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College Athletes Should Get Some Type Of Compensation

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High Risk Low Reward The debate on whether college athletes should get some type of compensation has been an ongoing one. A documentary which aired on the EPIX channel entitled “Schooled: The Price of College Sports”, shows the evolution of college athletics and how it became what it is now. With the creation of the term “student athletes” in the 1950s by Walter Bayers, student athletes were forced to give their labor for the sake of the NCAA. The term, as expressed by some of the interviewers in the documentary, is an evil term because it allowed universities and colleges to stand behind the term and neglect the student athletes. As the NCAA and the universities start to amass insane amount of revenue from the sweats of these said student …show more content…

The NCAA seems to be more content of levying fines and punishment for college misconduct than taking care of the players. Saying that college players are students is no longer acceptable because the fact of the matter is they are much more than that. In an article by Steve Berkowitz for USA Today, he reported that the NCAA had a total revenue of almost $1 billion, that’s according to their financial statement for the 2014 year and he goes on by pointing out that it’s an $80.5 million surplus for the year (Berkowitz) which by all means is an outstanding number when considering the machine that generate those types of revenue has no right to any of it. The NCAA limit each institution on the amount of scholarship they can give out, the highest number of scholarships goes to the discipline that generates the most revenue (O 'Shaughnessy) not where the kids are guaranteed a better life after college. The Lynn O 'Shaughnessy article also mentioned how college coaches try to recruit kids as young as seventh graders thus securing their chances at a high level athlete but not for the kids for the coach reserve the option to change his mind at any time (O 'Shaughnessy). Andy Katz, senior writer for the ESPN sport network, has reported that the NCAA proposed a rule that would let college athletes

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