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Article
Universities Behaving Badly: The Impact of Athletic Malfeasance on Student Quality and Enrollment
Journal of Sports Economics (2020)
  • Austin Eggers, Appalachian State University
  • Peter Groothuis, Appalachian State University
  • Parker Redding, Appalachian State University
  • Kurt W Rotthoff, Seton Hall University
  • Michael Solimini, Seton Hall University
Abstract
National accolades and positive media attention are frequently lavished upon successful collegiate sports programs. Correspondingly, studies have demonstrated that universities often benefit from the achievements of their athletic teams by increasing the schools’ application numbers, student quality, and alumni donations. This study demonstrates that the opposite effect occurs when a university’s sports team is accused of engaging in impropriety. Our findings suggest that the negative attention given to the National Collegiate Athletic Association postseason tournament ban of a men’s basketball program could serve as a signal to prospective students regarding the quality of the institution. This perception ultimately leads to a decrease in the infracting university’s enrollment the year before the ban that then rebounds the year after the ban. However, the ban reduces the percentage of high-achieving students who choose to attend the university after the ban has been implemented.
Keywords
  • Education,
  • NCAA,
  • athletic malfeasance
Disciplines
Publication Date
January 1, 2020
DOI
10.1177/1527002519859416
Citation Information
Austin Eggers, Peter Groothuis, Parker Redding, Kurt W Rotthoff, et al.. "Universities Behaving Badly: The Impact of Athletic Malfeasance on Student Quality and Enrollment" Journal of Sports Economics Vol. 21 Iss. 1 (2020) p. 87 - 100 ISSN: 1552-7794
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/kurt-rotthoff/14/