The ideals of amateurism and the capitalist benefits that the NCAA reels in annually do not mix and are in fact hypocritical. Television deals and sponsorships are only growing. The three weeks of the NCAA Basketball Tournament, known as “March Madness,” generate over $770 million in TV rights deals alone as reported by USA Today. College football moves to a playoff system for the 2014 season. ESPN is in the process of securing the playoff TV rights, and many expect the network will eventually have to pay somewhere in the neighborhood of 500 million for them. So while the NCAA is signing multiyear, multimillion dollar deals it’s only giving out 1 year renewable scholarships to their athletes playing in these highly profitable games.” The rules have been set up in such way to avoid a public understanding that athletes are already paid. It’s just a matter of whether they are paid their value” said Staurowsky, who in 1998 co-authored the book” College athletes for hire: The Evolution and Legacy of the NCAA’s Amateur Myth” with Allen L.…
The biggest question circulating in college sports right now is the controversial topic that ask, “Should college athletes be paid?” In August, a federal judge decided that players in top college football and men’s basketball programs- the big-money sports- are entitled to receive payment if their “names, images, and likenesses” are used in video games or TV broadcasts, according to Veronica Majerol, author of the article “Should College Athletes Be Paid”. It is a subject that has been around for a long period of time, and is now receiving light on the matter. The problem with this is where would the funds come from? Also, paying athletes would take away the fact that they play for the love of the…
The article, titled “Should college athletes be paid?” was written by Allen Sack and published on March 7, 2008 in the Christian Science Monitor. Allen Sack is a professor at University of New Haven. He attended college at University of Notre Dame, where he was on the 1966 National Championship football team. He has a published book, many journal articles and has given multiple presentations on the management of sport industries. Allen Sack’s main points when he wrote this article was either give college athletes all the benefits of pro athletes, or place them on an amateur status. His article focuses on how the organization, NCAA, has changed throughout the years as a…
On average, annually D1 Colleges are earning 50 million dollars across all sports in the schools. All of the D1 schools are making a great deal of money off these stellar athletes and they are receiving very minimal in return. On the other hand, if D1 colleges decide to pay their athletes how could this affect the other programs in the school? This is where the discourse begins on whether we should pay the college athletes, or is a scholarship more than content for the student. As a result of this dispute it can cause humongous outrages from angry parents and fans of certain teams.…
The primary focus of higher education is academics, or at least it used to be. In the article Why College Football Should Be Banned written by Buzz Bissinger, Bissinger claims that universities today focus more on “the social well-being of students as opposed to the obsession that they are there for the vital and single purpose of learning as much as they can to compete.” (Bissinger 4). I agree that this may be the case, considering college athletic programs have grown exceedingly in the United States over the past few years, causing tuition to increase and making it harder for students to pursue an education.…
In the article titled “College players deserve pay for play,” Rod Gilmore makes his case clear; it’s time for a change in college football. Since college sports originated, the athletes have been considered amateurs that receive benefits through scholarships. Recently, college football has become a multi billion dollar industry, and controversy about whether or not players should get paid has risen from it. Through factually supported claims, clever attacks at the system in place, and intelligent and reasonable requests, Gilmore presents a convincing argument to persuade readers to support college football players being paid.…
The article “Want to clean up college athletics? Pay the players.” the author, Ryan Swanson explains the unlikeness of paying college players, but explains the benefits of paying college students who are playing sports in college. Ryan explains that some coaches want to pay the players for more motivation and so they can keep themselves financially safe and to pay for tuition, an example would be in 1980 Southern Methodist University had illicitly paid their football players, another example would be the University of Kentucky which they had lured in Chris Mills by having 1,000 dollars of cash in transit. Which none of these events had led to a change in the NCAA model. Swanson believes that paid athletes who gain revenue require them to take money out of their own wallet, meaning the money they recieve will result in less money for the colleges and the idea of paying college athletes is actually really old. In 1905 Harper's magazine published an editorial called “Pay of College Athletes.” which was quoted “How to make athletes work for nothing” which helps Swanson's claim of no money=no motive. There is a workaround of course to…
The notion of paying college athletes has been an ongoing and controversial debate for student-athletes, coaches, schools, media and most certainly the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). Many would argue that playing major college sports is more like a job versus an extracurricular activity. As with the majority of many student athletes, some attend college with the aspiration of becoming professional players thereby college is seen as a means to end. Although student-athletes already receive compensation via full and partial scholarships to participate at the college level, passionate conversations will continue to be a topic of debate because of the enormous revenue generated by college sports.…
Sack, Allen L., and Ellen J. Staurowsky. College Athletes For Hire: The Evolution And Legacy Of The NCAA’s Amateur Myth. Praeger, 1998. EBook Collection (EBSCOhost). Web. 18 June 2012.…
(Daugherty). Not only does a paying college athlete diminish the value of an education, but also…
Remy, D. (2012). Why the New York Times ' Nocera is wrong. NCAA News, 5.…
As the day started with the sound of cars passing by with the engine roaring, I knew it was time to go. I awoke from a dream that a 17-year would have about sports, specifically a 17-year old with the championship game, that happened to be on that day as well. I had the utmost confidence that my teammates and I will be able to deliver something that couldn’t be done by the last “dream team.” Those players had the utmost belief in each other and seemed that they knew where each person would go. It seemed they had a psychological connection, which I presume came from the relationship they had off the court. I would see them roaming the hallways with a smile that would give anyone belief that they can achieve those miracles. As time passed they grew older, flew towards a new goal. One became an assistant coach at UC Berkeley, one is fighting to become one of the starters and prove his worth at Washington State, and others stayed at community College still hoping there dream of playing college basketball becomes a reality. Now, after those long practices where you had players saying…
“Success is how high you bounce when you hit bottom”(George S. Patterson). In life odds are that you will not reach your goal on your first try. In fact, you’ll get knocked down or out of your path multiple times in your life. So it's good to have multiple plans in your life. My goal is to play football after high school, but I realize there is a good chance that won't happen. Either the team I want to play for doesn’t offer me or just that I wasn’t good enough. My goal and dream is to play college football.…
Three weeks after a trial over the NCAA’s use of college athletes’ likenesses ended this summer, U.S. Senator Jay Rockefeller’s Commerce Committee began hearings on the welfare of athletes and included testimony from NCAA President Mark Emmert. Amid the senators’ skepticism and the professed need for congressional oversight, Emmert once again promised more change to come and referred to the hearings as a “useful cattle prod.”…
Since the 1920’s, professional football, basketball, baseball, have become much more popular in the United States, however they have not yet been able to rival college footballs popularity in terms of attendance and revenue.…