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College Athletes for Hire: The Evolution and Legacy of the NCAA's Amateur Myth. Foreword by Kent Waldrep. Westport, Connecticut: Praeger Publishers. ISBN 978-0-275-96191-6. OCLC 38002569. Sperber, Murray A. (1998). Onward to Victory: The Crises that Shaped College Sports. New York City: Henry Holt and Company. ISBN 978-0-8050-3865-1.
A new system for compensating college athletes would be needed to avoid similar challenges in the future; for example, anything that looks like a cap on compensation by, say, the four major ...
“There’s no one to put the brakes on them,” says Joel Maxcy, a Drexel University economist who studies college sports. “There’s no one to say, ‘No, this is not a sound investment.’” A Hail Mary. Georgia State, a commuter college located in a largely vacant stretch of downtown Atlanta, had long resisted a move into big-time ...
College athletes that receive a full scholarship to college already benefit from perks that the general student body does not receive. College athletes are able to take advantage of free room and board, the best dorm rooms on campus, free books and classes, and first choice of classes they want. [60]
The National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) established in 1940, is a college athletics association for colleges and universities in North America. Most colleges and universities in the NAIA offer athletic scholarships to their student athletes. Around $1.3 billion in athletic scholarship financial aid is awarded to student ...
It was the first time our two news organizations have collaborated, and we are thrilled to tell this critically important story together. This is not a story about jocks versus academics. College sports yield indelible moments that unite campuses and provide a path to a quality higher education for thousands of students who might otherwise not ...
The probability of college athletes becoming employees has gripped much of college athletics in fear. Some lawmakers plan to address the concept in a congressional bill.
Pavia’s attorneys argued in a Tennessee court that his time spent in junior college shouldn’t count against his NCAA clock because junior colleges don’t fall under NCAA purview.