Thomas and Smith 1
Thomas and Smith 1
field. These college athletes have something they value for the future. This
juxtaposition exemplifies the idea that different programs can shapes values
differently and the morals of some athletes can be distinguished by the
behaviors that they express on and off the field.
After exploring the Discourse of college football athletes and going in
depth with the behaviors and values represented in them, the conversations
that are being conducted now are also very important. One of the biggest
and quite frankly controversial conversations happening within this
Discourse is the decision of paying college football players. As hinted at
above college football makes an enormous amount of money in a single
season. In fact Image 1 shows the monetary value of every BCS college
football program (see Appendix), with 50% of them cashing in at over 150
million dollars (Everson). This is an enormous amount of money that is
passing through these programs and one would assume that the players are
receiving some portion of it. The answer is yes and no; because it all
depends on what the player and the observer define as a portion of it. Many
critics hold the stance that college athletes are paid through free education
and many other benefits like; expert coaching, on-campus housing, frequent
meals, non-uniform clothing, free medical consultation, free access to stateof-the-art training facilities and free professional development (Zimbalist).
However, since you can't trade knowledge (i.e., mental enhancement) for
an immediate financial asset, higher education is often assumed to have no
value for athletes (Burton). The previous quote comes from Richard Burton
Appendix
Image 1: Visual representation of the amount of money that each individual
schools football program is valued at in millions (Everson, 2013).
Image 2: This is a cartoon showing the irony of the NCAA making money off
of Todd Gurleys jersey, while he makes nothing.
Work Cited
Burton, Richard. "College Athletes Are Already Paid With Their Education."US News. U.S.News
& World Report, 02 Apr. 2013. Web. 05 Feb. 2015.
Everson, Darren. "What Is Your Team Worth?" WSJ. Wall Street Journal, 07 Jan. 2013. Web. 10
Feb. 2015.
Foley, Douglas E. "The Great American Football Ritual." Sociology of Sports 7 (1990): 111-35.
Zimbalist, Andrew. "The Cost of Paying Athletes Would Be Far Too High." US
News. U.S.News & World Report, 01 Apr. 2013. Web. 08 Feb. 2015.