College Athletes for Hire

College Athletes for Hire

Author: Allen L. Sack

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA

Published: 1998-07-17

Total Pages: 206

ISBN-13: 0313001480

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Many books have been written on the evils of commercialism in college sport, and the hypocrisy of payments to athletes from alumni and other sources outside the university. Almost no attention, however, has been given to the way that the National Collegiate Athletic Association has embraced professionalism through its athletic scholarship policy. Because of this gap in the historical record, the NCAA is often cast as an embattled defender of amateurism, rather than as the architect of a nationwide money-laundering scheme. Sack and Staurowsky show that the NCAA formally abandoned amateurism in the 1950s and passed rules in subsequent years that literally transformed scholarship athletes into university employees. In addition, by purposefully fashioning an amateur mythology to mask the reality of this employer-employee relationship, the NCAA has done a disservice to student-athletes and to higher education. A major subtheme is that women, such as those who created the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW), opposed this hypocrisy, but lacked the power to sustain an alternative model. After tracing the evolution of college athletes into professional entertainers, and the harmful effects it has caused, the authors propose an alternative approach that places college sport on a firm educational foundation and defend the rights of both male and female college athletes. This is a provocative analysis for anyone interested in college sports in America and its subversion of traditional educational and amateur principles.


Discredited

Discredited

Author: Andy Thomason

Publisher: University of Michigan Press

Published: 2021-08-20

Total Pages: 205

ISBN-13: 0472132814

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The Carolina Way and the myth of amateurism


The End of Amateurism in American Track and Field

The End of Amateurism in American Track and Field

Author: Joseph M. Turrini

Publisher: University of Illinois Press

Published: 2010

Total Pages: 282

ISBN-13: 0252077075

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Combining social and institutional history and incorporating the recollections of the athletes and meet directors on the front lines, The End of Amateurism in Track and Field shows how the athletes thoroughly transformed their sport to end the amateur system in the early 1990s---changes that allowed the athletes to market their potential, drastically increase their earning possibilities, and improve their quality of life. --


The Greatest Athlete (You've Never Heard Of)

The Greatest Athlete (You've Never Heard Of)

Author: Mark Hebscher

Publisher: Dundurn

Published: 2019-02-16

Total Pages: 250

ISBN-13: 1459743369

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Canada’s first Olympic gold medallist couldn’t walk until he was ten, spoke nine languages, became the greatest runner of his generation, and was mistaken for an American for seventy years because the Americans wanted to keep him.