by Harry Slotter » Mon Mar 24, 2014 12:16 am
When I first came to the USA, I was amazed at the level of intensity in high school sports even, compared to the UK. In my schooldays, as a member of the rugby team, we played an inter-squad scrimmage mid-week, and a couple of general gym classes, then a match against another school on Saturday. The PE master from the host school would be the referee, the linesmen a couple of parents - if any were there to volunteer, otherwise any available schoolkid. Being British, I was asked to help coach soccer at a local small private school. I was astounded to find that there was practice everyday after school with coaches being paid, and paid officials at games. I was totally astonished that large high schools also had a stadium with floodlights, electronic scoreboards, grandstands, announcers, ticket office, concession stand, etc - some had facilities better than my local home town professional soccer team in England.
I also could not quite understand the level of support for college sports in America, and the extent of the coverage in the media. It was several months before I discovered that Ohio State was a university as well as a football team. Every person in Central Ohio seems to own a complete wardrobe of OSU clothing. The Columbus Dispatch makes the Buckeyes front page news and local TV stations report every minor detail. The capacity of the Horseshoe stadium is, I think, larger than most English Premier League grounds. In contrast, the Major League Soccer team in Columbus (Crew) usually draws a crowd of around 15,000 for their home games. So I see that college athletes might feel that they deserve higher financial reward and compensation.
However, many of the "student-athletes" are provided with generous scholarships (full rides?). Whereas their non-athlete classmates fund their own tuition though loans and grants (or maybe some academic scholarship) to the tune of $60k-$100k. And as college students, the athletes should be encouraged to focus on their academic studies as well as sports participation - not all will make it to the NFL, NBA, MLB. On which point, the income earned by a professional athlete may be needed to support them long after retirement from their sport (especially if early due to injury). At which time, as long as they have completed their college education, they would have the qualification to transition to a new career.
Not all professional athletes here in the USA are making vast fortunes in their sport. In MLS, with the "salary cap" rule, many players earn less than $100k. The Columbus Crew recently changed ownership - reputedly, the new owner paid US$68m in the deal - for the team, stadium, etc. At the same time in Europe, a single player transferred from one team to another for more than that amount!
So, as to the question whether college student-athletes should get compensation for injury (either season-ending or career-ending) - would it not be a case of proving the loss in any claim for damages? Actual loss of a sport scholarship. Or foreseeable loss of income from a lucrative professional career - which may only be proven if a contract with a professional team had been negotiated?