ragtimejoe1
Well-known member
to cover cost of attendance now that it has passed? I would hope we are doing it but where will the money come from? Are we going to take from an already thin budget or does he have other money sources? Anyone know?
Are we going to take from an already thin budget or does he have other money sources?
Snowyrange, I would add under your source number two "subsidies" that student fees are a big part of that. People on this board of been critical at CSU's budget jumped ours. It came solely on the backs of student fees. That is one area that other members of the MountainWest have a huge advantage. Because other institutions have tens of thousands more students, they can generate millions on the backs of their students. The other source of revenue would be from the conference by way of TV contracts. That's where the power five schools have such huge contracts their TV revenue makes up a huge chunk of their overall budget.
SnowyRange said:1. Student fees are another serious source of money. (I got totally slaughtered here a while ago for pointing out that CSU, with 20,000 more students, of course for that reason is going to have a higher athletics budget. We spend a lot more per student.)
2. Television revenue is also critical, and teams in our conference are always at a disadvantage there. And even though I try to follow this stuff, I'm always shocked at how huge our disadvantage is compared to the P5 schools.
So then, in your opinion, is State money our only option and if it doesn't come in FCS here we come? In your opinion is FCS a better option for WYO?
ragtimejoe1 said:Found the answer...
“I would say we can probably handle some of it without any incremental dollars. But if we were to do it right, we can’t," Burman said. "If they were to do full cost of attendance, that’s roughly $3,300 dollars per full scholarship at UW. That’s high. You take $3,300 times the number of kids that are on full scholarship, and it’s like $700,000. Could we do some of it? Yeah. Could we do all of it [without state support]? It would be difficult.
"We’re going to need help. And my thought is, you know what, we’ve got one school in our state. We can afford it. This state is not broke.”
http://trib.com/sports/college/wyoming/wyoming-athletics-prepares-to-face-potential-ncaa-autonomy-changes/article_262c3059-5a7a-579b-9451-787d3c2190c0.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
$3,300 is not a bad goal. However, what would bring better recruits/athletic success over the next 10 years: a facility that cost 10 mill or paying athletes $1 mill per year (roughly $6,000K per athlete)? There is a real opportunity to overcome our recruiting limitations. I can see Burman's plan is primarily asking the State. We have more than adequate facilities. We need to invest in people; athletes and coaches.
SnowyRange said:Snowyrange, I would add under your source number two "subsidies" that student fees are a big part of that. People on this board of been critical at CSU's budget jumped ours. It came solely on the backs of student fees. That is one area that other members of the MountainWest have a huge advantage. Because other institutions have tens of thousands more students, they can generate millions on the backs of their students. The other source of revenue would be from the conference by way of TV contracts. That's where the power five schools have such huge contracts their TV revenue makes up a huge chunk of their overall budget.
You're right, and I omitted those two things.
1. Student fees are another serious source of money. (I got totally slaughtered here a while ago for pointing out that CSU, with 20,000 more students, of course for that reason is going to have a higher athletics budget. We spend a lot more per student.)
2. Television revenue is also critical, and teams in our conference are always at a disadvantage there. And even though I try to follow this stuff, I'm always shocked at how huge our disadvantage is compared to the P5 schools. Just for the hell of it, I looked at what Purdue -- a struggling Big 10 program, though certainly with a nice athletics history -- gets from TV. It looks like it's about $26 million this year. In a couple years it's expected to be $35 million. Good god.
SnowyRange said:Are we going to take from an already thin budget or does he have other money sources?
Leaving aside the whole giant headache of feeling the need to build ever more grandiose facilities -- 3 story windows to make the weight room look like a modern cathedral, lounges with 20 big screens for playing Call of Duty! -- there is this whole topic of employee-type benefits....pay of some sort, travel issues, long term insurance, etc.
TSpoke said:I don't think that is how it works. I think the COA is a fixed number that is decided by a number of factors. You might be able to fudge the numbers a bit but I don't think you can just set whatever COA you want or the big boys would be spending more than they are planning to right now. I could be wrong but that is the way I understand it.
WestWYOPoke said:Really doubt we will be top of the MWC. I would think that UNLV and SDSU will both be higher due to the higher cost of living in those cities. CSU will probably be in the same ballpark as us, so I could see UW being around 3-5 in the MWC.