Originally posted by Unregistered
View Post
There is certainly more money in the women's game, but I doubt that more than 1/3 of the programs are fully funded and on average that the rest have no more than 8 or 9 scholarships. That money has to be split between 18-22 players. Even the fully funded programs need to escalate the amounts for the majority of their players. Just do the math. Lets say the program has the money for 10 scholarships. If the school costs $40,000 that means the coach has $400,000 to be split between 20 young women. You can make it easy and give each a 1/2 scholarship ($20,000) in each year. But that will essentially foreclose the chance to attract any top recruits who are expecting (and being offered by some others) more than 50%. It also might be frustrating to your senior all-american who would be getting the same $$ as players seeing little to no field time. So you are now going to have to split that money unequally. If you decide that four players are getting full money, that now leaves $280,000 to be split between 16 players. Give three others 3/4s and you know have 13 players splitting $190,000. You can quickly see how it is pretty easy for an incoming recruit to be looking at no more than a 1/4 - despite being the 3rd or 4th player on the recruiting board and carrying some pretty high performance expectations. No imaging that you don't have $400,000 to work with but $315,000. The pressures are even greater on that coach.
Comment