No, I don't believe he got a years worth of education. But I really don't care. That his choice to abuse a scholarship - just as thousands do each year throughout the NCAA.
And I get your point and 100% agree with it. I just can't get past the fact that these kids are "getting paid" via their full-ride scholarships, separate and apart from any money they also take in from other sources.
The NCAA has been and remains immensely hypocritical. They obviously know these kids are taking money from other sources, yet they continue to push their laughable rules aimed at preventing and penalizing the act that they know about and, arguably, contribute to... what a joke.
Agreed one of the things that has been totally lost in this whole story is that NCAA rules don't even require money to change hands for it to be a violation. if there is an agreement in place with an agent, even if it's for a later date, that's a violation and the kid is ineligible. That rule exists to stop the scenario where you tell Ayton for example, we'll pay you to go our school but we can't do it until after you leave or you'd be ineligible. So in this story we have all these examples of kids who apparently were being steered to Dawkins and Sood, IF the kids were in on it, they're all ineligible even if they never saw a penny of money. If they weren't, and it's just Dawkins, Sood and Book scheming, then the kids are ok.
That's where the Book stuff on tape becomes critical he's the only guy with both ties to a college team, Arizona, and ties to the kids, he's one of their coaches. If for example Alkins cousin was really in Arizona getting paid by Book, then Alkins was ineligible. It's also why in the case of Ayton possibly the most damning story is really the Avenatti one not the FBI one. Because that shows what is purported to be a paper, text and email trail of someone going to meet his mom, with money they had, and then gave to her. They don't have video but if the NCAA agrees she actually met them with the intent of getting money, he's ineligible retroactively.
All of which is just too complex. The NCAA needs to let them have some spending money, and then they need to continue to have rules to stop the kids who want MORE, from being bought and paid for. Which will be very tough to do since the entire youth basketball system depends on money from shoe companies.