Thursday, May 10, 2012

A Defense of College Athletics


Buzz Bissinger recently wrote a piece for the Wall Street Journal in which he made an argument against the perpetuation of college football at universities nationwide, which you can find here. His argument essentially states that football programs serve no academic purpose: the players don’t go to class and/or study, so their description as “students” is basically false; the programs themselves, barring a few outliers, aren’t particularly profitable for the university; and the average student is harmed rather than hurt when expensive buildings or exorbitant coaches’ salaries raise their tuition rates. 

As I chewed this issue over, the salient question that emerged seems to be a little more fundamental: what is the purpose of the college experience, both for students and for universities? This question must be answered before a judgment can be made as to the necessity or value of football, or any sport really, being associated with higher education establishments.

So what’s the point of college? For students, the answer that readily falls from their lips would be “to be educated in a particular field of study so that they might get a well-paying job in that field.” Fine. But why do they pick the institution that they attend? The elite students with designs on becoming scientists, engineers, politicians, professors, or some other profession that places great emphasis on one’s educational background select their schools based on the reputation of the school. If you’re planning on being a history professor, as a good friend of mine would like to do, then going to a school like the University of California at Davis will facilitate this ambition. She doesn’t care twopence about the quality of the football team because her reason for going there is completely academic. Aside from the top-level schools like Harvard, Yale, Berkley, etc, different schools boast expertise in different areas of study. I’ve heard it said that the University of Missouri is a well-respected journalism school, though not being interested in journalism I have not researched it in-depth.  The point is, for serious students with definite goals in mind, ancillary considerations do not apply to their decision to attend a particular university.

The rest of students who don’t really know what they want to do after they graduate from high school, but who have been “encouraged” (read: tuition has been paid for) by their parents to attain a college degree are more likely to make choices based on criteria such as their friends’ presence at a school, the location of the school (i.e., it is close to home, is it warm, are there mountains nearby where they can snowboard or rock-climb), the cost of attending, and finally, the reputation of the athletic program. If you’re a Kansas City resident, the prowess of Missouri’s football program or Kansas’ basketball program may weigh heavily in your decision where to attend. Other factors like family history (“Dad went to K State, KU’s not an option!”) may also come in to play, but the point here is that for these types of students, the experience of college itself is as important as the benefits and career possibilities a degree will afford. 

For example, I grew up on the University of Oregon’s campus, surrounded by that culture. I attended a basketball game as a child where the Ducks play Cal and I got to see the college version of Jason Kidd demolish the Ducks on a sprained ankle. I attended Truman State University for 6 years, and never went to a single football game during that time. I attended women’s volleyball matches, because the team was excellent, and the one year the basketball team made noise, I went to several games. The football team stank, so the desire to contribute to team spirit was lacking. Now, there were other factors in my decision to attend Truman; the fact that my father taught there and thus allowed me to graduate with a Bachelor’s debt-free was the primary factor, along with the close proximity of my family and the free room and board that went along with that. What point am I making you ask? I am more of an ardent fan of the Oregon football squad than any Truman athletic program, despite the fact that I graduated from Truman with 2 degrees and Oregon turned me down for their doctoral program twice. U of O football is nationally renown, and thus I am a fan.

So my answer to the question What is the point of college for the average student, “to have a good time”, requires us to factor in the experience of having a successful athletic team. There is an undeniable sense of camaraderie that occurs even with non-sports fans when their school’s football team is doing well. A sense of pride and notoriety accompanies them wherever they go; a sense of commonality among everyone on campus spreads like a happy virus. It’s a cliché, but sports can bring numerous and disparate people together in ways that nothing else apart from religion can. Which is why sports have supplanted religion in many peoples’ hearts; the connection, the instant rapport that it affords builds communities and gives a sense of belonging that most people desperately seek. And the question then becomes: is it worth paying an additional 5% in tuition to have such an experience, to have that shared community and sense of loyalty that can transcend racial, social, ethnic, and even generational barriers? Do Nebraska alumni react with delight and pleasure when they encounter a student who graduated ten years later than them? Do Alabama grads yell “Roll Tide!” to their grandparents or grandkids, instantly establishing a common ground among separate generations? 

The second aspect of the question, what is the point of college from the perspective of the school itself, is more straightforward. Money. Some might say Prestige, but prestige is the means to the end of making the school more Money. Yalies might lord over Princeton students, but the board of directors and presidents of schools care more about generating revenue to expand their school’s scope of operations. In this I agree wholeheartedly with Bissinger; if schools’ single focus was academic excellence and scholarship, then they would completely sever any official ties with athletic programs. 

Originally, a healthy mind was thought to require a healthy body to go with it, which is probably why college athletics began. But quickly the powers that be recognized the singular appeal of athletics to both students and alumni, and saw an opportunity to woo potential students (more tuition money) and coerce alumni to donate to the school’s athletic programs. 

Bissinger makes the argument that smaller schools like New Mexico or Alabama at Birmingham do not benefit from football programs, and the risks to students’ health far outweigh the benefits they gain. I would be curious to discover the ratio of players who make a profession out of their athletic endeavors, as well as the GPAs and graduation rates at such schools. For the main case made against college athletics at the big programs are that the students aren’t attending classes or actually attaining an education; they are merely showcasing for professional leagues. The players are exploited by being unpaid laborers putting their health at risk for no compensation. The schools grow rich off the players whom they exploit.

My answer to this issue begins with the nature of sports. For most players know that their chances of becoming professional athletes are virtually nonexistent. They have reached the pinnacle of their career in football or basketball or tennis or weight-lifting. But most of them first started playing sports because they loved to, and because of the bonds and experiences sports provided to them. I never played college athletics, but I played pickup basketball for years. It didn’t benefit me in any way other than keeping me relatively healthy and making connections with other students and professors. Plus, I loved playing basketball! Athletes play sports because they love to, and the fact that risks are involved (which they are more acutely aware of than anyone else) and that they may never go pro ultimately doesn’t matter to them. They love to play, and the opportunity to play in front of thousands of cheering fans, for high stakes, makes the competition all the sweeter. 

Moreover, those select elite who will go pro have the opportunity to demonstrate their skills before scouts from professional teams. The current system does benefit the pro leagues and colleges more than the players who fill them, but as currently situated the players still benefit from college ball as their exhibition of skills. If they insist on earning money straight out of high school, there are developmental leagues or foreign leagues that will compensate them. Whether or not that system should change is a different issue than the original premise for this post, so we will not address it, merely acknowledge it.

As for the argument that it subjects athletes to possible injuries, the answer is simple: injuries are the risks of the business no matter what level of play a person is at. High school athletes are injured frequently, and as minors must have their parents’ permission to play. If anything, ban high school sports with injury potential, but once a person turns 18, they become legal adults, and if they choose to roll the dice by playing football or rugby, that is their right. Besides, since the players are bigger, stronger, and faster in pro leagues, and more is at stake, the argument could be made that college athletics is safer than professional athletics. 

This is my argument to the issues raised by Mr. Bissinger. College athletics benefit students, the athletes themselves, and the programs who offer them. Keep them as they are. They’re jolly good fun.

Friday, May 4, 2012

Future Drama


A lot can happen in a short amount of time. I’ve been accepted into Baylor’s doctoral program, starting this fall, and I’ve been fired from my job. That makes three consecutive non-academic jobs that I’ve been fired from. The only job I was able to maintain, for more than a year and a half, was teaching. Perhaps this is a suggestion as to where my future lies, or maybe I’m just a failure. Time will tell. 

I say “Time will tell” and not “God will tell” because God doesn’t seem to say those kinds of things to me. I don’t get clear leadings from the Spirit, or dreams or words of knowledge. On occasion I will be overwhelmed with piercing emotion and affection, which I interpret to be a caress from the Lord. But a crystalline directive? No.

Doubtless this is due to my own sinfulness. I still struggle with sin, an inordinate amount it seems to me. I lack self-control in my appetites, I am greedy and selfish and afraid. This surely must be the kink in the connection that disallows the Lord from making His will known to me in unambiguous terms. I had a chat will my friend Nathan this evening, and he was saying that the cure to sin and temptation is to focus on and walk with Jesus. I agree. So why don’t I? Why can’t I?

I am stuck with a conundrum. For if the way to avoid sin and grow in my relationship with God is self-discipline, that is, to direct my thoughts in ever-increasing frequency and duration upon His wonderful face, then I will be unable to ever accomplish growth in this regard since one of my struggles is self-discipline. If the means by which I can overwhelmingly conquer, as the NASB version of the Bible puts Romans 8:37 it, is a quality that I need the Lord’s intervention for in order to achieve the Lord’s intervention, then my situation is even more desperate than Paul’s in Romans 7! I need self-discipline in order to gain self-discipline; but I can’t achieve self-discipline if I lack self-discipline which is what I need to attain self-discipline. 

There is no condemnation for those who walk according to the Spirit, Romans 8:1 says. Fine, I’ll buy that. But what if I am unable to walk according to the Spirit? Perhaps I missed a lesson somewhere, but that’s always been my downfall. I understand and believe the Life more Abundant thanks to our New Identity in Christ argument, but how to effect this in my experience? I want to hear the voice of the Lord, I want to see Him at work in the lives of others through me. I want to be conformed more closely to His image, the likeness of Jesus. Oh God, I want that! 

But no matter how I try, how good my intentions are, no matter whether I pray the armor of God on or invite Jesus to live in and through me, I still stumble and fall. I still give way to lust and gluttony. I still loathe the figure that glares out of the mirror. I still look on with envy the couples I see around me, even those whom I love and admire. I still covet the presence of my friends and family, and daydream of winning the lottery or marrying a rich girl. Foolish fantasies. I still worry about grad school and surviving until then, and through the process, and writing a dissertation, and learning Spanish, and making ends meet, and finding a church, and making new friends, and everything else that looms in the oncoming future. And of course I look at my failings and despair curls around my soul like Shelob spinning her monstrous webs.

Will I ever be free? Will I ever see any progress? What remains? What else can I, must I do? If I must surrender all to Jesus, how can I? What happens if I can’t?