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NCAA president Mark Emmert on college athletic spending
Although NCAA president Mark Emmert is acutely aware of the financial challenges many major-college sports programs are facing, he does not have a lot of sympathy for university and athletics department administrators wringing their hands over the recent impact of athletes receiving enhanced benefits including scholarships based on the full cost of attending school.
“I think there’s going to be some real challenges for a lot of schools. But I think blaming that on the new costs of supporting students is a really bad argument. I’ll argue that one all day long. … Some people are saying, ‘Well, it’s the new full cost of attendance for students.’ Give me a break. That was $2 million out of a $150 million budget.”
Even where the amounts are less on both ends of that equation, Emmert says he is concerned that many schools have made long-term financial commitments “based on assumptions of ever-rising media revenue that’s not going to materialize. We don’t know where the media market for sport is going. … I think the market’s pretty saturated with sports, but I could be wrong.”
Although NCAA president Mark Emmert is acutely aware of the financial challenges many major-college sports programs are facing, he does not have a lot of sympathy for university and athletics department administrators wringing their hands over the recent impact of athletes receiving enhanced benefits including scholarships based on the full cost of attending school.
“I think there’s going to be some real challenges for a lot of schools. But I think blaming that on the new costs of supporting students is a really bad argument. I’ll argue that one all day long. … Some people are saying, ‘Well, it’s the new full cost of attendance for students.’ Give me a break. That was $2 million out of a $150 million budget.”
Even where the amounts are less on both ends of that equation, Emmert says he is concerned that many schools have made long-term financial commitments “based on assumptions of ever-rising media revenue that’s not going to materialize. We don’t know where the media market for sport is going. … I think the market’s pretty saturated with sports, but I could be wrong.”