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The Business of College Sports

The Business of College Sports

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For much of its history, college athletics was never intended to be a business. It was a campus activity involving students competing for school pride, with modest gate receipts helping to cover travel, equipment, and little else. Universities supported athletics not because it generated profit, but because it built community, identity, and connection to the university for students and alumni alike. But what if I told you that college sports has transformed into one of the most complex and financially powerful industries in American sport? What if the games you watch on Saturdays and during March Madness are now part of a multi-billion-dollar ecosystem driven by media rights deals, conference distributions, corporate sponsorships, and donor contributions? And what if, despite all that money flowing into college athletics… most athletic departments still struggle to break even?

In today’s podcast, we explore the business of college sports by following the money and exploring where it comes from, where it goes, and how it has fundamentally reshaped the structure of intercollegiate athletics. From the early days of ticket sales and alumni support to the explosion of television revenue and conference realignment, to the modern era of NIL, revenue sharing, and direct athlete compensation, we will examine how financial incentives have driven both growth and instability within the system. Along the way, we consider the rising costs of competition – from coaching salaries to facilities and recruiting – and what these trends mean for the future of student-athletes, universities, and the NCAA.

So, if you’ve ever wondered how college sports became a billion-dollar enterprise, why so many programs still operate at a deficit, and what the future of this financial model might look like, this is the podcast for you.

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