I was inspired to think about this again after
reading Bruce Feiler's "There's
no off in this season, Team Sports Are Taking Over Kids’ Lives" in the NYT. The article is nicely done
and the point is important. The line quoting Pastor James Emery White,
"Sports is a wonderful thing to do for kids, but it should be kept in its
place", returned me to my time as a high school athlete, and the treatment
of my own kids when they went through the same thing. I also offered some thoughts in the press a
while back and I thought I'd do a bit more on it.
I see and hear the following on occasion: "At least we got a tuition break out of
it." Other versions voice the actual pursuit of a "scholarship"
as part or all of the point of kids’ sports. Some even voice pro pipe dreams (yes,
pipe dreams, I watched a couple of athletes I played against go all the way
through to the pro level and, trust me, your kid isn't good enough.)
These claims got me thinking. How much money and time went into that
pursuit? We had our own youth athletes
in football and swimming and the money costs are clear—memberships, fees,
tournament fees, equipment, travel, “fundraisers” (that actually came mostly
out of our pocket) and never forget the value of time. I can’t even look back
and estimate the time spent by our kids and us.
And it gets even more expensive for the parents
of more athletically talented kids. All of the preceding occur nearly year
round, plus now there may need to be individual coaching, getting on the right
"travel" (elite) teams, or into the right academy. Don't forget
having to get into the elite private school where rules are more favorable to
sports participation—good coaches are there especially in basketball and
football.
It's pretty easy to see that the
"get the scholarship" claim really can't make monetary sense for nearly anybody. [I'll return to a more complete
consideration of other benefits later.]
We could start an analysis at any point in time,
but I find it easiest to present for a youth athlete at the college entry
point. The net present value (NPV) of an
upcoming four-year offer can be characterized generally as:
NPV = (aG – e)/(1 + i) + (aG – e)/[(1 + i)^2]
+ (aG – e)/[(1 + i)^3] + (aG – e)/[(1 + i)^4]
Here, G would be a full ride, the Holy
Grail. But a grant-in-aid (the NCAA definition
of an athletic "scholarship") can be partial (as all you baseball, women’s
basketball, softball, and soccer parents should by know if you don’t
already). Let a be the offered portion of an annual full
ride. Since right now G is less than full cost of attendance,
there will be out-of-pocket expenses, e.
So the numerator is just
the annual net value of the offer. The
denominator brings the next four years back to present value using the interest
rate i. I’m fully aware
that all of the elements in the numerator under the summation can vary each
year, but no harm is really done to the point I am trying to make by assuming
they are constant over the four years. [Yes, I know that occasionally
eligibility is longer (grad school) or shorter (by injury) but, again, I’ll
sacrifice that characterization to make the point.] So, with constant numerator:
NPV = (aG – e){1/(1
+ i) + 1/[(1 + i)^2] + 1/[(1 + i)^3] + 1/[(1 + i)^4]}
If i = 5%, then the sum in braces is 3.55.
Let’s have G
= $25,000 annually, say, good old State U, and e = $3,500 (the midpoint given what I
read in the press coverage on the issue).
Using these choices, NPV becomes pretty tractable (and you can choose
other values and do your own analysis if you like):
NPV = ($25,000a – $3,500)(3.55) = $88,750a – $12,425
We also need to include the fact that there is
only a probability of getting an offer, let's call it p. Multiplying NPV by p gives Net Expected Value (NEV):
NEV = pNPV = p($88,750a –
$12,425)
Let's run a few different scenarios on a and p. Let a and p both run to 1.00 in equal 0.25
increments. It's an easy Excel task to use the formulae to generate the
following table of NPV and then NEV:
a
|
NPV
|
NEV p=.25
|
NEV p=.5
|
NEV p=.75
|
NEV p=1.0
|
0.25
|
$9,763
|
$2,441
|
$4,881
|
$7,322
|
$9,763
|
0.50
|
$31,950
|
$7,988
|
$15,975
|
$23,963
|
$31,950
|
0.75
|
$54,138
|
$13,534
|
$27,069
|
$40,603
|
$54,138
|
1.00
|
$76,325
|
$19,081
|
$38,163
|
$57,244
|
$76,325
|
Now, let's suppose you started
“investing” in your kid’s sports prospects starting at age 9 (for us, that was the
start of youth baseball and then on to football and swimming later). That's 10
years to get the kid into position for the big offer. The table shows that if the
offer is a low partial a =
0.25, with low chances of p =
0.25, then no more than $2,441/10 = $244 per year (in today's dollars) should
ever have been spent in the pursuit of the offer. Anybody with a youth athlete
knows they spend far more than that on memberships, fees, tournament fees,
equipment, “fundraisers”, travel, and the value of time. We used to easily drop that much on a weekend
swim meet.
Of course, at the other end of the
spectrum, the prospects for a sure thing full ride student were worth spending of
up to $76,325/10 = $7,633 per year. And it's a good thing NEV goes up since, in
order to generate that higher p,
spending will surely have gone up anyway! Of course the payoff at higher
tuition colleges (G >$25,000)
increases the rational spending for any a and p.
But on the other hand, and these
would be the parents I’m talking to most, an even lower probability is strikingly revealing, regardless of the
size of a or G.
This second table was taken from NCAA.org on their research showing historical
average chances of advancing to different levels of play (Pros are included
just to drive the point home):
Level
|
WBB
|
MBB
|
Baseball
|
MHockey
|
FB
|
MSoccer
|
HS-NCAA
|
3.3%
|
3%
|
6.1%
|
11%
|
5.7%
|
5.5%
|
NCAA-Pro
|
0.02%
|
0.03%
|
0.45%
|
0.32%
|
0.08%
|
0.07%
|
This is just the NCAA calculating
the total slots available at the next level relative to the number of
participants at the lower level. But it
shows that the idea that p = .25, the
lowest value in the previous analysis, is probably way too high for nearly everybody! For nearly everybody who doesn’t have an
elite athlete identified at an early age, the chances are more like the ones in
the table.
At p = 0.05 (a 5% chance),
like for football or men’s soccer, we can use the calculations in the NPV/NEV Table
to adjust the value of spending on a developing youth athlete since everything
is linear in p (5% is 1/5
of 25%).
For a = 0.25, we can just multiply the $244
per year by 0.2 and see that student now should only draw spending of $49 per
year. Even investment in a full G (a
= 1.0) falls to $1,527 per year, which seems a hefty enough amount, but
a few sessions of individualized coaching would eat that up pretty quick.
Realistically, if your kid is low p, the financial component
cannot be about “getting that ‘scholarship’”.
Indeed, hitting the “jackpot” lessens the blow but does not cancel it. So for the typical "pretty good"
youth athlete, that is, one with low p,
these meager NEV results raise the question, "What really goes on with parents
and youth sports?"
We can't forget some kids are innately
better than others (you can’t teach speed or size) so that some have lower
investment for large outcomes than others. Also, long shots pay off
occasionally but remember the real problem is whether your kid really is even a
long shot. And the calculations are pretty hard and fast on what these dreams
cost. If it is far-fetched in monetary return, either the investment is irrational
or there is a broader explanation.
Surely it's the latter and early on
I promised to return to all those other “values”. The alternative explanations I've seen
include the not so seemly—peer pressure, permissive (generous? indulgent?)
parenting, or overbearing parenting. But there are also other more seemly—sports
kids also keep busy and maybe out of trouble. Sports build other values. [My
experiences were more along the lines of a quote I’ve seen tracked back to Grantland
Rice, “Sports doesn’t build character, it reveals it.”] And you probably heard seen some I have not
seen.
But nearly all parents should stop using
(hiding behind?) the money value of a "scholarship" as an explanation
for their spending on their kids’ sports. What else could have been done with
these resources for the vast majority of kids? If we’re talking about a
relatively richer parent, maybe it's no biggie but then time spent still weighs
in. If the parent is less well off, this could be a biggie for parents,
depending on next best possibility. [See Roger Noll's 1998 piece, "Economic
perspectives on the athlete's body," on the rationality of investment
in sports by those without much in terms of other prospects. I also cover this
in my Sports Economics 3d, p. 226.]
As if this weren't enough, sports
economics offers another important insight on this spending. All of the other
parents are out there spending the same or more than you! And your chance for
success depends on what they are spending on their kid as well as what you
spend on yours. [This is the logic of something called the "contest
success function", a mainstay in sports economics.]
So, fun is fun and there are many
types of values created (some enviable, some not so much). But spending is
spending and those dollars invested at a young age are the dollars that
eventually pay off the most. Here's to investing those earliest dollars wisely.