Anonymous wrote:Someone here looked up the educational path of athletic directors at like 50 SEC/ACC/B10/Ivy colleges. Sports management degrees were very common, although moreso at the graduate level. And aside from Ivy graduates becoming ADs at their alma maters, very very few went to Ivy League schools. People here don't know what they are talking about.
Anonymous wrote:As someone who worked in sports for over 15 years, it makes no difference what/where you get your degree. What matters is connections, internships and your willingness to work your ass off for little to no pay with a smile on your face. It’s all about someone hearing about a job and recommending you for it. Personal connections and experience matter more than you can imagine. Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:As someone who worked in sports for over 15 years, it makes no difference what/where you get your degree. What matters is connections, internships and your willingness to work your ass off for little to no pay with a smile on your face. It’s all about someone hearing about a job and recommending you for it. Personal connections and experience matter more than you can imagine. Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone here looked up the educational path of athletic directors at like 50 SEC/ACC/B10/Ivy colleges. Sports management degrees were very common, although moreso at the graduate level. And aside from Ivy graduates becoming ADs at their alma maters, very very few went to Ivy League schools. People here don't know what they are talking about.
Were they also athletes? Just curious if that plays a role.
Know a guy who ran a government agency who was recruited to run one of the top college athletic conferences. While sounded fun, he also passed because he just isn't that into sports or at least on a daily basis.
Anonymous wrote:Someone here looked up the educational path of athletic directors at like 50 SEC/ACC/B10/Ivy colleges. Sports management degrees were very common, although moreso at the graduate level. And aside from Ivy graduates becoming ADs at their alma maters, very very few went to Ivy League schools. People here don't know what they are talking about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any thoughts? Sports management major. Thanks
What kind of f***ing major is “sports management”? Seriously, our education system must be the laughingstock of the rest of the world.
It is in fact the envy of the entire world. I work for an international company and hire all over. US college grads are by far the best. Non-Americans who go to US colleges are also way ahead.
Some advice on that major though -- could you be a business major and minor in sports management? Do your internships in sports? That would be better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For sports management the place to go is Rice. Mostly because if all else fails and they make zilch in that profession, they have a degree from Rice to fall back on.
Rice? Why Rice? What a random school to plug, considering that Rice is barely prestigious to even warrant the "at least they'll have a Rice degree" comment.
Anonymous wrote:For sports management the place to go is Rice. Mostly because if all else fails and they make zilch in that profession, they have a degree from Rice to fall back on.