Kobe Bryant |
Forbes magazine is great but also incredibly depressing for a lot of reasons. They tell you about all the people who are bigger, smarter and richer than you. In 2008-2009, Tiger Woods was named the world's richest athlete. In that year, Woods made $110 million. That was his salary, which breaks down to about $4 dollars a SECOND. Oh, did I also mention that he only played about half the year? Since his car crash and his lack of performance (no pun intended), he still remains the world's richest athlete raking in $75 million dollars last year by being the front man for Nike and Electronic Arts (EA Sports); two companies which have built an empire over the Tiger Woods brand. It leads me to a much deeper question, is Tiger Woods a bigger brand than Nike itself? And he's not the only one. Kobe Bryant made $24.8 million last year, 4 million more than any other player in the NBA. With his endorsements, Bryant brought home around $54 million last year. Who would have thought...20 years ago if you had have told someone that the two most successful and highest paid athletes in the world would be African-American, most would have laughed in your face, Welcome to the future, ladies and gentlemen. Lebron James, Roger Federer (Tennis), Phil Mickelson (Golf) David Beckham (Soccer), Ronaldo (Soccer), Alex Rodriguez (MLB) are some of the notable athletes that rounded out the top ten, not one of them when filing for their taxes files for less than $30 million. The highest payed hockey players you ask? Vincent Lecalvier, Roberto Luongo and Sidney Crosby, all of whom make $10, $10, and $9 million dollars respectively (not including any endorsement deals)
The one and only, Yankee Stadium |
This is not to say that I don't support sporting events or any sport in general, I really do. I have been to almost every major sporting event, with the exception of a PGA event (there's something about watching golf, and then watching golf live that just doesn't do it for me) I'll tell you this: The game is bigger than the athletes, the sport is bigger than the organization and the message and what we get out of it is bigger than any game. And it's only getting bigger.
Need I say more? |
An athletes natural gift is potentially worth millions and that is what the entire sports community will have you believe. It starts when that little guy puts on his first pair of skates, that is when the dream begins to hoist the Stanley Cup (I get chills just thinking about it.) It begins on the court when you shoot your first basketball, or when you sign up for t-ball, or little league football, or score your first soccer goal; it all encompasses the world of self-achievement and fulfillment. You can't help but wrap yourself into it. And yes, the athletes are ridiculously over payed but as the sport grows, so does the salaries and the bank accounts of the world's greatest. It's a universal truth.
For some, the million dollar athlete is a symbol of something that they can never be, or somewhere along the line, they gave up on the dream of being the greatest. So we settle for a seat on the couch or in the stadium, and we scream all the top of our lungs for the pride we share in the passion of the game. Buying into the idea means buying into a system that can be fulfilling and frustrating. At the end of the day, and relatively speaking, we are all just pigeons on a wire, watching the greatest sports figures in the world carry out their day-to-day jobs.
Game on.
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