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Buy from Amazon $3.89$0.01 $3.00 $2.00 $1.00 Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr 2016 $3.89, Aug 3 - Oct 4$0.01, Aug 3 - Sep 6$3.89, Aug 3 - Oct 4$2.99, Sep 10 4:27 pm$3.89, Aug 3 - Oct 4$1.99, Sep 14 - Sep 22$3.89, Aug 3 - Oct 4$1.57, Sep 26 6:06 am$3.89, Aug 3 - Oct 4$1.27, Sep 30 4:47 am$3.89, Aug 3 - Oct 4$0.95, Oct 4 6:38 am$3.62, Oct 8 9:27 am$0.46, Oct 8 9:27 am$3.89, Oct 12 - Mar 29$0.01, Oct 12 - Mar 29 560,9942,439,453 2,734,375 2,265,625 1,796,875 1,328,125 859,375 390,625 Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr 2016

Price Details

3rd Party New

Last Seen $3.89 Mar 29, '16
Highest $3.89 Oct 12, '15
Lowest $3.62 Oct 8, '15
Average $3.89 (30d avg)
$3.89 (90d avg)
$3.88 (180d avg)
$3.89 (Lifetime average)
Added Aug 3, 2015

3rd Party Used

Last Seen $0.01 Mar 29, '16
Highest $2.99 Sep 10, '15
Lowest $0.01 Oct 12, '15
Average $0.01 (30d avg)
$0.01 (90d avg)
$0.04 (180d avg)
$0.23 (Lifetime average)
Added Aug 3, 2015

Sales Rank

30 day average: 2,004,907
90 day average: 1,522,477

Product Description

Big-time college sports embodies the ideals of amateurism and provides an important complement to university education. Or so its apologists would have us believe. As Andrew Zimbalist shows in this unprecedented analysis, college sports is really a massively commercialized industry based on activities that are often irrelevant and even harmful to education. Zimbalist combines groundbreaking empirical research and a talent for storytelling to provide a firm, factual basis for the many arguments that currently rage about the goals, history, structure, incentive system, and legal architecture of college sports. He paints a picture of a system in desperate need of reform and presents bold recommendations to chart a more sensible future.

Zimbalist begins by showing that today's problems are nothing new--that schools have been consumed for more than a century by debates about cheating, commercialism, and the erosion of academic standards. He then takes us into the world of the modern student athlete, explaining the incentives that, for example, encourage star athletes to abandon college for the pros, that create such useless courses as "The Theory of Basketball," and that lead students to ignore classes despite the astronomical odds against becoming a professional athlete. Zimbalist discusses the economic and legal aspects of gender equity in college sports. He assesses the economic impact of television and radio contracts and the financial rewards that come from winning major championships. He examines the often harmful effects of corporate sponsorship and shows that, despite such sponsorship, most schools run their athletic programs at a loss. Zimbalist also considers the relevance of antitrust laws to college sports and asks whether student athletes are ultimately exploited by the system.

Zimbalist's provocative recommendations include eliminating freshman eligibility for sports, restricting coaches' access to "sneaker money" from corporations, and ending the hypocrisy about professionalism by allowing teams to employ a quota of non-students as well as to receive funding from the pro leagues. A mixture of lively anecdotes, hard economic data, cogent arguments, and clear analysis, will revitalize debate about a subject close to the hearts and minds of millions of Americans.

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