MVCfans wrote:MSU AD:
Moats said it would be up to individual schools in a conference like the Missouri Valley whether to follow along with the cost of attendance, a portion of it or give none at all. He said his belief is that schools in the Valley, being a basketball-centric league, would do all they could to fund the additional costs for men's and women's basketball players.
Maybe it doesn't need to be a league in it's entirety, but schools can individually make the decision?
Conferences will have the ability to follow the rules implemented by the power five. Schools within those conferences that choose to adopt power five rules can, but do not have to fund full cost of attendance. In other words, Elgin is eluding to the fact that the Valley will follow the direction of the power five and believes most schools in the Valley will pony up.
On the other hand, if a school is in a conference that doesn't adopt rules implemented by the power five, that school cannot unilaterally choose to pay full cost of attendance. This is where it gets dicey. If enough Valley schools find out that they cannot afford full cost of attendance, in an effort to stay competitive in the league, they could vote to not allow full cost of attendance for all.
I would expect all Valley schools to jump on board at the onset. I don't expect all 10 schools will be as enthusiastic about it in five years. Another consideration is the power five want to add two scholarships to basketball, plus, the full cost of attendance number is expected to rise over the next few years. When the cost of keeping up with the big boys jumps from a few hundred grand to over a million, what are schools like Evansville to do?
Yes, the power five fully expect to expense smaller schools out of the game.
There are three rules that I live by, never get less than 12 hours sleep, never gamble with a guy who has the same first name as a city and never get involved with a chick with a tattoo of a dagger on her body. Stick to that and everything else is gravy!