Thursday, December 3, 2009

How would instituting a collegiate football program help a university?

I am doing a report on how instituting a football program for our university would help our school as a whole. I got some ideas on how it would help, but I need internet sources as proof. Does anyone know of any such websites that I could use as sources for my report?



How would instituting a collegiate football program help a university?nba logo





it helps bring more attention to the school and gets their name out more so than if there is not football or athletics.



How would instituting a collegiate football program help a university?nba video ,nba teams



Even a loosing football program brings in money. Ticket , and merchandise sales. National exposure from a winning team is the best advertisement for any school. Take a look at other schools ticket sales report, and alumni donations.
Just google NCAA football profits.



There are only two sports in the NCAA that can consistently make a positive income for a university: men's basketball and football. And really, football is a lot more likely to be profitable in a down year than basketball.



I'd also look for information on the University of Central Florida's football program. I'd even email their athletic department. They would be a perfect model of how a school that didn't even have a football team a few years ago built a program that was both successful and profitable in a short amount of time.
so your school don't have football team.. hmm.. Is your school one of those small liberal colleges out there? It takes millions of dollar to start football program even at small school.. Your school have to build their own stadium.. Anyway, the money will come from ticket sells, boosters, and merchandise.. If you football team do well financially then it would help you school if it is not it will hurt your school.. .
How much revenue do you think your school makes with golf, tennis, checkers, etc. The real money is in football, gives national exposure to the university, which is a good thing unless your a Notre Dame fan.

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