The Treatment Of College Athletes Need To Change
The NCAA needs to protect the overall well being of the athletes because they are the bread and butter of the school and NCAA’s income. The NCAA needs to start paying the athletes, allow the athletes to receive money from an outside source, provide a stable living environment for athletes who qualify, provide the proper nutrients the athletes need in order to excel on the field, and the NCAA needs to ban colleges from pulling the athletes scholarship after an injury. The athletes can’t get decent jobs due to their overload schedule, and the food proportion the athletes receive isn’t nearly enough for their bodies to be healthy and run properly. Many student athletes don’t come from the best backgrounds, which means financial support from the families aren’t always there. Student-Athletes attend big colleges to get an education while playing a sport they enjoy. Regular college students have the opportunity to get a job that pays decent because they have much more time on their hands, and sometimes that isn’t enough. Now imagine how hard it is for athletes who have to
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Without the athletes, they wouldn’t be able to provide paychecks for the professors, they wouldn’t be able too provide top-notch technology for their students, and colleges wouldn’t differentiate from other colleges. Alabama is one of the top tier colleges for athletes, and without athletics, who would want to travel to the middle of Alabama just to attend school without the college sport atmosphere? When people think about college, they think about that last second win against their rival school. The college atmosphere is based of the competitive emotion on the field, and for not so gifted humans to cheer on the athletes. Professional athletes bring fourth the same attributes and they get lumps of cash, while bringing in less revenue than college
College athletes are taken advantage of and deserve to be compensated for their services while playing sports. These students are exploited and used to make money and out of everything that particular school makes, the athlete never given a penny of it. All of the hard works, blood, sweat and tears that they put into that
The NCAA is a money-generating monster that disregards college athletes’ financial well being. How can we stand back and let the NCAA steal money from the hard working athletes that provide it? Take this for example: Philip is a landscaper that works hard day in and day out mowing yards. He is not always perfect, and makes the occasional mistake. Even though he make mistakes, he is good at what he does. Now imagine if Philip earned a very small amount of the total money made. The rest of the money goes straight to his advisor who sits around and does nothing all day. This is what collegiate sports have come to. Collegiate athletes are working hard by earning money for the NCAA. The NCAA is
In America sports wherever there is people, there will also be sports. Sports have played a major role in American history. To some people sports is all they have. It is just the way that things are. The issue in sports now is that the NCAA exploit the sports world and the very backbone of the corporation is the poorest. It is an issue that has been around for quite some time now. The issue is that the sports world face is the fact that college athletes are not paid, although they perform in a multibillion dollar industry. The NCAA basically has a monopoly on college athletics, and generate about one billion dollars a year. College sports are extremely demanding both in and out of season, and these athletes put their future on the line. The NCAA should be legally obligated to compensate athletes, based solely on the fact that the money made, is from their performance.
Everyone seems to benefit off these college athletes except for the athletes themselves. Student athletes should be able to make money off themselves because it's hard for college athletes to live and sustain themselves without money. As well as NCAA athletes should be able to profit off themselves because people exploit them. The NCAA shouldn’t limit financial opportunities for students because it takes away from them. Lastly, students aspire and have hobbies that they should enjoy if it also involves making money so be it.
Another path this debate travels down is determining where the funds for the compensation will be found. At the expense of all other non-big revenue producing sports, it is assumed that those sports will take the hit financially. Women’s soccer, swim, lacrosse, and many more that are not big business. It is unfair to these hard working athletes, who go out every day and work just as hard. Along with other student athletes being affected, non-athletic students will also be affected largely. With what money not being taken from other sports will be taken from possible scholarship money that could be allotted to these academic based students. Not only are these students losing opportunity for free money but also being set on a side of a drawn divisor. Student athletes have special everything, ranging from their own tutors to their own specific counselors. As stated in the NCAA Guide “basic purpose of this Association is to maintain intercollegiate athletics as an integral part of the educational program and the athlete as an integral part of the student body…” (NCAA) This statement in which is
It is the NCAA’s policy that no student athlete shall receive any special benefits or compensation in regard to their status as an athlete of a university. This basically means that no player can accept gifts or services with any special benefits from school or athletic personnel, or receive any benefits for outside entrepreneurship for reasons regarding their play. For example, a student athlete cannot sign a jersey with their number on it and exchange it for any type of compensation. However, over the past few years, many scandalous conspiracies of soliciting services to athletes for their commitment and play have surfaced. Due to the NCAA’s stance on this issue many of these violations have left athletics programs with sanctions that in reality are very unnecessary and hardly ever punish those who initially violated the rules. The fact is that the college athletics generates on average 10.5 billion dollars of revenue annually, and the NCAA organization alone, about 720 million annually. Of that 720 million that the NCAA accounts for, only 60 percent of that is returned to the Division I universities whose athletics accounted for almost all of it. The rest is dispersed into other funds such as championship games and the national office services, with a small amount being paid to division II and III schools. However, of that 60 percent paid back to the Division I schools, which amounts to approximately 430 million dollars, the majority is spent by the University on
No one expects somebody to work two fulltime jobs and not get paid for it. Nobody would think it would be fair to work so hard and not receive any form of compensation. This is exactly what is happening to student athletes. Student athletes are not only fulltime students, but also are fulltime athletes. There are two very decisive sides to this argument. On one side the NCAA claims that the student athletes are amateurs and cannot be paid. They also claim they are paid in other ways such as a full ride scholarship to a top level education. The other side of the argument states that the work load of a fulltime student and a fulltime athlete is almost unmanageable and the NCAA is making millions off of their work and sweat. This is an issue
The NCAA is focused on education as it states, but when athletes are struggling to survive, and in some cases, going to bed starving, one has to wonder how focused the NCAA truly is on the student and his or her education. With all of the money generated through the college athletes in the performance of their respective sport, it would make sense that these
There is blatant, inarguable proof that the players and their talents are being exploited. These athletes are the draw to the games. They are the reason people watch and cheer on their teams. The amount of money given as a “full” scholarship is a marginal benefit only a drop in the bucket when compared to the market value of a player’s talent and skills. Athletic scholarships, as will be explained later, is indeed financial assistance but still leaves the student athlete living below, or at best slightly above, the poverty line. The NCAA and the respective universities has a duty to be concerned with the overall well-being of its players, not just whether or not an injury would keep their star player from playing in the upcoming game. The NCAA ought to consider the social responsibility of meeting the needs of its players, subsequently initiating a reformation of the NCAA bylaws concerning paying college athletes.
When asked, “Do you agree that the NCAA is taking away your rights by making you devote more time towards sports than school?” Summer Atkins responded, “Yes, I agree. You sign a contract to play sports, and the NCAA is specifically for “Collegiate Athletics,” so even though you have to keep your grades up to play, you’re there to represent the school sport wise.” The NCAA is forcing student athletes to sign away their freedom rights because it says it is “protecting” the students. Sure, the athletes receive full rides with paid tuition, room and board, along with extras, but sports are a huge source of funding for those schools.
Imagine going to work at your job every single day but never getting a paycheck. That is the crisis that college athletes are currently going through. Division 1 athletes produce billions of dollars for everyone around them, but the athletes themselves do not get a dime. The idea of student athletes being paid by their college has been proposed numerous times, but has been denied by the NCAA every time. Colleges have plenty of money that is generated by the athletes that they can pay them. Having enough money is not the issue. There is enough money to do it, but the NCAA thinks athletes should not be paid. In order to solve the problem of NCAA Division 1 athletes not being paid, the NCAA must allow colleges to pay their athletes, to ensure that the hard working athletes are being paid.
heath for student athletes and they create more opportunities for the them. Another reasons is they help athletes stay on track of their academic work.
Colleges and Universities, along with the NCAA, make money hand over fist off the backs of student-athletes while the athletes themselves get nothing. Players give upwards of forty five hours a week to practice their trade, negatively affecting their ability to get strong grades and a solid education, while eliminating the possibility of earning any additional income for themselves or their families. On the field, players quite literally run the risk of injuring themselves in a way that could impact them for the rest of their lives. For their troubles, they get a sub-par education and one in a thousand shot at an NFL career. College football players are being ripped off. They deserve
Student athletes commonly go to school for one reason: their love for the sport they participate in. These student athletes get scholarships from large Division 1 schools, which means things such as schooling, board, and food will be paid for by the school so the student athletes do not have to pay for these benefits themselves (Patterson). If college athletes are to be paid, it will cause unfair compensation between players who are valued or played more than others. When student athletes are rewarded with a scholarship, they have nothing school related that they would need to pay for. This can lead them to blow all of their income on unnecessary or dangerous things such as drugs and alcohol which could get them removed from the team they
Many critics stereotype athletes to be these young cocky jocks who only care about how they look physically and the big game that night. But clearly in today's society student athletes are making a strong effort to destroy that reputation. By athletes getting involved in the school's campus life as well at the community, they are showing that their lives aren't all about sports. NBC News writer, Lisa Heffernan, shows just exactly how students are becoming involved in the school in her recent article titled “College Athletes Find Success in College and the Workplace”. She writes “Athletes were more likely than non-athletes to say that they had a professor who cared about them as a person and were more involved with campus clubs and organizations.” (Heffernan). It is very important for an athlete to become close with a teacher or professor, because being an athlete means road games and possibly missing class which is never easy to do. Another statistic Lisa Heffernan points out, is that sports kept students in school and at one school for all four years. Statistics show that “Despite the time demands of playing for a team, athletes were highly engaged in campus life. They were far less likely to transfer (39% vs. 22%)...” (Heffernan). A school's mission should be to better their students and want them to stay at school for all four years. One way this is possible is by motivating students to participate in sports as well as clubs and organizations.