P:3, D:Within 24 hours, TT:why athletes should get paid their high salaries, I:persuave paper on why athletes should get payed their high salaries. pleases send a outline with the paper Outline I Introduction: A Theses statement: 1. Athletes should earn high salaries because, a) they are the driving source behind the income generated by professional sports for a lot of other people, b) when averaged over a normal career the salaries are not as high as they seem and c) the risk of severe career ending injury may destroy their high earning potention at any time during their career. B Examination of the income star athletes generate for anyone connected to the sport team owners sports equipment manufacturers athletic fashion businesses suppliers of consummables connected to the sport media C Examination of the short length of an athletic career by comparison to others most athletes are at their top earning level for only 8-15 years most other careers are much longer after averaging income the sums are not as high per annum as they seem D The constant threat of injury should be considered as a factor all professional athletes sustain frequent injury many injuries can end their career even injuries which do not end an athletes career can severley impact their earning power II Conclusion A large salaries for sports are not as they seem their earnings are small when compared to what they generate when the income is averaged over a normal career time it is not so much the threat of injury which can diminish or end their career is a factor to consider B We can conclude for these reasons that athletes should earn high salaries High Salaries for Star Professional Athletes are Not Something We Should Begrudge In light of multi-million dollar athletic contracts, many people think that star athletes are now paid too much. However, athletic competition is BIG business now, replacing many of the activities that used to help us channel our aggressive nature. As such, owners of most businesses connected to athletics reap huge profits, and the largest of these are the owners of the teams. While star athletes do earn huge salaries, there are many reasons why the should. Of these, the most important are: they are the source of all this shared profit, a professional athletes high earning years are few and there is always a risk of injury ending a promising career.
Lets just examine these three. As much as we love spectator sports, if the athletes were not extremely exciting to watch we would not spend nearly as much time or money supporting this industry. It is both the thrill of the intense competition and the absolute poetry of their performance which captures the attention of the crowd. While it is true that not every athlete on any professional team is a star, every professional team has a few, and these are the men and women who drive the team to victory and drive the industry. By comparison, there are others, including the team owners, who earn more from each athlete than the athlete does. Sports equipment manufacturers, the fashion industry, consumables of every sort and the media rake in the dollars from each new crop of young, beautiful stars. The stars themselves only shine for a limited time.
A professional athlete spends years working up to the level where he or she can earn even six figure incomes, by which time they are generally in their mid-twenties. Their time in the spotlight may be as little as eight years but seldom more than fifteen. By age forty they are beginning to lose their edge, and are generally already living with multiple injuries. So if the income from those years is averaged out over thirty years or more, the average length of an ordinary career, the earnings in any one year are much lower. Of course big sports stars still earn phenomenal mony, but not as much as it appears by their multimillion dollar contract deals. Of course, a strong factor here is the distinct possibility that any athlete will sustain career ending injuries, since they push themselves to the limit in every competition. By the time any professional athlete retires they have generally sustained many injuries to muscles, connective tissue (ligaments and tendons) and joints.
In fact, it can be even worse since ruels were changed. It’s a wonder we have the stomach to turn to the sports page each day for our daily dose of disdain. New National Hockey League arenas have seamless glass with no support bars. This provides a better view in the $100 scats, but the formerly flexible boards have no give, thus leaving unconscious players scattered like ice cubes on a freshly waxed floor. A record number of concussions are costing once healthy young men their careers and their senses. (USA Today, 1/1/1998) At any time during their career an athlete runs the danger of sustaining an injury which will keep him or her out of competition for an extended period.
While they are on the injured list, they work carefully to rehabilitate themselves, but if the layoff is long they lose their competitive edge and may never recover their former status, even if they return to their sport. We hear at every athletic draft season about athletes who were formerly popular, but are not being offered their previous sums due to injuries from the previous season. So even if they can continue their careers for a while, it is at a much diminished compensation level. It is clear that once a star athlete sustains a significant injury the teams and public do not have as much faith in their ability for the future. So large salaries for sports heroes and heroines are not as fantastic as they appear. The big prize of a huge salary is only paid to relatively few athletes. The rest work towards it, but never quite make it. It is this possibility that drives some of the competition, but most athletes play for the joy of the sport. When an athlete does achieve star status it is short lived, and that salary, when averaged over the length of a noirmal career, while good, is not as good as it first appears.
In addition, these attractive compensation packages are a small percentage of the revenue generated by these athletes for many others. Finally, even when an athlete makes it to star status and starts earning well, it can be quickly erased by injury, which is why they negotiate injury compensation so strongly. For these and many other reasons, star athletes should earn high salaries. !. Greed and hypocrisy in a land of plenty. (high revenues for sports teams and stadiums; high player salaries)(Brief Article)(Column) 1/1/1998; USA Today (Magazine); Barrett, Wayne M..