海角大神

海角大神 / Text

The 鈥榩roblem鈥 of outrageous sports salaries

The money involved in sports is a reflection of broader society in many ways.

By Mark Sappenfield, Editor

The gym did not exactly appear to be a launchpad for dreams of Olympic glory. As an Olympics reporter, I had been to American training facilities and written about the famous sports academies of China. What I saw down an anonymous street in Delhi was not that. The boxer was one of India鈥檚 better hopes for a medal at the Beijing Games. But the scene spoke of a struggle for more than athletic excellence. It spoke of a struggle simply to keep the lights on.

For a sports fan raised in the United States, a posting to India more than a decade ago was a step into another world. Despite having 1.3 billion citizens, India was accomplished at only one sport (cricket), and that happened to be one that only a dozen other countries played seriously. Even with a growing middle class, why were sports not a bigger part of Indian life?

鈥淥ur problem is Indian society just isn鈥檛 interested in sport,鈥 the boxing coach told me in 2008. 鈥淧arents will tell their children to study and become engineers and doctors and not to waste their time on sport.鈥

It is safe to say that America does not have the same 鈥減roblem.鈥 Over the next 12 years, one American baseball player will be paid a cumulative salary nearing half a billion dollars. And every year, the top three U.S. sports leagues 鈥 which are also the three highest-grossing leagues in the world 鈥 collectively generate more money than Tajikistan.

Like it or not, sports are one of the many indicators of a culture鈥檚 values and priorities. And that is what this week鈥檚 cover story is about. How did America get to this point? How did we go from elite professional athletes needing summer jobs three generations ago to the lowest-paid National Basketball Association players 鈥 those who almost never step onto the court 鈥 now making nearly $1 million a year?

Actually, some U.S. professional athletes still do work second jobs. Top players in the Women鈥檚 National Basketball Association play in Europe聽as well as聽the U.S. because Europe pays better. Is that because women鈥檚 basketball creates more money there? No. It鈥檚 because many teams are the playthings of billionaire Russian oligarchs and conglomerates.

The economics of sports are a reflection of broader society in many ways. The most obvious is that when we spend gobs of money on sports, owners and athletes get rich. But the quest for gender fairness is another window on those values. Members of the U.S. men鈥檚 soccer team, which failed to qualify for the 2018 World Cup, make more money than those on the women鈥檚 soccer team, which is the reigning World Cup champion, because the men still generate more revenue. Is that fair? Prize money in the tennis majors, however, is equal, despite the fact that the men usually generate more money. The same is true for prize money in figure skating, though the economic gender dynamic is reversed. Is that fair?

A famous sports film once crowed 鈥淪how me the money!鈥 But the money, it turns out, shows us something, too.聽