If the Ruling Sticks, They May Have To
Funny - I just brought this up on an earlier thread.
Maybe not immediately - it depends on how many high schoolers and underclassmen elect to come out - but if the NFL was boxed in by being forced to baby site man-children, they'd face the moral dilemma of (a) kids being encouraged to drop out of school (b) arriving on the scene ill-equipped to deal with the non-physical responsibilities and pitfalls an adult's world, (c) making their undeveloped bodies vulnerable to obliteration by full-grown men and (d) dealing with an expanded player-pool with 53 man rosters and 5 man practice squads and a somewhat "informal" NFL Europe.
Since there has been an incessant whine over recent years about "why shouldn't colleges pay football players?" and "Are all young people suited for college?" some have felt that, if a budding young athlete shouldn't have to waste his time taking courses like basket-weaving or "phys ed" but be taught courses on "life skills" (i.e. how to deal with sleazoid agents", "how to financially plan for the future", "life after pro football", "keeping predatory family members and homeboys from the hood from leeching off you" etc.
Well, if rape by the courts is inevitable, why not establish a really solid mechanism for accepting young kids into the NFL and seeing to it that they develop into solid citizens as well as well-coached and physically prepared football players?
A minor league program which includes mandatory attendance (and passing) of life-skills courses is an intriguing idea. The only thing that might have to be tweaked would be the scheduling of minor league season - to make it more convenient for teams to evaluate and promote players in line with minicamps, training camps, preseason and regular season.
I also think that the League should look past NFL Europe and consider adding teams from Asia and Central/South America and possibly Canada. But, to keep air travel down to a dull roar, have more than one league (similar to the Cactus and Grapefruit Leagues MLB spring training set up).
Because everyone is scrambling and diving for the bushes, I wouldn't expect to see anything for at least a year or two - but it does look like the direction things will eventually go.
Until it does, you may see an expansion of the number of players who can be on a team's practice squad and an expanded length time by which a team can protect players categorized as "under the age of 20 or 21."