Author Topic: NCAA report shows athletic expenses rising again  (Read 6270 times)

Offline IAA Fan

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NCAA report shows athletic expenses rising again
« on: May 06, 2013, 01:30:37 PM »
NCAA report: http://ncaapublications.com/p-4306-revenues-and-expenses-2004-2012-ncaa-division-i-intercollegiate-athletics-programs-report.aspx


INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -- Athletic expenses are rising at a faster pace than revenue is being generated at most Division I schools, according to a new NCAA study.

The 2012 Revenue and Expenses Report, released this week, shows Football Bowl Subdivision schools are spending 10.8 percent more on athletics than in 2011 despite generating new income of only 4.6 percent. Non-football playing Division I schools are contending with a larger discrepancy -- spending 8.8 percent more while seeing their revenue base actually shrink by 1.7 percent.

Football Championship Subdivision schools did far better, holding expenses to an increase of only 6.8 percent while generating a 9 percent increase in revenue over 2011 though median losses expanded by 6.7 percent from 2011 to 2012.

A year ago, the disparities were far smaller. FBS schools, for instance, had budget increases of 9.7 percent and revenue increases of 8.8 percent.

It's not the only troubling financial sign in the report.

Since the NCAA began compiling these numbers in 2004, athletic department budgets have increased substantially when measured as a portion of a school's overall budget. It has gone from 4.6 percent to 5.5 percent.

''There's been a consistent trend of increases in athletics spending mirroring those of the institution over the past several years,'' NCAA Chief Financial Officer Kathleen McNeely said in a statement posted on the governing body's website. ''This year's report shows a break from that trend. Whether it is an anomaly or the beginning of a new trend certainly bears monitoring.''

Losing money on sports is not new.

Only 23 Division I schools reported profits in their athletic departments in this report -- the same total as 2011 though some of the schools on this year's list were different. The report did not identify schools individually.

The largest portion of athletic department expenses, 34 percent, continue to be spent on coaches where football, men's and women's basketball and men's ice hockey coaches continue to outpace the pay rate of their coaching colleagues in other sports. Scholarships account for 15 percent of overall budgets.

One factor driving up costs over the past decade is the race to upgrade football stadiums, basketball arenas and other sports facilities on campus. Facility rental and maintenance now accounts for 14 percent of all athletic department expenditures.

But one previous concern, how the sluggish economy would affect costs and income in the sports world, did not change the numbers.

''Given the popularity of college sports, it comes as no surprise that the recession does not seem to have been particularly detrimental,'' said Dan Fulks, the accounting program director at Transylvania University who authored the 2012 report.

What it does show is a wide disparity in budgeting for Division I athletics.

The largest budget in the FBS was $138.27 million on athletics compared with a median budget of $56.265 million. And one school reported earning nearly $163.3 million in revenue -- more than four times the median income of other schools ($40.581 million).

Fulks believes the number of self-sufficient athletic programs could increase in the future, too, as more conferences make money through their own conference television networks and other media platforms.


Offline Wick250

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Re: NCAA report shows athletic expenses rising again
« Reply #1 on: May 06, 2013, 02:09:45 PM »
IAA Fan,

Please keep these well-documented facts off of your message board!  Don't you realize that you might disturb the fantasies of some of your more delusional posters. ::)

Offline HappyPenguin

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Re: NCAA report shows athletic expenses rising again
« Reply #2 on: May 07, 2013, 08:17:08 AM »
IAA Fan,

Please keep these well-documented facts off of your message board!  Don't you realize that you might disturb the fantasies of some of your more delusional posters. ::)
Yeah when are we joining the MAC again?

Offline IAA Fan

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Re: NCAA report shows athletic expenses rising again
« Reply #3 on: May 07, 2013, 08:22:01 AM »
One thing that I noticed with these figures. If you take out the average of over 14% for facilities, many of the schools do show profit ...especially in I-AA/FBS football ...including YSU. Can any of you guys in non-profit or governmental accounting tell us if facilities is an expense that can be written off for taxes? I think it is, and that would explain the amount of school expanding and moving.

Offline GuinsAndNoles

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Re: NCAA report shows athletic expenses rising again
« Reply #4 on: May 08, 2013, 12:03:28 AM »
Here is some school specific stuff (We are 158):

http://www.usatoday.com/sports/college/schools/finances/

Offline Wick250

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Re: NCAA report shows athletic expenses rising again
« Reply #5 on: May 08, 2013, 11:02:05 PM »
Thanks for that link, Noles.  What really struck me is the size of the internal subsidy that Akron (19.3 million) and Kent (17.3 million) provide for athletics.  We stand at 8.5 million.  So the question remains unchanged for those that aspire to play "make-believe" big time football.  Where will the money come from?

Offline penguinpower

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Re: NCAA report shows athletic expenses rising again
« Reply #6 on: May 09, 2013, 06:23:12 AM »
What I don't get is:

Ysu has a better Athletic program than Akron
YsU is probably closer to Kent in Athletics, except Kent is better at MBB and YSU is better at football.
YSU is a better university thank Kent because Kent is a liberal Arts college that mainly has make believe degrees ( or degrees that people end up with jobs where the persons farewell greeting in business transactions is "Do you want fries with that?"
Akron and YSU are similar in the area of education.
So YSU is the better school, especially if you want a decent degree and like football ( which is the only sport that matters).

Why can't we get the money?  We need to get it from the oil companies now. We need to partner the engineering dept with them. Make more petrochmical engineers and reach and make it their idea to reach into their pockets and give us the money.
We have the infrastructure and the tradition in football. We need the money becasue the fan base is tighter than 2 -coats of paint. 

Offline penguin8797

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Re: NCAA report shows athletic expenses rising again
« Reply #7 on: May 12, 2013, 09:52:05 AM »
So Kent's programs in architecture, engineering technology, math, science, business, medicine etc are 'made up' and we should shake down the shale gas industry for money to pay for football. Now that is classic yunks-town thinkin'; denigrate others with unsubstantiated nonsense, attack the goose that lays the golden egg, and come up with a strong arm plan with no leverage to carry it through. 

YSU alumnus

Offline penguinpower

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Re: NCAA report shows athletic expenses rising again
« Reply #8 on: May 12, 2013, 10:40:47 PM »
No. What I'm saying is that every other school gets the benefit of the businesses that they support. Why should YSU be different.

Also architects are artists not engineers. Period.