Canadians, CFL players divided on whether new NCAA rule on compensation
They’ll forever be rivals, one a former college quarterback at Florida the other a rugged centre at Miami. But Tim Tebow and Canadian Brett Romberg do agree that NCAA athletes should not be financially compensated, despite a recent rule change.
Earlier this week, the largest governing body of college sports in the U.S., voted to allow student athletes to “benefit from the use of their name, image and likeness.”
Tebow, a former Heisman Trophy winner who led Florida to a pair of NCAA titles, has come out against college athletes being paid. Romberg, a 40-year-old native of Windsor, Ont., who had a decorated career as a centre at Miami, agrees.
“I don’t want to put praise on Tim Tebow because he’s a Florida Gator but initially when I heard him speak, he made a hell of a lot of sense to me,” said Romberg, who’s now a radio talkshow host in South Florida. “I was and am the old-school player with the old-school mentality that when I put the University of Miami logo on my helmet and the name on the back of the jersey, it was for my school, my passion, my love of the game.