Money in NCAA sports has changed
life for a few. For many athletes, college degree remains the prize
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[November 08, 2024]
By CHEYANNE MUMPHREY, MICHAEL MAROT and DAVID BRANDT
PHOENIX (AP) — Sponsorship deals were far from Jonny Bottorff's mind
when he transferred to Northern Arizona University on a football
scholarship. As money-making opportunities for college athletes have
boomed since then, the offensive lineman has earned a few hundred
dollars through name, image and likeness deals, but nothing that has
changed his life.
Bottorff, 23, earned an undergraduate degree and is now working on
his master’s degree at the Division I school in Flagstaff, Arizona.
He transferred from Missouri Western State University, a small
Division II school in Saint Joseph, Missouri.
“I think the reality for most college athletes is things haven’t
really changed that much. We just got an extra little bit of cash in
our pockets that probably needed to happen,” Bottorff said.
For some players, money from NIL deals has transformed what it means
to be a college athlete. But outside the highest-profile athletes,
who now can earn millions of dollars while still in school, many
players say a college degree remains the ultimate prize.
College athletes graduate at rates that are comparable to and often
higher than non-athletes. For Division I schools, the NCAA last year
reported data showing a record 91% of athletes are graduating.
Before the Supreme Court ruled in 2021 that U.S.-born athletes could
earn money from advertisements, autographs and university boosters,
college athletes were under a simple agreement with their
institutions: compete in exchange for a degree.
Money received through NIL agreements has changed the equation for
athletes like Washington Commanders quarterback Jayden Daniels and
Chicago Sky forward Angel Reese, who leveraged their personal brands
while still in college, securing endorsement deals with the likes of
Reebok, Powerade and Beats by Dre.
Where academics rates as a priority varies with each individual. But
several Division I athletes said in interviews the money available
to them through NIL remains a small consideration compared with
earning a degree and competing in the sports they love.
Anthony Leal, a guard for Indiana University's basketball team, said
he is coming back as a fifth-year senior because of school, even
though he received his undergraduate degree last year. He said
earning a master's in business administration was always the goal.
“I’m about 70% through the program in the Kelley School of
Business,” he said. “I wanted to get that degree.”
NCAA eligibility rules allow athletes five years to compete
athletically across four seasons. Under the redshirt eligibility
rule, many receive an athletic scholarship and practice their first
year, but do not compete in games or matches. The NCAA also allowed
athletes to extend their eligibility by a year if their team was
affected by the pandemic.
For some athletes, NIL money is an incentive to attend and stay in
college, but Leal said it's not often that athletes are completely
disinterested in school.
“Every student knows that it has to be a piece of the puzzle at some
level. So everyone kind of understands the value of school,” Leal
said. “But, yeah, sure, some people may have other goals. There are
plenty of people, maybe not at Indiana, but there are plenty of
people throughout college basketball who don’t care because you’ve
got NIL (money) and the transfer portal.”
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Northern Arizona University's Jonny Bottorff took advantage of new
NIL money making opportunities and rebooted his college football
career. Bottorff poses for a photo on the campus on NAU on Monday,
Oct. 28, 2024, in Flagstaff, Ariz. (AP Photo/Josh Biggs)
The transfer portal has become a plug-and-play
method for powerhouses and rebuilding programs alike. It has made it
easy for athletes to switch colleges and play the next season,
rather than sitting out a year under previous rules. And it has
become a way for top athletes to shop around for more lucrative
opportunities. UNLV quarterback Matthew Sluka, for one, walked away
from the team in a dispute over a $100,000 NIL payment his agent
says was promised but never paid.
The NIL market is expected to reach $1.67 billion in the 2024-2025
school year, according to an estimate by the NIL platform Opendorse.
The highest earnings go to top men's basketball and football
players.
Even though the NCAA now allows players to transfer without sitting
out, the academic transition can be more complicated.
Ray Harrison started at Presbyterian College in 2020, but
transferred in 2022 to Grand Canyon University, a private Christian
university in Phoenix where he is a senior guard on the basketball
team. He said NIL money wasn't a factor. It was about finding a
better fit for him.
“I just came out here because this is where God led my heart. Of
course, we win two (conference) championships and that changes
things,” he said. But it wasn’t a smooth transition — a lot of his
course credits didn’t transfer. “When I got here, I had to do some
catching up.”
Trinity San Antonio, another student who transferred to Grand
Canyon, previously attended California Baptist, a private university
in Riverside, California. Finding a school that would accept the
majority of her previously earned college credits was harder than
she expected.
“Coming in as a freshman when you’re really a junior is not ideal,”
said San Antonio, who also played basketball for Puerto Rico last
summer in the Paris Olympics.
A shot at a college education remains a dream for many younger
athletes.
Tavarius Covington, a wide receiver on his high school football team
in Chicago, has ambitions of playing in college. But he said his
priority is school. He hopes to pursue a business degree.
Covington took a break from football but came back to it last year,
hoping it would help him become the first in his family to go to
college and earn a degree, he said.
“I was watching my little brother play. We were going to his games
and the family was excited for him. It made me interested in the
game again,” he said. “Part of it is trying to establish a
foundation for him, too, as a first-generation college student,
hopefully. I want him to know there is more to look forward to
coming out of high school.”
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Marot reported from Indianapolis.
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