together. He wanted to make the team for the meals it would feed him and plus, when on the team, the university would give him a job cleaning the cafeteria.
So contrast all that to what we have now…
It's really been corrupted by money. There's no denying it.
What made college sports so compelling and popular was the RA-RA of rooting for your school and it's players were classmates. That's gone. It's a mercenary pro league now. And I think, unless things really change, college sports is in real danger of completely losing its appeal.
This isn't just a rant about players getting paid. Maybe they should be paid something but I'd argue that a full ride scholarship plus the national exposure to put your talents on display for NFL opportunities was already tantamount to be paid pretty darn well.
Coaches are also obscenely over-compensated. Our Jimbo Fisher is the most egregious example. The Olympic winning coach of the 1936 UW squad wasn't getting rich by 1936 standards and there is a scene in the film which drives this home…
Somehow college athletics needs to be brought back down to earth. More parity needs to be created. I think I'd start by tiering and capping how much teams can pay coaches. Then look at how much money a schools athletic program are allowed to "keep" from TV deals - e.g, that money should go to facilities and then back to the academic pursuits of the university and non-athletic scholarships.
Anyway. Great movie.
"The Boys in the Boat" tells the true story of the 1936 Washington Husky "JV" rowing team that won the national championship and the gold medal at Hitler's Olympics.
The interesting thing about that team is that they were kids from the backwater of the US that were raised during the depression. They had zero money and zero privilege. But they came together under a great coach, worked hard, beat the odds, represented UW and represented the United States. The poor kids beat the Yale kids.
It's a true story. Much of the story surrounds the plights of one particular guy who didn't have two pennies to rub together. He wanted to make the team for the meals it would feed him and plus, when on the team, the university would give him a job cleaning the cafeteria.
So contrast all that to what we have now…
It's really been corrupted by money. There's no denying it.
What made college sports so compelling and popular was the RA-RA of rooting for your school and it's players were classmates. That's gone. It's a mercenary pro league now. And I think, unless things really change, college sports is in real danger of completely losing its appeal.
This isn't just a rant about players getting paid. Maybe they should be paid something but I'd argue that a full ride scholarship plus the national exposure to put your talents on display for NFL opportunities was already tantamount to be paid pretty darn well.
Coaches are also obscenely over-compensated. Our Jimbo Fisher is the most egregious example. The Olympic winning coach of the 1936 UW squad wasn't getting rich by 1936 standards and there is a scene in the film which drives this home…
Somehow college athletics needs to be brought back down to earth. More parity needs to be created. I think I'd start by tiering and capping how much teams can pay coaches. Then look at how much money a schools athletic program are allowed to "keep" from TV deals - e.g, that money should go to facilities and then back to the academic pursuits of the university and non-athletic scholarships.
Anyway. Great movie.