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Who makes the big bucks in Amateur sports by Stephen Lars
I know we’ve been over this topic a couple time before. It’s just that things keeps on coming on in the news and troubles me a bit. Jim Tressel made the news last year when it was discovered that he had covered up an improper benefit scandal that involved one of his players. This led Ohio State to fire Tressel and now they University will have to appear before the NCAA committee on infractions later on this week. Tressel was forced to resign on May 30 for failing to tell his bosses at Ohio State that he had learned players were trading memorabilia for cash and tattoos, breaking NCAA rules. Tressel was required under his contract and NCAA bylaws to alert his superiors to any rules violations by his athletes.
And it’s fine, I guess. Not that he got fired or that he covered up some issues with his players getting some extra perks. I believe that at one point or another, Tressel knew that his players deserved some love, something other then a free tuition for the money they were providing the athletic department and Ohio State as a whole. At some point, Tressel new that he was really the guy making the big bucks, the Only One who wasn’t an amateur at no possible level. Amateur is French for lover; and yes, Tressel could have love the game, but he was the most expensive lover in Ohio State.
This is why we are saying this: Jim Tressel made $21.7 million as Ohio State football coach over his decade-long tenure before being ousted for breaking some rules, that is, not paying too much attention to some extra perks his key-players were making. A couple thousand dollars worth of free tattoos and the selling of memorabilia doesn’t really bother me as much as a guy who makes 21.7 million dollars for coaching a group of guys who don’t make a dime. Yes, free tuition. But heck, it’s hard to compare, to even put this figures in the right perspective.
Let’s go ahead and break those numbers up a little. During his career with the Buckeyes, Tressel not only got his sweet salary. He received a heck lot of extras. For instance, Tressel was provided football game tickets valued at $104,800, more than $10,000 in Ohio State basketball tickets and over $21,000 in bowl tickets. Those could sell very well on Ebay, I bet. His contracts also called for him to receive a $200,000 signing bonus in 2003; national championship game bonuses worth a total of $835,000 (Credit goes for Tressel and the Buckeyes who have played for the BCS title after the 2002, 2006 and 2007 regular seasons). That’s not it, somehow he even manage to make some extra money from his player’s academic performance. There was$155,000 in bonuses for Ohio State players hitting certain academic standards.
Now, it’s probably not a lot compared to professional coaches in the NFL. But heck, what’s really troubling is that Tressel was making more money, far much more money then the President of Ohio State. By comparison to Tressel's $3.5 million salary last year, Ohio State president E. Gordon Gee earned a raise in his base salary to $818,167 and received a $300,000 bonus. That’s one third of what Tressel made last year. Just not right.
Stephen Lars is a prominent sports blogger and currently covers NCAA Sports, previews and handicaps for the BetIAS' Sports Betting Blog . You may reprint this article in its full content, please note no modifications to it are accepted.
Article Source: http://www.earticlesonline.com/Article/Who-makes-the-big-bucks-in-Amateur-sports/1176462
Will Ohio State get the death penalty?
Contrary to the way that OS has been trying to spin this thing, what they are involved in appears to be 10 times worse than what USC did. Free cars for players, tattoos, trading memorabilia. And just to make things worse, Pryor showed up to Tressel's meeting, to announce that he was leaving (because of the scandal) in a new 350Z, with dealer plates on it!
I don't think that the NCAA will do it, but this sounds as bad as anything that we have heard, since at least Auburn, maybe SMU!
What do you think?
I don't think that 2 years with no bowl games is sufficient. This investigation is not over, and we will see how this all shakes out. However, USC got 2 years, and 30 scholarships. How much worse could it get? Who knows what kind of an effect that is going to have on the program. What, 3 years and 40 scholarships? That could destroy the program.
they will get a close call to the death penalty
they should be severely punished