I agree with all this.I'm all for players who WANT to be here and that believe in themselves, regardless if others do! I'm all for players who are willing to do the hard work and compete! Proving the doubters wrong is a powerful motivation. I like what I see in this kid. He has the competitiveness of a champion to me, from what I'm seeing. I-L-L
Seems more correct to me.
And you are saying $30K per SEMESTER. The other people are saying $18K per YEAR...which can't be accurate.
I think you two are talking about two different versions of the concept of “cost”.Not close to being true. Tuition at UIUC annually is far more than 14-18k and is likely more than that at 97% of Div.1 schools. Tuition alone for out of state students, which most of the hoops players are indeed, is 37,000. Add in room and board and you are over 50,000 or 200,000 per year. Good private schools, such as Ivy, Stanford, Notre Dame, Rice, etc. are about $10,000 more per year. There are some colleges where a student can expect costs to exceed $100,000 annually.
Low overall effective cost but lost income to the school.That’s how much you pay for it. How much does it cost the university though? That was the question.
There are also many, many supporting services that go into a student being successful at a university. Adding a student to an existing class if a seat is available might seem free, but the instructor has more to grade and more student contacts to answer (and I imagine your typical athlete's schedules generate a lot of contacts - won't be at class, can I take that test later, etc etc). I work in IT at the university up the road and can tell you that a ton of work goes into all of the technology a student uses every day; add to that counseling, health services, advising, registration, housing, dining, grounds, and many more departments' worth of staff that work every day to support students at a university. Yes, it's marginal in an economy of scale sort of way to support one more student, but there's a lot to it and is a cost that could be calculated.1. for out of state students, the yearly cost of attendance is around 58k
2. the value for all of the services the athletes get is significantly higher than the cost of attendance. they get clothing/swag, individualized tutoring, the transportation to their games, maybe they go on an international trip, highly individualized tutoring, housing (not in a cinder block fifteen by fifteen room with a common bathroom down the hallway), nutrition guidance and meals, and finally tuition.
I don't think that adds up to several hundred thousand dollars, but it is well into the six figures. 300-400k all in/4 years
Do walk-ons have to pay their own way to games?1. for out of state students, the yearly cost of attendance is around 58k
2. the value for all of the services the athletes get is significantly higher than the cost of attendance. they get clothing/swag, individualized tutoring, the transportation to their games, maybe they go on an international trip, highly individualized tutoring, housing (not in a cinder block fifteen by fifteen room with a common bathroom down the hallway), nutrition guidance and meals, and finally tuition.
I don't think that adds up to several hundred thousand dollars, but it is well into the six figures. 300-400k all in/4 years
If he were to secure that and that kind of financial commitment, players that bouncing between the back end of the first round or front end of the second around.... they're coming back tomorrow school. Fland is good, but Florida would be getting ripped off.
It does for out of state students. My son was accepted a couple of years ago. It was $62k per year including room and board full price precisely.Illinois does not cost 60-70k per year unless maybe you're an international student.
I paid 72k total in tuition and fees for 4 years and graduated within the last decade(tuition hasn't really risen that much if you look at it). It was like another 11 for room and board as a freshman and then 15ish total for rent the final 3 years(no clue about what I spent on food and booze because I paid for that by bartending).
So probably all in for roughly 100k total over 4 years or 25k per year(freshman year was by the far the most expensive with living in a dorm). My graduating class was the first one not to see a team make the tournament in 4 years if you want a clue on the timeframe.
My niece is at UIUC right now and she is on the hook for 70,000 a year. That is of course including R&B.Not close to being true. Tuition at UIUC annually is far more than 14-18k and is likely more than that at 97% of Div.1 schools. Tuition alone for out of state students, which most of the hoops players are indeed, is 37,000. Add in room and board and you are over 50,000 or 200,000 per year. Good private schools, such as Ivy, Stanford, Notre Dame, Rice, etc. are about $10,000 more per year. There are some colleges where a student can expect costs to exceed $100,000 annually.
I miss the freaking out posts
The DIA is on the hook for the cost of tuition as well as room and board in most cases for athletes on scholarship (not sure why so many are insistent that full ride scholarship athletes don't get room and board covered in their packet), which is generally separate from the university. The cost comes from there. The university is not actually paying the costs at all.Seems most are failing to understand we are talking about how much it costs the university and not how much you pay for it