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Sports Illustrated article: How and why athletes go broke.

Aragorn

Fleet Admiral
Admiral
Complete Sports Illustrated Article here.


This is a very fascinating read. But there are plenty of places where you can also laugh at the athletes for their sheer stupidity. Here are some highlights (it's a VERY LONG article):

• By the time they have been retired for two years, 78% of former NFL players have gone bankrupt or are under financial stress because of joblessness or divorce.

• Within five years of retirement, an estimated 60% of former NBA players are broke.

• Numerous retired MLB players have been similarly ruined, and the current economic crisis is taking a toll on some active players as well. Last month 10 current and former big leaguers—including outfielders Johnny Damon of the Yankees and Jacoby Ellsbury of the Red Sox and pitchers Mike Pelfrey of the Mets and Scott Eyre of the Phillies—discovered that at least some of their money is tied up in the $8 billion fraud allegedly perpetrated by Texas financier Robert Allen Stanford. Pelfrey told the New York Post that 99% of his fortune is frozen; Eyre admitted last month that he was broke, and the team quickly agreed to advance a portion of his $2 million salary.

.....

For the risk-averse investor, an adviser such as Butowsky would suggest allocating 5% to private equity, 7%--12% to real estate, 50%--65% to a mix of public securities (stocks, mutual funds and the like) and the rest to alternatives such as gold and hedge funds. Yet with athletes, who are often uninterested in either conservative spending or the stock market, those percentages are frequently flipped. Securities are invisible, after all, and if you don't study them, they're unintelligible. Not to mention boring. Inventions, nightclubs, car dealerships and T-shirt companies have an advantage: the thrill of tangibility.

Many players, consequently, are financial prey. "Disreputable people see athletes' money as very easy to get to," says Steven Baker, an agent who represents 20 NFL players. In May 2007 former quarterbacks Drew Bledsoe and Rick Mirer and five other NFL retirees invested at least $100,000 apiece in a now-defunct start-up called Pay By Touch—which touted "biometric authentication" technology that would help replace credit cards with fingerprints—even as the company was wracked by lawsuits and internal dissent. (The players later sued the financial-services firm UBS, which had encouraged its clients to invest in Pay By Touch, for allegedly withholding information about the company founder's criminal history and drug use.)

About five years ago, Hunter says, he invested almost $70,000 in an invention: an inflatable raft that would sit under furniture. The pitch was that when high-rainfall areas were flooded, consumers could pump up the device, allowing a sofa to float and remain dry. "The guy I invested with came back and wanted me to put in more, about $500,000," Hunter says. "Then I met [Butowsky], who just said, Hell no! I wound up never seeing that guy—or any of my money—again."

.....

IN 1996, when Panthers owner Jerry Richardson—a former NFL flanker turned businessman—addressed his players, one of them asked, What's the most dangerous thing that could happen to us financially? "Without blinking an eye," Ismail recalls, "Mr. Richardson said, 'Divorce.'"

Players today would not disagree. In a survey reported by the financial-services firm Rothstein Kass in December, more than 80% of the 178 athletes polled—each with a minimum net worth of $5 million and two thirds under the age of 30—said they were "concerned about being involved in unjust lawsuits and/or divorce proceedings." By common estimates among athletes and agents, the divorce rate for pro athletes ranges from 60% to 80%.

.....

Children almost always complicate the issue. How to limit paternity obligations is a challenge for pro athletes. Former NBA forward Shawn Kemp (who has at least seven children by six women) and, more recently, Travis Henry (nine by nine) have seen their fortunes sapped by monthly child-support payments in the tens of thousands of dollars. Last month Henry, who reportedly earned almost $11 million over seven years in the NFL, tried and failed to temporarily reduce one of his nine child-support payments by arguing that he could no longer afford the $3,000 every month. Two weeks later he was jailed for falling $16,600 behind in payments for his child in Frostproof, Fla.

An aversion to family planning goes hand in hand with neglect of other forms of financial foresight, which can affect what happens to athletes' fortunes even after they die. Hall of Fame linebacker Derrick Thomas, who died at 33 following a January 2000 car crash, had ignored the urging of his financial adviser to make a will, and his entire estate was left for the court to divide, touching off a legal battle among the five mothers of his seven children. (Of the estimated $30 million Thomas had earned in the NFL, he had only $1.16 million in valued assets at the time of his death.)

.....
 
Isn't that the truth? I think any person in this forum could probably be comfortable for life on just one of the contracts these guys get. I just don't get it and I probably never will.
 
Stupid people do stupid things with their money. Stupid people who are rich do stupid things with A LOT of money.
 
Kinda sad, really, when you think about how much these people have made. Just bad decisions, short-sighted purchases, and the belief that the money will always keep on coming.

And in many of these cases, they were previously NOT well off, financially, so they go from dead broke to super-rich too fast to learn common sense, and it's gone instantly. When an injury happens, or a decline in performance, the endless well of cash suddenly shuts off, and they're screwed...
 
I read that article a couple of weeks ago and was shocked by it. One of the biggest mistakes they make is "hiring" unqualified family and friends to handle their financials. I can understand wanting to hire someone you can trust but that trust turned out to be damned expensive in some instances. But some of the ventures the feature athlete was investing in.... my goodness!!! Talk about a fool and his money.
 
So, the long and short of it is this - if you are rich and successful then don't get married and don't have children if you wish to maintain that situation. This is hardly a new thing.
 
About five years ago, Hunter says, he invested almost $70,000 in an invention: an inflatable raft that would sit under furniture. The pitch was that when high-rainfall areas were flooded, consumers could pump up the device, allowing a sofa to float and remain dry. "The guy I invested with came back and wanted me to put in more, about $500,000," Hunter says. "Then I met [Butowsky], who just said, Hell no! I wound up never seeing that guy—or any of my money—again."

Damn. Hey, I gotta bridge to sell you over some Florida swampland. Interested?
 
So, the long and short of it is this - if you are rich and successful then don't get married and don't have children if you wish to maintain that situation. This is hardly a new thing.

I think the lesson is to use condoms.

That and don't bog yourself down with so much overhead that you can't handle a drop in your income.


-nobody
 
Aside from the issues mentioned, a lot of pro players seem to be oblivious to the average duration of the professional career. If you last five years you've done well. Lifestyle choices and financial planning should be centered around the expectation of only a few years of ample income.
 
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