Should College Athletes Be Paid Essay

774 Words4 Pages

Think, if you were in college, and a football player, spending all your time and energy playing football and you are getting paid. You go to the NFL tryouts and do not get picked. Wouldn’t you be devastated. Now you have nothing else to do. You should’ve focused on something to lean back on in case this would have happened. The article I read was, ‘Should College Athletes be Paid?’. The topic was that some people think that college athletes should be paid. But I don’t think that should happen. I chose this because anything involving college has always been of interest. Especially in this problem, whether the college’s money should go towards a sport. Although I do understand why you might think that college football players deserve to be paid. …show more content…

From recruit757.com I learned that only 6.5 percent of high school football players actually get a football scholarship for college. From that 6.5 percent only 1.5 of them actually get picked for the NFL. You might think that amateur football players deserve the money, but NFL players with a minimum wage for a couple of years do not make enough to live off of. So when you are done with your career, you need your college education to do more than just football! The college players need to at least get a job so they can have money. The whole point of that job is to be able to go back to if you don’t make it to the NFL which many don’t. The article even states, “Top college football and men’s basketball players put in up to 60 hours a week in games and practice, leaving them little time for academics.”. That is ridiculous, players should not practice that much for basically an extracurricular activity. Another thing colleges don’t exactly have a ton of money to give out to all of their players. Colleges need the money for other and in my opinion more important things than football, like focusing it on education related upgrades. From Radio Open Source.org I learned where the college money actually does go. Public Universities have 27 percent goes to instruction, 12 percent goes to research, 11 percent goes to hospital services, 9 percent goes to auxiliary