Tim Tebow is fed up.

A day after the California senate passed a vote making it illegal for schools in the state to take scholarships or eligibility away from student-athletes who have accepted endorsement money, Tebow blasted the idea of paying student-athletes on ESPN’s “First Take.”

“Now we’re changing it from us, to we, to my university … to it’s just about me,” he said Friday.

The Heisman winner and current Syracuse Mets outfielder said allowing student-athletes to be paid would only pile on to a “selfish” culture that shouldn’t have a place in college football.

“It’s about your team, it’s about your university, it’s about where my family wanted to go, it’s about where my grandfather had a dream of seeing Florida win an SEC championship. And you’re taking that away so that young kids can make a dollar.”

In the full seven-minute clip — a shorter one was widely circulated around Twitter — Tebow later said he would support the founding of a committee to provide student-athletes with stipends and “make the lifestyle easier, especially [for] kids from low-income backgrounds.”

Still, Tebow was criticized for his remarks online.

Fellow ESPN employee Mina Kimes implored Tebow to think about the needs of college athletes from less fortunate backgrounds than himself.

“I appreciate Tebow drawing on his own experience here,” she wrote. “But he’s making an anti-individualist argument while using his own, individual story to disregard the needs of others.”

And ESPN college basketball analyst Jay Bilas flipped Tebow’s arguments on their head.

“Great perspective,” he wrote on Twitter. “That Tim Tebow wishes to turn down compensation doesn’t mean all should be required to. He is free to play for free. All athletes should have the same economic rights as LITERALLY everyone else. That’s real choice.

Despite counterarguments from hosts Stephen A. Smith and Max Kellerman, Tebow stuck to his guns on the issue.

“We’re changing what’s special about college football,” he said.