Morning Sun

ADS fear sharing revenue with college athletes

- By Ralph D. Russo

Back in January, two Democratic senators introduced federal legislatio­n called the College Athlete Bill of Rights.

Among a long list of reforms, there was one item that jumped out as a potential game-changer to college sports: Schools would be required to share 50% of their profit with athletes from revenue-generating sports after accounting for cost of scholarshi­ps.

“How does that even work?” Boston College athletic director Patrick Kraft said.

In an Associated Press survey sent to 357 Division I athletic directors, 69% said they would strongly oppose “being required to give college athletes a share of university revenue derived from sports.”

Another 19.6% said they somewhat oppose sharing athletic department revenue with athletes.

Almost 77% of athletic directors said many fewer schools would be competitiv­e in sports if schools had to share revenue with athletes and another 13% said somewhat fewer schools would be competitiv­e.

An overwhelmi­ng majority of respondent­s in the survey that granted athletic directors anonymity in exchange for candor said sharing revenue with athletes would make it more difficult for their department­s to comply with Title IX and provide equal opportunit­ies to men and women. More than 75% said it would be much more difficult and almost 19% said somewhat more.

“What little revenue 95% of institutio­ns realize through revenue sports, goes toward supporting other sports,” one respondent said. “Paying those 5% of students will devastate the other teams that rely on that revenue to survive .... ”

Most of the survey respondent­s came from schools outside the Power Five conference­s — only 11 of the 99 ADS who participat­ed in the survey were from the Power Five — the wealthiest and most powerful in college sports that include the Atlantic Coast Conference Big 12, Big Ten, Pac-12 and Southeaste­rn Conference.

Nearly 69% of respondent­s came from the 22 conference that do not play FBS football.

Dozens of schools have athletic department­s that bring in revenue surpassing $100 million annually, but the NCAA says only about 25 in 2019 actually made a profit.

Football is the most common revenue-generating sports along with men’s basketball. For schools in the wealthiest conference­s such as the Big Ten and Southeaste­rn Conference, media rights contracts with television networks bring hundreds of millions of dollars each year — with football as the centerpiec­e of those deals.

“I’m funding 31 sports here,” said Kraft, whose school competes in the Atlantic Coast Conference. “I’m trying not only to get the best experience for our football players but for our swimmers and our sailors and our skiers. We’re all in this together. So football ticket revenue helps fund that.”

The College Athlete Bill of Rights introduced by Sens. Cory Booker (DN.J.) and Richard Blumenthal (D-conn.) is one of six related to college sports in the legislativ­e pipeline on Capitol Hill. It is the only one that is pushing for revenue sharing, which seems like a radical idea, unlikely to survive compromise­s.

But allowing schools to pay college athletes a stipend of a few thousand dollars per semester to cover the full cost of attendance was once a nonstarter for the NCAA and now it’s routinely part of an athletic scholarshi­p. Permitting college athletes to earn money off their name, image and likeness once seemed like a radical idea, but that will soon be a reality.

Plenty of people outside college sports don’t see anything radical about the athletes at the center of a multibilli­on dollar business sharing in the revenue that business generates.

“College sports revenues have exploded exponentia­lly in the last 15 years, but none of that money has gone to the actual players. To act like the sky will fall if athletes receive a fair share of the money their labor produces is downright disingenuo­us and fails to acknowledg­e the major civil rights inequities inherent in the industry,” Sen. Chris Murphy (D-conn.) said in a statement to the AP.

For some at schools with smaller budgets, the prospect of being forced to share revenue doesn’t register as quite so alarming.

“I think we’ve always adapted to whatever the rules are presented, we make changes,” Central Arkansas athletic director Brad Teague said. “We make it work. But what is income at the end of the day? At our level we have no income. There is nothing to share.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States