- You never have a billionaire owner who destroys the team with meddling
- You never have a billionaire's failson in your personnel department or something
- The city never gets extorted into building a billion-dollar stadium for a billionaire owner
- The team never moves
- You never have an ownership group that prioritizes profit maximization over on-field competitiveness
I think, if your scholarship is tied to you performing for the swim team, I would say it is a job.
I could see that if the school was making money off your labor (as is the case in college football, for instance), but I don't think that works for sports that aren't profitable. And it seems like sports -- which don't really produce much beyond entertainment value -- are closer to hobbies than to work when they don't even produce enough entertainment value to cover their own costs.
Then again, you have a training/pipeline problem, where globally all these developing athletes are valuable because they produce the top-tier professionals that do generate significant entertainment value, but locally your individual college swim teams can't make a buck. You see this problem in baseball and boxing, too.
It seems like I'm dancing around questions of productive vs. unproductive labor, but I'm not sure that clarifies the issue of unprofitable college sports all that much. What might clarify the issue is asking "are the athletes being exploited?" If the school gives you a scholarship and loses money on your sport (e.g., swimming) I find it hard to answer that in the affirmative. If the school gives you a scholarship but pockets millions on your sport (e.g., football) I think it's much easier to say yes.
It would be a completely different discussion if this is just your local swimming club where your training is not tied to a material incentive, like a scholarship.
That is obviously a hobby, at least until you get approached by the national or regional federations.
That is what I meant by bringing up the scholarship argument, it is at least de facto a job.
Because you can't just say "Fuck it, I don't like to do sport x anymore", because then the school says bye bye scholarship.
That is why I say it is a job and not a hobby anymore.
But let's agree NCAA is a fuck, okay?
Haha absolutely.
Is a student on an academic scholarship working a job then? Or what about a walk-on athlete on the swim team?
I still think the "is their labor being exploited" question is the touchstone here. If someone else is making money off of what you do, it's a job. If someone else is paying to facilitate what it is you do, and they're not profiting from it, I have a hard time calling that a job.
But why does profitability matter to you?
If our fictional swimmer is putting in all the work he can, just like the football player, then I don’t see why it is the athletes problem that it is not directly profitable for the University, if they want to provide these programs.
What also came to my mind was that Universities do profit, maybe not on this immediately obvious measurable way(like with FB), but they do like to brag about their diverse programs they sponsor, don't they?
I think it's helpful in distinguishing between a hobby and a job. If I play guitar in the park sometimes, that's a hobby. If a bunch of people want to come and pay to see me play, that's a job. Should someone get any additional compensation for practicing their hobby (above and beyond everything needed to live decently, which should be guaranteed for everyone, of course)? I don't see much justification for that. Where does the expectation for additional compensation come from if whatever one is doing doesn't produce any value? It's one thing to want to receive the full value of your labor, but what if the value of your labor is zero?
That's a good point -- the value a swim team provides goes beyond ticket revenue. I'd certainly be open to increasing the compensation for swimmers if someone did some sort of econometric analysis showing that (accounting for whatever they add to the university's brand) the sport is profitable. I doubt that's the case, though, based on how few people watch sports like swimming and how sports of that type sometimes get cut from athletic programs without much overall impact on the school itself.
I maybe should've been more clear, I was with concerns to financial compensation only talking about the specific NCAA context, if you have that education for physical performance situation.
Additionally, not all labor is that easily measurable/quantifiable to me, it kinda flows.
Like the example of art, art to me inherently has a value, the quality of that art is obviously subjective, but I wouldn’t dismiss it because it doesn’t make a profit.(not suggesting you were doing that)
So like you say everyones needs need to be met, even if they just want to do street music or be a swimmer. But the level of your compensation would obviously, even in a socialist/communist society, vary somewhat depending on the appeal of your work.
I think that leads into a broader discussion, like how could art/entertainment be incentivized in a socialist/communist society.
I have to admit I'm not too sure how this was/is handled in socialist countries, but I think that is a very important discussion to have at some point.
Although that is pretty bougie, is it? Like to even be thinking about that, when most people don't even get what class is.(Just a thought)
I have to admit that I'm obviously not an expert on the topic to give exact numbers, those were just my thoughts from my personal perspective on the NCAA.
I can see why the NCAA, next to just simply not wanting to give up 1$, don't want to even slightly open up this can of worms.
Because they'd have to answer these questions too, like is this work?
And I, as a leftist, wouldn't want to make that argument for them.(Sorry I can't word it without sounding snarky)