I’m pretty sure they pay more than $25k a year. Maybe I’m wrong but lax doesn’t seem like it’s super popular in the high “demonstrated need” demographic. Over the past 20 years baseball has also become a rich kid sport(although those parents sometimes spend so much on baseball that they may be poor by the time the kid is 18). It seems like these sports would have functioned just like a popular major to lure kids into enrolling. I went through some of this with my son. He wasn’t good enough for a tennis scholarship so we looked at DIII’s. We went on a campus tour in Montgomery and the first thing they asked was “What sport are you gonna play?”. Those schools use playing sports, not watching sports, to bring in paying students.
I don't have a great answer since I don't have access to a line-item budget, but consider some of the costs of fielding a college baseball team:
- 11.7 scholarships x cost of Furman
- Any academic scholarships that the players earn for just being good students
- Gear (bats, jerseys, cleats, gloves, balls)
- Food (snacks, pre and post game meals)
- At least 15 hotel rooms per roadtrip x 2-3 night stay
- Renting a bus and/or plane tickets for any trips x 20+ trips a year on average
- Field maintenance
- Staff hours to maintain field
- Coaches salary
- Recruiting budget
I'm sure there's much more, but that's all I can think about right now. Not arguing either way, but I bet running a program is much more than we think, and I would have a hard time believing that the university didn't weigh all the costs and then the money offset by players paying full tuition before making their decision.