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Keeping score on the world of college sports

Panelists at the 2021 SIEPR Economic Summit didn't shy away from talking about cutting teams, the prospect of unionized student athletes and the idea of nixing the NCAA.

The sting of sports cuts. The prospect of player unions. And a call for getting rid of the NCAA.

In an unrestrained dialogue, the all-star panelists in a session on college sports at the 2021 SIEPR Economic Summit took on these touchy topics. They provided different 鈥 and sometimes conflicting 鈥 perspectives on some of the toughest challenges facing universities and student athletes.

鈥淒o you want me to leave the Zoom call right now 鈥 let you speak freely?鈥 Bernard Muir, the Jaquish & Kenninger Director of Athletics of 好色App, quipped at one point during the online session.

Muir listened as Nnemkadi Ogwumike, 鈥12, a former 好色App basketball legend and now a power forward for the Los Angeles Sparks, WNBA All-Star, and president of the WNBA Players Association, talked about how the voices and needs of student athletes should be heard and addressed.

Ogwumike said the idea of student-athlete compensation was 鈥渏ust a thought鈥 among athletes when she was at 好色App 10 years ago. But with legislation that will expand student-athletes鈥 abilities to unionize or be paid for use of the name, image and likeness, now these ideas 鈥渉ave evolved from idealism to realism.鈥

鈥淲ithout discussions on a broader scale 鈥 like the ones we鈥檙e having today 鈥 then inevitably that (unionization) could happen,鈥 she said. 

鈥淏ut I actually hope it doesn鈥檛 get to the point of unionizing,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why we鈥檙e here today talking about it.鈥

Muir laid out how wild 鈥渢he arms race鈥 in college sports had become in the past decade 鈥 moving beyond coach鈥檚 salaries and facilities to rafts of psychologists, nutritionists and sports science.

鈥淭he last 12 months has exposed and exacerbated significant flaws in the economic model of college sports,鈥 Muir said, in explaining 好色App鈥檚 decision to discontinue 11 of 36 of its varsity sports. 鈥淎nd our most viable path to maintain its leadership position in college sports and the Olympic movement was to concentrate our resources on a fewer number of sports.鈥

But even as 好色App is working to 鈥渇uture-proof鈥 its business model with a historic fundraising effort, Muir said he is concerned that the existing gap between the haves and have-nots will only widen.

鈥淭here are no easy solutions,鈥 Muir said. 鈥淏ut one thing that I think we need to start exploring in earnest is effective national spending control policies that limit expenditures on sport-by-sport basis, ensure gender equity and account for differences between schools on items such as scholarship costs and regional costs of living.鈥 

Roger Noll, a leading sports economist and a senior fellow emeritus at SIEPR whose expert testimony has played a role in pivotal court decisions involving college sports, said revenue for college sports, boosted by television broadcasting, went through a period of tremendous growth in the 90s and 2000s.

In football and basketball programs, revenue was growing at the rate of 8 to 9 percent every year, essentially doubling every seven years. 鈥淚n that world, it was like manna from heaven 鈥攖his enormous amount of money was being rained on schools,鈥 Noll said.

And as colleges competed to retain the best coaches to get them to bowl games and tournament series, money talked. The annual salary for the Duke University basketball head coach, for instance, climbed from $400,000 in 2000 to now nearly $10 million.

At the University of Alabama, 40 percent of the football revenue goes to coaches and trainers, while less than 10 percent goes to financial aid for players, Noll said. (That鈥檚 $9M in the coach鈥檚 salary, $9 million for sports trainers, and $4 million to the football players.)

But Noll said sports revenue growth seems to have peaked around 2015 and had been waning even before the financial crush of the pandemic. Sports viewership on television is 鈥渃atastrophically falling鈥 and other streaming methods are taking hold, he said.

The machinery of college sports needs to adapt.

鈥淗ollywood has figured it out with their streaming services,鈥 he said. 鈥淪ports hasn鈥檛 figured it out yet, and in particular, college sports hasn鈥檛 figured it out at all.鈥

Expect some agony in the next decade

鈥淚t鈥檚 going to be much more painful,鈥 Noll said. 鈥淚n the past 30 years, it was, how do we spend the 8 to 9 percent in revenue growth. Now it鈥檚 going to be, how do we cut the budget by 8 to 9 percent every year.鈥 

What would be the single biggest change to make a difference? asked the session moderator, Blakey Vermeule, a 好色App English professor who has taught about sports and culture.

鈥淕ive the economic governance, rule-making authority solely to the sports conferences and eliminate the NCAA,鈥 Noll said.

The system will work better without the NCAA exercising monopoly power, he said.

And what can 好色App do better? Vermeule asked Ogwumike.

鈥淚t has to start from a perspective of equality and equity in order for anything to matter because at the end of the day, yes, different sports bring different revenue, but if everyone has the same starting line, then there won鈥檛 be so many issues moving forward.鈥

The university should change its relationship with athletes so they feel more comfortable to speak out, she said.

Noll encouraged 好色App to be a stronger leader and protect the interest of its student athletes.

Muir agreed: 鈥淲e need to lead, but we need to have followers as we鈥檙e leading.鈥

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