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Should Student Athletes Be Paid For Work Essay

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Xavier Knowles May 17, 2017 Journalism 110 MW 2pm All Play no Time for Work: Should D1 Student Athletes Get Paid for Their Services? Imagine spending 8 hours a day, 6 days a week working an unpaid internship, having to be prepared to give about 4 presentations a week on completely different topics, while also having to be cross-trained in another field at the same time if you want to stay in the internship program. You also don’t have time to get a paying job and can’t find ways to make money on the side because you will be dismissed from the program, but don’t want to leave this internship because of the opportunities that are going to presented afterward. During this internship you brought the company almost $10,000,000 dollars in …show more content…

Some players, if they come from a low-income household get Pell Grants, which gives them the ability to buy soup instead of ramen packets. On top of that a scholarship isn’t guaranteed. During the 2013 NCAA Men’s Final Four and Kevin Ware, a guard for Louisville suffered a compound fracture to his right leg and in that moment almost lost everything he had worked his entire life for. Kevin however was very fortunate; he was able to go back to playing. Erin Knauer was not so fortunate. Erin was a Colgate University student who racked up $80,000 in medical bills after injuring her back and legs in training for the crew team. Insurance has covered less than a third of the cost because of the way her condition was diagnosed. “I thought I would be covered,” said Knauer, “You never think you’re going to rack up that much of a bill.” After an incoming student signs a letter of intent to attend a university, a good majority of NCAA schools have no contractual obligation to treat injuries or strains that result from playing for that college. Upon joining a Division 1 team, every participant must have insurance and undergo a medical examination before playing. However, when it comes to protecting the players, who generate billions of dollars every year, from having to pay unexpected medical bills or ensuring they receive proper healthcare, there are no official NCAA rules in place. There is also rules to prohibit a coach from

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