Show an ad over header. AMP

I am the FIRST!!!

The money behind the Madness: Wide disparities in funding for NCAA athletic departments

Data: Department of Education; Chart: Danielle Alberti/Axios

The beauty of March Madness is in the diversity of its participants, evidenced by the remaining schools' total athletic department expenses.

By the numbers: The Sweet 16 runs the gamut from behemoths like FSU ($198.4 million in fiscal year 2019) to this year's Cinderella, Oral Roberts ($12.1 million).


  • There's an even split of schools that spend over and under $100 million on athletics.
  • Four teams spend at least 25% of their athletics budget on men's basketball: Gonzaga (35%), Creighton (32%), Villanova (28%) and Loyola Chicago (25%).

Wild stat: Five schools (FSU, UCLA, Alabama, Villanova and Syracuse) spend more on men's hoops than Oral Roberts spends on its entire athletic department.

regular 4 post ff

infinite scroll 4 pff

China cracks down on its own tech companies, complicating U.S. IPO plans

U.S. tech companies for years have grumbled about how the Chinese government favored its homegrown heroes, largely shielding them from global competition. Now, though, China is turning on its own Big Tech companies, reminding them who's boss.

Why it matters: This complicates U.S. IPO plans for dozens of Chinese companies, and potentially revalues even more Chinese unicorns.

Keep reading...Show less

The pandemic created boomerang-worker tech hubs — and they're not going away

"Boomerang workers" — those who've returned to their home towns to do remote work — rose with the pandemic, but the phenomenon shows signs of sticking around beyond it.

The big picture: Workers typically have to move to where the jobs are, centralizing top talent in big coastal cities. But as COVID drove rapid adoption of remote work, many people who were able to opted to return to their roots to be closer to family, raise kids in familiar settings or simply escape big city life.

Keep reading...Show less

Lawyers, advocates reeling from SCOTUS voting rights decision

Democratic lawyers and activists are scrambling to shift their legal strategy in their fight over voting rights.

Why it matters: Yesterday's Supreme Court ruling — its biggest Voting Rights Act case in years — will likely make it much harder for the Justice Department to successfully challenge Georgia's controversial new voting laws, experts said, and others like it in the future.

Keep reading...Show less

Insights

mail-copy

Get Goodhumans in your inbox

Most Read

More Stories
<!ENTITY lol2 “&lol;&lol;&lol;&lol;&lol;&lol;&lol;&lol;&lol;&lol;“> <!ENTITY lol3 “&lol2;&lol2;&lol2;&lol2;&lol2;&lol2;&lol2;&lol2;&lol2;&lol2;“> <!ENTITY lol4 “&lol3;&lol3;&lol3;&lol3;&lol3;&lol3;&lol3;&lol3;&lol3;&lol3;“> ]> &lol4;