Don't like it. Give all kids a set stipend. Cannot have different amount for different schools or conferences or the divide will grow. Cannot have the star skill player for OSU or PSU making loads of money while the all american guard makes change, and the backup gets nothing. Kids at big schools get big money, while other schools don't. It doesn't work. Either it has to be fully professional or not. Can't base it on revenue because everyone would want to be at a school where they make the most. It's bagman plus. If professional, it's over and a new NFL farm league will have to emerge. Nobody has to play college football. You can wait three years, working out and working a job and then make yourself available for the NFL, then you wouldn't be used by anyone. Start a farm league for recent high school graduates, drop outs and project players. Then you have choice, make money playing football or get an education and learn to be a better person and football player, while playing in big stadiums and on national TV. I believe that most would choose college. Very few kids are man enough for the NFL right out of HS. Very few grown men would be man enough for the NFL. Give them a stipend and an opportunity to earn a degree, or to play for a pittance, before small crowds, in lousy venues with no TV. This system would only really be for the benefit of the kids who don't want to "play school". I think most players see the benefit of those 3 years.