logo
Let Squash Die

Let Squash Die

The Atlantic9 hours ago
A few sports at a few U.S. universities generate billions of dollars in total. The rest hemorrhage money. For decades, this was an easy circle for schools to square: The money from football and basketball was spent on sports such as squash, water polo, rowing, tennis, golf, and field hockey.
But this system was monumentally unfair. The football and basketball players, disproportionately Black and poor, entranced millions of TV viewers and enriched their universities. Rather than compensating them, administrators turned around and spent much of the money subsidizing teams that go largely unwatched.
Recent court cases have produced major policy changes: Star athletes can now be paid by advertisers, fans, and as of this summer, their schools. This has spooked those on the other side of the equation, whose sports are getting cut to free up money to pay the football players. 'That's not fair, you know?' Cochise Wanzer, the father of twin collegiate divers, told The Washington Post, after both of his sons lost their roster spots because of budget reductions.
Yet allowing colleges to pay revenue-generating athletes is long overdue. If that means cutting the diving team because athletic budgets are finite, so be it.
Saahil Desai: College sports are affirmative action for rich white students
In the struggle of subsidized squash against the powerful forces of the free market, President Donald Trump has sided with the former. In an executive order signed late last month, he declared that 'opportunities for scholarships and collegiate athletic competition in women's and non-revenue sports must be preserved and, where possible, expanded.' (Whether he has the legal authority to enforce these requirements is, to put it lightly, unclear.)
Protecting women's access to college sports is a matter of settled federal law—Title IX is interpreted to require equitable athletic opportunities for men and women. But blanket protection for nonrevenue sports, which Trump's order calls 'the backbone of intercollegiate athletics,' would help preserve an arbitrary status quo. If you're an excellent high-school-squash player, you might be admitted to a school that you would otherwise not get into, and that might pay for your tuition, even if your parents could have afforded it. (Student athletes come from disproportionately wealthy backgrounds, and many nonrevenue sports are distinctly upscale pastimes.) When you arrive, you'll be treated to expensive travel, fancy merch, and a get-out-of-class-free card. If you're equally good at chess or violin or oil painting, however, none of this is an option.
Where does the money for nonrevenue sports come from? Revenue-generating sports put up some of the cost; the student body (or tuition-paying parents) tends to cover the rest. James Madison University, for example, is unusually transparent about this nonconsensual sponsorship agreement: Each student pays a mandatory $2,362 a year to support the university's athletics.
In the race to secure applicants and alumni donations, colleges see this as money worth spending—and charging students for. But the usual rationales for most intercollegiate sports don't add up. If the goal is to promote school spirit, why does almost nobody go to the games? If the goal is to promote fitness, why not do so directly, rather than count on the tennis and lacrosse teams to set a good example? If the goal is teaching teamwork and resilience, why recruit and admit a special group of students to hoard these learning opportunities? From an academic standpoint, the traditional athletics program is a negative: According to NCAA figures, athletes typically spend 30 hours a week on their sports.
Originally, college athletics were cheap and nonintensive. Some stronger-than-average Yale and Harvard students rode a train to New Hampshire in 1852 to face off in a rowing race, the first-ever intercollegiate sporting event. For a while, that system of athletic amateurism continued. Even today, a version of this system exists, known as club sports. As an undergrad, I played club soccer and club table tennis against teams from other colleges. We paid dues to help fund our modest operating costs—we had no coaches—and offered financial aid to students who couldn't afford those dues.
Over the past 75 years, NCAA sports has become ever more professionalized. Football and men's basketball began to generate eye-watering sums of money, incentivizing colleges to invest more resources in them. Revenue generated by those teams subsidized the school's less popular teams. The roster of sports continued to expand as more and more women enrolled in higher education and schools added teams to comply with Title IX.
To protect the 'amateur' status of the athletes, a rigid policing structure was created to make sure they never earned any money off their sports, no matter how much they generated for their universities. Not only could colleges not pay them, but the players couldn't accept any money or gifts as a reward for their athletic achievement. They couldn't charge to sign autographs or even accept complimentary meals from local restaurants when their 250-pound bodies got hungry.
In the mid-2000s, the running back Reggie Bush was the best player on a football team that generated tens of millions of dollars for the University of Southern California. His Heisman Trophy and the team's national championship were stripped after the NCAA found out that marketing agents had bought him a $13,000 car, let his parents stay in an empty investment property, and paid for their airfare so they could watch him play. (His Heisman was reinstated last year.) Ohio State players were suspended for multiple games for, among other things, accepting discounts on tattoos. Reggie Bush went on to the NFL, but not every college sports star can go pro. The most egregiously unfair cases regarded the football players who were crucial to their juggernaut teams, never got paid for their work, and just barely missed out on a professional career.
By contract, about 50 percent of NFL and NBA revenue goes to the players. At that rate, according to a 2020 National Bureau of Economic Research paper, college football players at the top 65 schools would have been paid about $360,000 a year, and basketball players about $500,000. Instead, for decades, they got nothing.
This began to change in 2021. In National Collegiate Athletic Association v. Alston, the Supreme Court unanimously held that certain rules against athlete compensation violated federal antitrust law. Shortly thereafter, the NCAA allowed players to receive pay for the use of their name, image, and likeness. This dramatically shifted the economics of big-time college sports. Top players at major programs can now make millions of dollars in endorsement deals. 'Donors' eager to attract talent to their favorite team provide compensation to many other players, nominally in exchange for showing up at some events.
A legal settlement approved in June gave athletes another way to cash in: Universities are now allowed to directly pay athletes, up to a total of $20.5 million a year per school. Because some schools will compensate revenue-generating athletes in order to attract top talent, other athletes fear they'll make room in the budget by cutting the teams that don't generate any revenue at all. This fear has been especially pronounced about women's sports, which typically generate less money, but Title IX ensures that any cut would affect men and women equally. In practice, universities that continue to field teams in their most lucrative men's sports would also maintain their most popular women's teams. Not every school will necessarily keep football and men's basketball in perpetuity—at many schools, even those sports have little following.
Jemele Hill: Trump has a funny way of protecting women's sports
Supporters of the existing system fear that the country will lose out if universities drop niche sports. In comments earlier this month, Trump noted that college sports are the primary training ground for American Olympians. But a negligible fraction of college athletes will ever compete in the Olympics, and many Olympic sports aren't played at the intercollegiate level anyway.
Cuts to nonrevenue sports might be a good thing. Instead of giving admissions, scholarships, and resources to the best cross-country runners, for example, colleges could accept the most qualified applicants, spend money to provide them the best education, and offer financial aid to as many needy students as they can.
Students would remain free to pursue hobbies, including sports. They just wouldn't be rewarded with scholarships and other benefits for doing so. Trump's order purportedly seeks to 'maximize the educational benefits and opportunities provided by higher education institutions through athletics.' Awarding scarce benefits and opportunities on the basis of talent in niche sports is one way to run an educational system, but it's not one worth preserving.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Northern Virginia schools at risk of losing funding over transgender bathroom policies
Northern Virginia schools at risk of losing funding over transgender bathroom policies

Yahoo

time36 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Northern Virginia schools at risk of losing funding over transgender bathroom policies

Five northern Virginia school districts are at risk of losing their federal funding after they rejected the terms on an agreement with the Education Department to resolve probes into their transgender students policies. Districts representing Alexandria City, Arlington County, Fairfax County, Loudoun County and Prince William County have been placed on high-risk status, the agency said Tuesday. All federal funding sent to these school districts will now be done by reimbursement only, forcing the schools to pay their education expenses up front. More than $50 million of formula funding, discretionary grants and impact aid grants are at risk. Education Department officials said they are now proceeding with efforts to suspend or terminate federal funding to these school districts. 'States and school districts cannot openly violate federal law while simultaneously receiving federal funding with no additional scrutiny,' Education Secretary Linda McMahon said in a statement. 'The Northern Virginia School Divisions that are choosing to abide by woke gender ideology in place of federal law must now prove they are using every single federal dollar for a legal purpose.' The Education Department said the schools were found to be in violation of Title IX, the federal education law that bars sex discrimination, because of their policies allow transgender students to use restrooms and locker rooms that align with their gender identity. Officials said the agency's Office for Civil Rights finished its investigation on July 25 and the school districts did not sign a proposed resolution agreement by its Aug. 15 deadline. The department's action marks a major step against the D.C. area's suburban school systems, and it is one that is most often deployed against entities with a history of financial instability, poor fiscal management, a track record of unsatisfactory performance with federal funds, and other missteps. In one instance, the U.S. Virgin Islands school system was designated by the department as a "high-risk" grantee in the late 1990s because of unsatisfactory performance. The agency has also imposed the designation on Guam and American Samoa. The Trump administration has said Title IX will now only be interpreted based on biological sex and has sought to end transgender student participation in sports teams and use of single-sex facilities that align with their gender identity. But the school districts' policies align with a landmark case in the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals that bolsters transgender students' rights in the state. In 2021, the Supreme Court punted on the long-winding legal battle over transgender students' rights to use bathrooms that match their gender identity in Gavin Grimm's case against the Gloucester County School Board in Virginia. The 4th Circuit sided with Grimm twice, ruling the transgender bathroom ban was unconstitutional under the 14th Amendment's equal protection clause. The Supreme Court's decision to not hear the case meant the appeals court's decision remained in place. The Supreme Court punted again in 2024 on an Indiana school bathrooms case, but has agreed to take up a pair of challenges over state laws barring transgender students from women's sports. Juan Perez Jr. contributed to this report. Solve the daily Crossword

Black Businesses and Urban League Staff Hit After Trump Cuts
Black Businesses and Urban League Staff Hit After Trump Cuts

Yahoo

time37 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Black Businesses and Urban League Staff Hit After Trump Cuts

Participating in the Urban League of Greater Atlanta's Capital Readiness program last year helped metro Atlanta entrepreneur Tamara Fowler secure enough seed funding to expand Wiggle Giggle, her Marietta-based indoor playground business. The 31-year-old married mother of two said she was disappointed to learn earlier this year that the program's $3 million grant funding was canceled due to an executive order issued by President Donald Trump. Trump's March 31 executive action sought to reduce the size of the federal government by eliminating departments that the president deemed 'unnecessary.' One of those departments is the Minority Business Development Agency, a division of the U.S. Department of Commerce that promotes the growth and competitiveness of minority-owned businesses. The MBDA was the agency that awarded the capital readiness grant before the program was effectively eliminated. In May, a federal judge issued an injunction blocking Trump's elimination of the MBDA, but the Urban League said its funding hasn't been restored. READ MORE: Georgia Gubernatorial Candidate: Black Votes 'Critical' to Block Aid Cuts 'I was incredibly disappointed and disheartened,' Fowler told Capital B Atlanta on Wednesday. 'This program has brought a lot of funding and a lot of information to people, and it's free. It's not just for people of color. It's for all people that are in any sort of disadvantaged situation.' Some inflation-weary Black voters who supported Trump in 2024 did so because they thought he would do a better job on the economy than former President Joe Biden. But local Black entrepreneurs, who benefited from the Urban League's capital readiness grant program, say Trump's opposition to similar initiatives aimed at helping minority-owned firms grow and thrive will hurt metro Atlanta small businesses and their employees. The Urban League said that Trump's grant funding cancellation effectively eliminated the group's capital readiness program, which has helped more than 4,700 small business owners participate in the nonprofit's two eight-week accelerator courses and has assisted some entrepreneurs in completing loan and grant applications that many were previously unaware of. Twenty-nine of those businesses have received a total of roughly $6.9 million in contracts, grants, and loan funding as a result. 'The cancellation meant we had to lay off our Metro Atlanta Capital Readiness team and end the programming in progress,' Nancy Flake Johnson, president and CEO of the Urban League of Greater Atlanta, told Capital B Atlanta. 'Our remaining entrepreneurship center team [members] are continuing to support the entrepreneurs in the program as best we can with the much smaller team.' READ MORE: How Georgia's Black Republicans Are Capitalizing on Trump's Election Victory Johnson said the local Urban League was one of 47 grantees nationwide who received funding through the MBDA's grant initiative. 'Almost every state received resources through this program,' she said. 'Government contracting has been a path for small and minority and women and veteran-owned firms to grow their businesses. Without those pathways being intentionally in place, it's going to slow down job creation. It's going to slow down economic growth in underserved communities and neighborhoods across the country.' Atlanta resident Patricia Morgan said she was nearly finished with her Urban League capital readiness training when Trump's order canceling the program came down. 'One of the coaches that I worked with directly was let go,' she told Capital B Atlanta. 'I lost that direct coach that I had that was my procurement contact.' Morgan is the founder of The Executive Learning Labs, a company that offers training and workforce development solutions to government and other small businesses. She said the Urban League's grant cancellation didn't stop her from establishing business connections that she said boosted her company's profits by 120% over the course of about a year. But she's disappointed that other entrepreneurs may not get the same opportunity. 'There are not a lot of programs for us as entrepreneurs that are entering that accelerate phase,' Morgan said. Fairburn resident Kimberly Jones said the Urban League's program helped her Atlanta-based IT consulting firm, KYJ Consulting, land a lucrative contract with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in February. Jones, 55, a former nurse and data scientist for Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said she began participating in the Urban League's programs last summer after seeing a related post on social media. Her company specializes in work with emerging technologies, such as water intelligence and electric vehicle charging stations. She said the Trump administration is 'doing more harm than good' by eliminating capital readiness grant funding from the MBDA, in part, by reducing competition for lucrative government contracts. 'These prime contractors, they're the same people always winning,' Jones told Capital B Atlanta. 'Now it becomes that monopoly that we try not to have.' READ MORE: Nurses Rally Against Atlanta VA Layoffs, Warn of Risk to Black Veterans U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff, D-Ga., who is up for reelection next year, recently sent a letter to Trump's U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, urging him to restore funding for the Urban League's program. The 38-year-old Atlanta native, who received overwhelming support from Black Georgians in 2020, said he hasn't forgotten who sent him to Washington, and remains a champion for Black businesses, a value he said Trump doesn't share. 'The Trump administration is making war on Black-owned businesses,' Ossoff told Capital B Atlanta during a recent phone interview. 'They've tried to disband entirely the Minority Business Development Agency. They've canceled this grant that I fought for, for the Urban League of Atlanta to support Black-owned businesses. … I will continue to apply pressure to restore this funding.' White House Spokesman Kush Desai told Capital B Atlanta via email on Monday that the president's trade deals 'have unlocked unprecedented market access for American exports to economies that in total are worth over $32 trillion with 1.2 billion people.' 'As these historic trade deals and the Administration's pro-growth domestic agenda of deregulation and The One Big Beautiful Bill's tax cuts take effect, American businesses and families alike have the certainty that the best is yet to come.' The post Black Businesses and Urban League Staff Hit After Trump Cuts appeared first on Capital B News - Atlanta. Solve the daily Crossword

Northern Virginia schools at risk of losing funding over transgender bathroom policies
Northern Virginia schools at risk of losing funding over transgender bathroom policies

Politico

timean hour ago

  • Politico

Northern Virginia schools at risk of losing funding over transgender bathroom policies

'States and school districts cannot openly violate federal law while simultaneously receiving federal funding with no additional scrutiny,' Education Secretary Linda McMahon said in a statement. 'The Northern Virginia School Divisions that are choosing to abide by woke gender ideology in place of federal law must now prove they are using every single federal dollar for a legal purpose.' The Education Department said the schools were found to be in violation of Title IX, the federal education law that bars sex discrimination, because of their policies allow transgender students to use restrooms and locker rooms that align with their gender identity. Officials said the agency's Office for Civil Rights finished its investigation on July 25 and the school districts did not sign a proposed resolution agreement by its Aug. 15 deadline. The department's action marks a major step against the D.C. area's suburban school systems, and it is one that is most often deployed against entities with a history of financial instability, poor fiscal management, a track record of unsatisfactory performance with federal funds, and other missteps. In one instance, the U.S. Virgin Islands school system was designated by the department as a 'high-risk' grantee in the late 1990s because of unsatisfactory performance. The agency has also imposed the designation on Guam and American Samoa. The Trump administration has said Title IX will now only be interpreted based on biological sex and has sought to end transgender student participation in sports teams and use of single-sex facilities that align with their gender identity. But the school districts' policies align with a landmark case in the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals that bolsters transgender students' rights in the state. In 2021, the Supreme Court punted on the long-winding legal battle over transgender students' rights to use bathrooms that match their gender identity in Gavin Grimm's case against the Gloucester County School Board in Virginia. The 4th Circuit sided with Grimm twice, ruling the transgender bathroom ban was unconstitutional under the 14th Amendment's equal protection clause. The Supreme Court's decision to not hear the case meant the appeals court's decision remained in place. The Supreme Court punted again in 2024 on an Indiana school bathrooms case, but has agreed to take up a pair of challenges over state laws barring transgender students from women's sports. Juan Perez Jr. contributed to this report.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store