Pay Day: Greed in Professional Sports

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Ever watched ESPN and seen a report about a baseball player signing a five year contract worth 150 million dollars? Now, with a little math, one would come to realize that that contract means that baseball player will make a bit less than 30 million dollars in that five year period. That is ridiculous. Why do professional baseball players as well as professional athletes in general make so much money just to play a game that little kids play to stay out of trouble? It is because people pay them to play, athletes unions that, for a large part, are used to force team owners to pay them such a high salary, and businesses pay them to advertise their products. Players do not deserve the money they receive. There are people who do much more than the players do. Why do teachers not get paid millions of dollars to teach kids? Some of those kids end up going on to become professional athletes. Police officers and firemen risk their lives to keep people safe and most of them do not even make any more than 95 thousand dollars a year (Megerian). These athletes get fined more money than that and hand it over like someone just asked them for one dollar. Players have all of this money and do not even do anything worth earning it. Why do they get this money? It is because fans value athletes more than the important things in life like education and family. “Fans pay to watch athletes compete at the highest level. To be sure, it is the fans that primarily pay the athletes’ salaries” (Walter). Yes, a large portion of an athlete’s pay comes from the people that come to watch them. Athletes get a portion of all revenue their team or staff receives. This means that everybody gets a cut of that prize money, everybody gets a cut of ... ... middle of paper ... ...August 2011. Web. 4 December 2011. Bucher, Rick. “Source: Union has issues with offer.” Espn.go.com. n.p. 15 November 2011. Web. 22 November 2011. Freedman, Jonah. “The 50 highest-earning American Athletes.” Sports Illustrated. n.p. 2011. Web. 21 November 2011. Gilbert, Sarah Jane. “Marketing Maria: Managing the Athlete Endorsement.” Harvard Business School. n.p. 29 October 2007. web. 21 November 2011. Megerian, Chris/ Statehouse Bureau. “N.J police salaries rank highest in nation with median pay of $90,672.” nj.com. New Jersey On-Line, LLC. 19 September 2010. Web. 4 December 2011. Sherk, James. “What Unions Do: How Labor Unions Affect Jobs and the Economy.” The Heritage Foundation. n.p. 21 May 2009. web. 21 November 2011. Walter, Andrew. “Point: Salary Caps Provide Parity in Professional Sports.” Tennessee Electronic Library. n.p. 2011. web. 21 November 2011.

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