OrediggerPoke
Well-known member
I think it would be an uphill battle on the legal argument against a 4 year limitation because that has been uniformly applied and the college undergraduate system has always been set up on the theory of a 4 year degree.With the proliferation of money in college athletics for athletes, I wonder how long it will be before players challenge the limit on years they are allowed to play. I fully expect an athlete to say that they are being denied the chance to make significant coin in college because of the arbitrary "four years of eligibility" business. Amateurism is dead anyway, why not go all the way and say that college sports are simply an alternative to turning pro - and you can move around as you see fit. Similarly, I wouldn't be surprised if players that go pro and flail and fail in the pro game sue to go back and play in college. I'm not saying I support either, but with the current state of play, they are wholly plausible.
But the restrictions on returning to college after not making it in the pros is a really interesting thought. Under anti-trust theories that are now being adopted by the courts, hard to see why that should be barrier.