You’re sooo close to understanding with your contradictions in your posts. |
Playing pro is your dream because you asked her. |
| Another bad team joins the GA. Will it ever stop? |
You can also get an education in college. Collectives also pay college athletes now. You’re uninformed. |
| Delusional, college is a bigger fraud than the dairy industry |
College is a fraud kids! You're better off trying to play professional sports! |
If every "student athlete" received a full ride scholarship. Then maybe playing sports in college would make sense. However on most teams 1-3 have full rides 5-10 have partial scholarships and thebrest are paying to play. Colleges are just being greedy. If students had more protections there wouldn't be unionization and NIL happening. |
College is fraud kids!!! Play professional sports for your career!!! |
Did you play college sports? |
Don’t women’s college programs have 15 scholarships to give? Your numbers don’t add up. Stop spewing misinformation. |
How much money do you think soccer brings in? If soccer players demand pay, then soccer gets cut |
| Soccer doesn't generate revenue for colleges. Football and basketball do, and it's not like that for every college. Some make way more than others. If/when the NIL/NCAA lawsuits get settled, sports in college will change. Title IX won't be the saving grace either. |
Not really. NCAA will simply institute a salary cap of sorts which is essentially what the agreed upon number of scholarships per sport amounts to currently. |
Maybe you need to educate yourself... https://www.ncsasports.org/womens-soccer/scholarships |
Women’s soccer is an equivalency sport, meaning that coaches are not required to give out full scholarships to their athletes and can instead break them up however they want. So, for a D1 team with 28 roster spots, a coach could give out 14 full-ride scholarships, or 28 scholarships that cover half the tuition. Additionally, the cost of tuition at each college and university is going to vary. An in-state student at a public university could pay close to $10,000 a year, while an out-of-state student at a private university could pay $60,000 a year. Trying to find an average women’s college scholarship amount doesn’t account for those differences in tuition. Furthermore, not all athletes receive scholarships all four years of their college women’s soccer career. Instead of trying to determine what the average scholarship amount is |