The Billion Dollar Sweat Shop
The true story behind March Madness
boycewatkins@blackathlete.com •
View all articles by Dr. Boyce Watkins, BASN Contributor
POSTED: Mar 5, 2010
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When I am asked whether I
think college athletes should be compensated for their labor, I simply
respond
to the question with another question:
“Why shouldn’t they get paid?
Did they not earn the money?
Is someone else
earning money from their labor?
Is the labor
of the
athlete essential to the revenue-generating process?”
That
helps us to understand how insane it
is that athletes earn billions of dollars for coaches, but aren’t
entitled to
any of that money for themselves.
I’ve seen race horses get better deals than that.
When you answer a simple question with a simple answer, you find that the issue that once seemed so complicated is not nearly as difficult to figure out as one might imagine. Let’s break the process down, shall we?
The
NCAA earns more money
during
March Madness than the
Super
Bowl and the
World Series.
Tickets
can be sold for the
Final Four
for as much as $8,000 dollars apiece.
Coaches and their families get to fly to games on private jets
and use
their massive salaries to buy mansions, yachts and fancy cars.
That money doesn’t fall out of the
sky.
It comes from corporations
paying millions of dollars to advertise to the massive audience that
shows up to
view the show.
Is the audience
there to see the coach? Probably not.
I humbly suggest that the audience watches the game to see the
big, tall
athletes run up and down the floor.
In fact, you could probably still draw a big audience if the
athletes
showed up without the coaches.
But
you could never draw an audience if the coaches showed up without their
athletes.
Thus, it is established: watching athletes is what draws the audience, which is what draws the ad revenue. So, I ask again: Why are the families of athletes not allowed to negotiate for a fair share of this money?
Let’s break down some of the quick issues that come up with one discusses the NCAA and why athletes should or should not be paid:
First, the issue is
actually one
of labor rights.
Athletes are not
the ones who choose to be paid with just a scholarship.
They
are forced into that style of
payment because the labor market has been artificially rigged to control
their
income and labor options.
Congress
allows all the universities across
America
to form a coalition (called the NCAA).
Members of this coalition have agreed to only pay athletes with
scholarships under threat of severe punishment if they deviate from the
agreement.
This style of action would be illegal in nearly any other industry in America and allows universities, coaches and administrators to profit handsomely by keeping athletes from demanding a fair share of the money.
The NCAA is allowed an
exemption
from anti-trust laws to maintain their cartel because they’ve convinced
Congress
that they are focused primarily on education and nothing more.
They argue that money doesn’t matter and
that they exist almost solely for the well-being of the athlete.
That is why they spend millions of
dollars running those commercials telling you about all the great things
they do
for college athletes.
The problem
is that the NCAA has no problem giving $
30 million dollars to coaches like
John
Calipari at
Kentucky, who has been found guilty of
numerous NCAA violations and doesn’t have a very high graduation rate.
Also, in my experience as a college
professor, I’ve seen athletes pulled out of class for games, and forced
to
practice so much that they barely have time to study.
In fact, many athletes have their scholarships taken away when they can no longer play sports or compete at the level that their coaches expect. Many athletes are expected to put their athletic performance ahead of their academic ones.
My argument is not
that we should
force universities to write a paycheck for athletes.
I
guess that would be too much for them,
even though they have no problem pumping out several million dollars per
year to
pay a coach who doesn’t care much about academics.
Instead
of paying the athletes, perhaps
we should simply decriminalize compensation.
Why
have we been convinced that a
star athlete, worth $
10
million dollars or more to his university every year,
should be considered a terrible person because he takes $1,000 dollars
from a
booster to pay his mother’s rent?
Do coaches have to beg for money to pay for their own rent? If not, then why have we decided that athletes and their families should be treated as second-class citizens?
Here’s the real deal
on the
NCAA:
part of the reason they can
get away with their billion dollar sweatshop is because most of the
people being
exploited are black.
Most of the
people watching March Madness don’t realize the billions of dollars
getting
passed around, and most of them don’t even care.
Also,
most of the audience thinks that
those
black kids
should be happy with what they get, since a natural jealousy
can rise up when people see a young black man with more resources than
they feel
he deserves.
While they certainly have no problem watching a coach buy mansions and private jets from coaching a championship team, they have serious issues seeing a 20-year old black kid in a Bentley.
The NCAA will change
when the
athletes get informed on the exploitation and gain the courage to stand
up
against tyranny.
Additionally,
legal action from concerned citizens (National Black Law Student
Association,
did you hear that?) may help pave the way to challenge the lack of
constitutional fairness of many of the NCAA’s excessive rules and
regulations.
This is a matter of equity and although a scholarship is nice, athletes should have the same labor rights as coaches.
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