The price of a dream: Why becoming an Olympic athlete is so expensive

The price of a dream: Why becoming an Olympic athlete is so expensive


The Atlanta Olympic Games were a low point for British sport.

Great Britain returned from the 1996 Summer Games with just one gold medal in hand — and 15 overall.

“There was an immediate overhaul,” said Ben Bloom, a sports journalist who has covered the Olympics for more than a decade.

UK Sport, a government agency responsible for investing money into Olympic and Paralympic sports, was founded just one year later. The money, sourced through the government and the National Lottery, was transformative for the nation’s Olympic program.

“People buy a lottery ticket, and the good causes would be sport and culture and heritage and charities,” said Katherine Grainger, chair of UK Sport and Britain’s most decorated female rower.

“It supports athletes individually, but it puts a huge amount of money into every national governing body for the Olympic and Paralympic sports,” she added.

“Britain has gone from the mid-30s in the medal table … [to] the top five every single time,” Bloom said. “It’s changed everything.”

Team GB’s transformation has made one thing clear: money matters in sport.

However, unlike in more lucrative sports like soccer, very few Olympians see a return on investment for the time and money they spend over the years.

An athlete lucky enough to land UK Sport’s Athlete Performance Award will secure £28,000 ($36,000) a year, whereas the average English Premier League player’s annual salary amounts to nearly £3.1 million, according to Capology.com.

“UK Sport have a very difficult dilemma in that they would love to financially support an enormous range of people across a vast range of sports. They just can’t do that because there isn’t enough money,” Bloom said.

So how do you inspire the next generation of Olympic athletes without huge sums of money?

In the first installment of CNBC Sport’s “The Business of Elite Athletes,” we meet some of the young people vying for an Olympic medal before the end of the decade, including BMX rider Emily Hutt and speed skaters Willem Murray and Freddie Polak.

Watch as the athletes, their coaches and parents grapple with the price of a dream by clicking the video above.



Source

Couples who are ‘truly close’ use 8 phrases when talking about each other, says Harvard-trained psychologist
World

Couples who are ‘truly close’ use 8 phrases when talking about each other, says Harvard-trained psychologist

Building a healthy romantic relationship takes time and intention. Over time, meaningful experiences, personal disclosures and authentic conversations create closeness and intimacy. To genuinely know someone, you must understand what matters to them — their likes and dislikes, passions, limits — and respecting those traits even when they differ from your own. In fact, many […]

Read More
China’s AI trade is quickly moving from infrastructure to applications. Watch these stocks
World

China’s AI trade is quickly moving from infrastructure to applications. Watch these stocks

Local investors in China are excited about a new artificial intelligence stock trend. As trading volumes in the retail investor-dominated mainland Chinese stocks surged to record highs this month, one of the big themes centered on generative engine optimization, or GEO . It’s the idea that advertisers will spend more on getting brands to show […]

Read More
Earnings playbook: Apple and Caterpillar lead a big week of reports
World

Earnings playbook: Apple and Caterpillar lead a big week of reports

The corporate earnings season intensifies this week, with megacap technology stocks and industrial giants alike set to report. More than 90 companies in the S & P 500 are due to post results, including Apple, Caterpillar and Microsoft. So far, the reporting period has been strong. FactSet data shows that 76% of the companies that […]

Read More