In this compellingly argued and deeply personal book, respected
sports historian Michael Oriard--who was himself a former
second-team All-American at Notre Dame--explores a wide range of
trends that have changed the face of big-time college football and
transformed the role of the student-athlete.
Oriard considers such issues as the politicization of football in
the 1960s and the implications of the integration of college
football. The heart of the book examines a handful of decisions by
the NCAA in the early seventies--to make freshmen eligible to play,
to lower admission standards, and, most critically, to replace
four-year athletic scholarships with one-year renewable
scholarships--that helped transform student-athletes into
athlete-students and turned the college game into a virtual farm
league for professional football.
Oriard then traces the subsequent history of the sport as it has
tried to grapple with the fundamental contradiction of college
football as both extracurricular activity and multi-billion-dollar
mass entertainment. The relentless necessity to pursue revenue,
Oriard argues, undermines attempts to maintain academic standards,
and it fosters a football culture in which athletes are both
excessively entitled and exploited.
As a former college football player, Oriard brings a unique
perspective to his topic, and his sympathies are always with the
players and for the game. This original and compelling study will
interest everyone concerned about the future of college
football.