3 options. Become a Professional athlete in the major leagues. get a normal job and join the rest of the world with working 60 hours a week to feed their families and not play a game and make millions of dollars. Or the worst option, they realize that they have been injured so many times in the head that they are literally irrelevant, and since they peaked in college. They realized that they are literally so dumb that all of their professors gave them A's because they are athletes at the college and it was in the colleges best interest to have their athletes academically succeed so they are not academically ineligible. Unfortunately my brother was the latter, a lineman for penn state, and since he didn't get drafted, he works at a grocery store because no one would hire him.
There aren't regulations of speaking to college athletes.
Yes, college athletes attend class with non athletes.
Yes.
3.3 and higher
a lot
yes
No!
yes
Around 25% of college athletes in the United States are freshmen. This is because most sports teams need a mix of players from different academic years for a balanced and competitive team.
Daniel J. Henderson has written: 'Do former college athletes earn more at work? a nonparametric assessment' -- subject(s): College athletes, College graduates, Wages
S. Thomas Stubbs has written: 'The attitudes of selected male college athletes and coaches toward the values of athletic participation' -- subject(s): Athletes, Attitude (Psychology), Attitudes, Coaches (Athletics), College athletes, College sports, Psychological aspects, Psychological aspects of College sports
Billy Hawkins has written: 'The new plantation: black athletes, college sports, and predominantly white NCAA institutions' -- subject(s): National Collegiate Athletic Association, Social conditions, Racism in education, Race relations, African American college students, African American athletes, Racism in sports, College sports 'The new plantation' -- subject(s): College sports, Moral and ethical aspects of College sports, College athletes, National Collegiate Athletic Association, African American athletes, Social conditions, Race relations, African American college athletes, Racism in education, African American college students, Racism in sports