John Calipari will make 3.7 million dollars next season as the coach of the University of Kentucky.
It just seems outrageous to me because it is a public institution.
It just seems outrageous to me because it is a public institution.
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John Calipari will make 3.7 million dollars next season as the coach of the University of Kentucky.
And only $400k of that comes from the university directly. The rest comes from "other sources" For what its worth UK athletics don't take any taxpayer money as they are run as a separate entity financially from the university. In big time athletics thats the way its done.
As far as UMass it probably will not be the last cut, my guess is another sport might go next year. And about the professor that made $631k - a large part of that is grant money so the number is a bit skewed.
Give Warp an Amen on this one!! It looks like UMass is right sizing the issue by cutting the smaller programs. Same as other schools as previously mentioned. The University I work at has not cut any programs and are currently on track to open a new athletics facility in the not so distant future (though not immediate either). But our Univerity's athletic program does not live and die by big game attendance.Most athletic budgets are generated off a combination of student generated fees AND athletic DONATIONS and as was debated YESTERDAY on TV JUST before the NCAA tipoff by a number of UNiversity Presidents notably Penn State , Ohio State , U of Hartford and several others IN NEED OF CHANGE as a prioity as $$$$ to foundations have eroded from market decline AS AS ISSUES THAT ARE DETRACTING from support of teh central ACADEMIC mission of any University . So the issue will certainly evolve and change and probably result in A CONTRACTION of athletics at MANY schools .
This is a problem that has gotten entirely out of hand and needs to be RIGHT sized
Give Warp an Amen on this one!! It looks like UMass is right sizing the issue by cutting the smaller programs. Same as other schools as previously mentioned. The University I work at has not cut any programs and are currently on track to open a new athletics facility in the not so distant future (though not immediate either). But our Univerity's athletic program does not live and die by big game attendance.
I have never liked the idea of college students as professional athletes. Which those that get shown on prime time TV essentially are even though their "payment" comes in the form of full boat scholarships, fame, and visibility to the pro teams. But everyone that makes a bracket is culpable as these folks along with Vegas make the demand which feeds the process. Where there is demand and potential revenue, you can be sure man kind will create supply and profit. Unless it is regulated.....
Steve are you with Plymouth State and is it a D3 school ?
This is actually the least expensive part of fielding a team. Most teams work out cheap local options for training. When I was at UML, we even received five days of free training as an act of good will from Black Mtn one year.It is too bad in that the ski program was probably one of the lowest cost ski programs around...they've been able to work out excellent deals with their home mountain for almost half a century.
COaches can make alot more than 100,000. I think calhoun makes 3 million plus various other endorsement deals. It sucks to hhave to pay htat much but that is what the market says they are worth and the organizations have created such monsters with tv rights and such they can get it. Not calhoun but certainly the athletic departments should share the wealth.
Totally sucks for the Umass team.
I love th Ohio State story, where the men's football and basketball teams are run in the model of a business to earn revenue that allows those 2 sports to earn enough money (along with other athletic department licensing and such) to pay all their own expenses (including servicing debt on their new arenas and renovations), plus cover the budget shortfalls for the other 34 "non-revenue" varsity teams (most in the country), and have enough leftover to give money to support academics at the university, e.g. renovation of the library.
This is actually the least expensive part of fielding a team.
The big money is in loading up two or three University vans every week and paying for gas to and from ski areas and then paying for two nights of lodging for the entire team. Counting coaches, that is 30 people for a full team with back up racers. Add in food and a race weekend gets very expensive very quickly not even counting lift tickets (even with a discount). Local practice options are usually the cheapest part of the entire season.
So UMass should build a 101,568 seat football stadium and get John Calipari back to coach the basketball team?
Columbus is the largest city in Ohio, and doesn't have any professional sports teams.If UMass students/alumni supported their football and basketball teams the way they support the Red Sox and Pats, this would work, yes.
Columbus is the largest city in Ohio, and doesn't have any professional sports teams.
Springfield isn't even a quarter the size of Columbus, and Boston has plenty of other options.
The sports programs that really bring in money are the ones where there aren't professional teams as options.
Columbus does have a professional hockey team and I disagree with your statement regarding college teams doing well only if pro teams are absent.
It's a cultural thing and has very little to do with the presence of a pro sports team. I say this as a former resident of Ohio. They've got not one, but two pro football teams and yet you can walk up to those stadiums during any home game and get tickets for below face value. Both of those teams are less than two hours drive from metro Columbus. You want Buckeye tickets? Plan on paying $350.
Michigan same thing even though there are four pro sports teams in Detroit. There are numerous other examples.
I can't think of many major NE teams that don't have a nearby home mountain that would cut a good deal on night skiing rates.... pretty much every College or University fielding a ski program has a night skiing option within a half hour or less or their own home mountain very near the campus for some of the better teams.Sometimes yes, sometimes not so much - depends upon the school, its location, and the home mountain.
Columbus does have a professional hockey team and I disagree with your statement regarding college teams doing well only if pro teams are absent.
It's a cultural thing and has very little to do with the presence of a pro sports team. I say this as a former resident of Ohio. They've got not one, but two pro football teams and yet you can walk up to those stadiums during any home game and get tickets for below face value. Both of those teams are less than two hours drive from metro Columbus. You want Buckeye tickets? Plan on paying $350.
Michigan same thing even though there are four pro sports teams in Detroit. There are numerous other examples.
good point s USC UCLA ND Florida State , Miami etc etc etc etc