The Impact of Paying College Athletes: An Analysis

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The argument that college athletes should be paid as been ongoing for many years. With the growing rise of college athletes’ popularity in the media, many people believe that college athletes should be paid, but they do not see the negative effects of the payments. The payments of college athletes could cause their price of enrollment to rise, forcing many students to transfer to other universities or not attend college at all. It may also cause fan ratings to drop because the relatability factor would disappear. Along with university budget cuts appearing, academic scholarships and athletic scholarships would disappear. College athletes should not be paid because college athletes are students and not professional players, the deep connection …show more content…

In the article “Pay to Play: should college athletes be paid?” the article states, “College athletes should not be forgot their main purpose at school is to learn and study, not receive money” (Birkenes and Akash). One can take from this that athletes should not be paid because they are normal students. College athletes are not making playing sports their only purpose for attending college; they are attending to pursue a more concrete degree that offers financial stability. Birkenes and Akash also write, “Paying college athletes would take money away from college budgets…” If athletes were to be payed then college would lose academic opportunities. The payment of athletes would cause academic cuts for things; such as math and science research. Payment of college athletes will cause a decline in college academics and cause the players to focus less on being a …show more content…

Obtaining a scholarship through athletics has always been a number one goal for athletes and is more than enough to compensate for the hard work. The article “Pay to Play: should college athletes be paid?” states “According to the NCAA, [National Collegiate Athletic Association] college athletes often receive grants worth more than $100,000” (Birkenes). Athletes receiving grants of such a high price should have more than enough money to cover college needs. The payment of college athletes would cause not only athletic, but academic scholarships to be lowered and the cause of attendance to rise. The NCAA prohibits the payment of college athletes because athletic scholarships have been raised. In the article “The Call to Pay College Athletes Misdiagnosis the Problem” Yankah writes “The [United States Court of Appeals] required that the NCAA increase scholarship payouts to cover the full cost of attendance…” From the article one can understand that athletic scholarships have been raised, so colleges will not have to pay

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