Menu
Colleges

Nevada Postponing Paying Full Cost Of Attendance Until '16-17 Season, Bucking Trend

Univ. of Nevada is "bucking the trend of the rest of the Mountain West and won't offer the full cost of attendance to its student-athletes" for the '15-16 season but "plans to do so" starting in '16-17, according to Chris Murray of the RENO GAZETTE-JOURNAL. Nevada AD Doug Knuth said, "For us, we're planning on the fall of 2016 to implement that. We're 100 percent supportive of doing it. We understand it and we think it's important, but for financial reasons, we won't be able to be behind it 100 percent from day one. We'll have to phase it in." Murray notes seven of the 12 Mountain West schools "have committed to paying the full cost of attendance." UNLV and Hawaii "haven't decided if they will." New Mexico "will fund the cost of attendance, but hasn't set a timeline for when the payments will begin," and Air Force is a non-scholarship school. Nevada estimates its full cost of attendance "at $4,800 per scholarship" and $1.046M per year, which is 4.2% of its $23M athletic budget (RENO GAZETTE-JOURNAL, 5/15).

DOLLARS AND SENSE: ESPN.com's Andrea Adelson noted Boston College AD Brad Bates "predicted exactly what has played out over the last several months and during conversations at the ACC spring meetings, as coaches have openly wondered how the inherent inequities will affect recruiting and athletic directors have wondered how they are going to pay for it all." There is "no proof just yet that prospective student-athletes are making choices based on how much money they can get in cost of attendance from each school." However, cost of attendance "cannot be looked at in a vacuum, either." The natural reaction is to "look at the individual dollar amounts offered and immediately jump to conclusions." Every coach and AD is "worried about being at a competitive disadvantage," but nobody "knows whether that is actually the case." Still, there is the "very real fear that athletic departments will begin to meddle in financial aid offices to try and raise their cost-of-attendance figures." Virginia AD Craig Littlepage said, "I would like to think that kids are making decisions not strictly on the basis of financials" (ESPN.com, 5/14).

SBJ Morning Buzzcast: May 8, 2024

Start your morning with Buzzcast with Austin Karp: The NFL sets a date for its 2024 schedule release, while also dropping hints that it could soon approve private equity investment in teams; WNBA teams finally land charter flights; the F1 Miami Grand Prix delivers a record on TV; and Elevate lands in Happy Valley.

Phoenix Mercury/NBC’s Cindy Brunson, NBA Media Deal, Network Upfronts

On this week’s pod, SBJ’s Austin Karp chats with SBJ NBA writer Tom Friend about the pending NBA media Deal. Cindy Brunson of NBC and Phoenix Mercury is our Big Get this week. The sports broadcasting pioneer talks the upcoming WNBA season. Later in the show, SBJ media writer Mollie Cahillane gets us set for the upcoming network upfronts.

SBJ I Factor: Molly Mazzolini

SBJ I Factor features an interview with Molly Mazzolini. Elevate's Senior Operating Advisor – Design + Strategic Alliances chats with SBJ’s Ross Nethery about the power of taking chances. Mazzolini is a member of the SBJ Game Changers Class of 2016. She shares stories of her career including co-founding sports design consultancy Infinite Scale career journey and how a chance encounter while working at a stationery store launched her career in the sports industry. SBJ I Factor is a monthly podcast offering interviews with sports executives who have been recipients of one of the magazine’s awards.

Shareable URL copied to clipboard!

https://www.sportsbusinessjournal.com/Daily/Issues/2015/05/15/Colleges/Nevada.aspx

Sorry, something went wrong with the copy but here is the link for you.

https://www.sportsbusinessjournal.com/Daily/Issues/2015/05/15/Colleges/Nevada.aspx

CLOSE