If so, employers, and graduate school admissions committees can be expected to discount the degrees and the GPA of college athletes in order to control for an informal "athlete's bonus", when screening applications.
I have rarely been asked my GPA (Grade Point Average) when applying. So I suspect that college athletes grades aren't discounted because they simply aren't evaluated.
If athletes' GPAs were evaluated, then it's not really necessary to devalue them. When the answers to that question say that GPA is inflated, they don't mean from a 2.0 to a 4.0. They mean that the GPA is inflated from a 0.8 to a 2.1.
A summary of the requirements:
Maintaining NCAA eligibility
There is another element to NCAA academic eligibility, and that is maintaining your eligibility once you are in college. While you should have the full support of your college's compliance office to ensure you maintain eligibility, here is a rough breakdown of the academic requirements once you are in college:
By the START of sophomore year, you must:
- have a cumulative GPA of 1.8
- have completed 36 units
By the END of sophomore year, you must:
By the START of junior year, you must:
- have a cumulative GPA of 1.9
- have completed 72 units (40 percent of your total degree requirements)
By the START of senior year, you must:
- have a cumulative GPA of 2.0
- have completed 108 units (60 percent of your degree requirements)
By the START of a fifth year, you must:
- have a cumulative GPA of 2.0
- have completed 144 units (80 percent of your degree requirements)
A 1.8 or 2.0 is a mediocre GPA. A student with much lower grades will be flunking out of school. The NCAA (National College Athletics Association) is basically saying that students have to be students passing classes on their way to a degree, not just athletes pretending to attend the school.
This is especially a problem in college football (American rules, not soccer). Because football doesn't have a minor league system where an athlete can turn professional straight out of high school. So the only place where someone who wants to play those sports professionally can go is college (unless they are so good that they can skip college, which is nearly unheard of in football).
In terms of GPA then, there is little need to discount the GPA. For the relevant students, their GPA is already lousy.
I would also agree with this answer that college athletics has value of its own that may offset bad grades. College athletes demonstrate that they can maintain a high level of efficiency in an endeavor. For some careers, that may be sufficient. I would not want someone like this to be my boss, but I wouldn't mind seeing such people in sales. The ability to get good grades does not necessarily indicate that someone is good at sales. My position and my boss' position would require a stronger athletic background.