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Should College Athletes Be Paid?

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Paying the College Athlete The college athlete has steadily grown in popularity in the United States over the span of the past decades. Monetarily speaking, this increased publicity has been extremely beneficial for National Athletic Association (NCAA) and all the colleges involved in athletics which has sparked the dispute of whether or not the athlete should be paid for their hard work and dedication on the field and to their school or if the athletic scholarship is more than enough. College athletes should be paid. College athletes should be paid because they are “employees” of the college just as much as coaches are to the school. Coaches are in a better financial status than the players who are doing all of the hard physical work day in and day out. According to Matt Connolly, a reporter for Mic News, “The average compensation for the 108 football coaches in the NCAA’s highest division is $1.75 million. That’s up 75 percent since 2007.” The average compensation for every athlete during the same period was 0 percent because the only compensation they get is in the form of a scholarship that helps them attend the school that wants them to play sports for long hours every week. These colleges are feeding of their athletes like hungry parasites, gathering hundreds of thousands of dollars and not a single cent goes to the players who do most of the work. Every other level of sports players are paid for their labor, so why not compensate college athletes too? Many critics

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