Monday, 27 March 2017

NCAA describes OHL players pros, but they truly are amateurs

Should all top-level amateur athletes get paid?

Parents invest a ton of money into figure skating, baseball, and piano lessons; OHL players receive a ton of value 

By Mark Schadenberg
I’ve been watching a debate from the sidelines too long, and feel now is the time to offer my opinion.
It takes a rare breed of an athlete to become a regular roster name in the NHL or to play shortstop for the Blue Jays, middle linebacker for the Eskimos, or a shooting guard for the Raptors. All sports have their respective roads to the top defined – the path to success.
If you want to play on the PGA Tour you (and your parents) shall spend a ton of money on coaching, greens fees, equipment, travel to tournaments, tournament entry fees, and certainly sports psychologists and physio therapists, and tutors to maintain your grades as you will aspire to gain a NCAA scholarship. For an amateur golfer (not taking cheques or gifts for winning tourneys as prize money), you will be a speck of sand in the sand trap of life when hoping you get scouted for the NCAA level, so you must prepare a resume video and circulate samples to schools from near and far.
If you want to win an Olympic gold medal in figure skating, the tabulation of expenses is overwhelmingly astronomical for coaching, ice time, costumes, travel and certainly even buying the rights to the songs you want to skate to.


If you want to reach the upper echelons of golf, figure skating, volleyball, auto racing, badminton, or tennis the years of dedication and desire to your craft are usually comparable to the number of cheques you must write. You better hope your rich Aunt Mildred and Uncle Charlie are assisting.
I would never be able to guess the thousands upon thousands of dollars it required to have Milos Roanic emerge from Thornhill as Canada’s greatest-ever male tennis player. I can guarantee you that for every Milos there are 30 or 40 other hopeful tennis players who combined the ‘love’ for their racquet sport with a 6-love loss to another upcoming star. In turn, that particular upcoming star likely lost 6-love to Roanic in a youth playdowns competition somewhere in this province.
Hockey is no different.
WAGES FOR OHL PLAYERS
I am quite frankly tired of the discussion about paying players in the Ontario Hockey League a wage – whether significant or meagre. I won’t refute arguments presented in the press or agree with sentiments as publicly announced at a current hearing into possibly issuing minimum wage to OHL players.
I don’t know exactly how their system works based on teams paying for meals on the road and supplying equipment and trainers and physio therapists and nutritional advice and seats in a classroom at a private high school and of course meals at their billet home. Have you seen the cost of hockey sticks today?
I would equally guess that maybe the players do deserve a little more than they currently receive, but, and this is where many folks forget about the overall picture of this argument about paying OHL players. How much do we pay today’s OHL stars when they are still just 17? I’m not talking about today when NHL stars (the few that make it) have reached the top, I’m referring to their years of training when they are between the ages of 16 – 19? Do we pay players to attend dry land training sessions? Do they get paid for all 6 fours they must be at the rink for a game? Do they get compensated for riding a bus to Sudbury? Is this a 40-hour week or a 20-hour week?

OTHER SPORTS
Did we also under-pay sporting endeavours as they hoped and dreamed to climb the ranks such as Milos Roanic, Adam Hadwin, Brooke Henderson, Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir, Christopher Mabee, Christine Sinclair, Simeon Jackson, Andrew Wiggins, Brad Gushue, Rachel Homan (won world championship this past weekend) and Rosie MacLennan? The list does go on forever.
Who is Brian Yang and should he be getting paid as he climbs the sporting ranking ladder? Yang is Canada’s top ranked U19 badminton player. Should he be getting paid minimum wage, or less because he is in a sport which doesn’t attract large crowds and jersey sales?
I realize OHL teams play in front of crowds in the average range of 5,000, but those young players are aspiring to earn $4 million (or more) annual contracts to play in front of 20,000. If someone needs to point fingers, the sport which should be analyzed is the contracts offered to Rookie-League baseball players who are adults who usually also have college diplomas.
As the world’s best in trampoline, MacLennan has gold medals from many competitions and a few meagre endorsements, but she would never be considered rich or professional or someone who has collected pay cheques as a teenager in trampoline.
Simeon Jackson is a good story. Who is Simeon Jackson? Currently a member of Canada’s national men’s team in soccer, Jackson moved from Mississauga when he was 15 to London to attempt to reach his soccer dreams. He moved to London . . . London in England to eventually find a pro job as a soccer player. He must be good as he has earned more than 40 caps for Canada in international play.
Mabee, who is from Tillsonburg, trained out of Montreal to gradually become one of Canada’s top figure skaters. Virtue and Moir were based in Michigan for several years and now they are also in Montreal. When you calculate accommodations with coaching and ice time, you can understand why tickets to the touring Stars On Ice can be so high. 


It’s a difficult argument in the OHL, especially when the NCAA system considers the stars of the Peterborough Petes, Erie Otters and Owen Sound Attack as professional. (An argument to weigh the pros and cons to on another day). None of those three centres are large. Neither of those three cities have an overall fan base which would or could support a team if the price per ticket suddenly was raised to $30. In the case of Peterborough, the summer passion for lacrosse often attracts larger crowds than winter OHL contests, therefore it must be time to pay amateur 18-year-old lacrosse players an attractive salary. Has that time arrived?
The cost for an athlete to make it to the NHL begins at the age of 7, and then after 8 or 9 years of expensive AAA hockey only the best of the best ply their trade in the OHL, and from that group only a very few percentage points will eventually earn a healthy professional contract someday. Factors are countless, including staying healthy, but also include size, skating, hockey sense, fortitude and tenacity. Players like Mitch Marner and Alex Formenton grow several inches from minor midget until their 19, while others stay small or don’t progress as quickly. In the OHL, NHL hopefuls receive the best coaching, including skating coaches, plus trainers, physio, equipment, fitness equipment, and opportunity. The public relations chief of the Flint Firebirds says their players have facilities which are second-to-none in the OHL.
I find it comical that NCAA basketball and football players are not compensated beyond their schooling as March Madness in hoops is huge business.
Also curious about why Canada’s national junior baseball team comprised of players as young as 17 can play the Blue Jays in Dunedin (Live on Sportsnet so it wasn’t a ‘let’s keep this a secret’ game) and still be considered amateur athletes on the quest for NCAA scholarships. The opposite doesn’t hold true in hockey as a player is deemed a pro if they spend more than 48 hours at an OHL camp.
If you can post a golf score near par from the back tee blocks and you're just 18 years old, you will receive free slo-motion video counselling, free physiotherapy, travel costs and entry fees paid to all the tournaments you want to compete in, including Sudbury, Kingston and Niagara Falls. A scratch golfer, who has a chance at a PGA Tour card someday, should receive free over-night accommodations, free lessons, free greens fees and a brand new set of clubs. (lol)      
I don’t believe any sports system is perfect. Improvements can certainly be made in some areas to assist the athlete, but the rewards (stipends) of an OHL far exceed that of any other 19-year-old athlete.   
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
When you leave the world of athletics and peak into the arts, children growing up aspiring to be actors, dancers, singers and musicians must have a wallet brimming with cash to hit the Top 40 music charts or to star on CSI. The odds of your band having a hit radio song and tons of ITunes downloads is likely much lower than someday skating in the NHL. However, all those piano lessons and voice training – sing from your diaphragm – cost a lot of money, so we should start paying talented performers minimum wage after their 16th birthday?




LINKS:



Mark Schadenberg, Sales Representative
Senior Real Estate Specialist (SRES designation)
Royal LePage Triland Realty
Independently Owned & Operated, Brokerage

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