Don't get me wrong, I think it's a good thing to award Olympic athletes for their success. They're representing America and making everyone proud with their efforts so I think they deserve something. But $25,000 for a gold just seems like a lot of money to me. I also thought about the athletes' reasons for going to the Olympics. Do they go just for the cash incentives or do they go because they are truly passionate about their sport? I feel like they have to be passionate about it because most athletes spend their entire lives training, so if they didn't love their sport, they probably would have quit long ago. But I don't know. Do you think Olympic athletes get paid too much? Not enough? Or shouldn't be paid at all?
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
Money for Medals
Don't get me wrong, I think it's a good thing to award Olympic athletes for their success. They're representing America and making everyone proud with their efforts so I think they deserve something. But $25,000 for a gold just seems like a lot of money to me. I also thought about the athletes' reasons for going to the Olympics. Do they go just for the cash incentives or do they go because they are truly passionate about their sport? I feel like they have to be passionate about it because most athletes spend their entire lives training, so if they didn't love their sport, they probably would have quit long ago. But I don't know. Do you think Olympic athletes get paid too much? Not enough? Or shouldn't be paid at all?
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$25,000 by almost any measure is a tiny amount. It seems like a lot but lets compare it to a baseball player who makes well over ten million a year. This is four years for $25,000. You may say that almost 2 million dollars is a lot to pay from the government. When you consider that the government has a yearly budget in the trillions, a few million is really nothing to someone who lifts American morale so well; I don't think there is any better bang for one's buck.
ReplyDeleteAnd what you said about an athlete doing it just for the money is again ridiculous. Between training (coaching and facilities) the trip, and 4 years of no profession beyond practicing, $25,000 does not come close to paying for the cost of participating. That is before you consider the mental toll that practicing takes. Can you imagine 8-10 hours a day working your body to the ragged edge?