money
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money
So i was watching nfl live yesterday and they had a little thing about usain bolt on there and if he could play in the nfl. It was all a joke but his agent said that he would be able to make around 100 million dollars through endorsements and such. How much is the top pole vaulter like brad walker or someone like that making? I know its got to be less than a sprinter but i was amazed by how much he was making.
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- Bubba PV
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Re: money
I'm going out on a limb here as the systems have changed considerably from what they used to be. Elite friends of mine in the early to mid 90s were doing well in $100K-$200K range. These were not the very top T&F athletes but some of the better vaulters. There are so many factors that figure into these things that numbers can get skewed very easily. If you read the great new book about Tim Mack, he won $20K in the Goodwill Games and was thrilled that he would be able to survive a year on that. Somewhere in between is the truth. I could be totally wrong but Bolt won't make $100 million no matter what he does.
In the “old days” guys got appearance fees plus bonuses. Then it got to the point that you would have to refund half of your appearance fees if you nh’d, then there was a penalty if you didn’t jump a certain height, then it was pay for expenses and places only with no appearance fees unless you were a Marion Jones (lol). One weekend at my house in Southern California I had Dean Starkey, Simon Arkell, Pat Manson and Scott Huffman over and we were discussing how this change was affecting them. Photo here from that weekend - also Jill Starkey and NeoVault's Sean Brown - http://www.bubbapv.com/Images/poolside.jpg Pat says he’s already traveled the world many times over so it wasn’t worth it anymore to compete for prize money and no other guarantees. Huffman said that pretty much first place was Bubka and second was Tarasov so the rest were competing for 3rd place prize money – again, hardly worth it. After the WC’s in 1997 in Athens, after getting the bronze, I think Dean said he was getting $8K a meet and trying to jump three meets a week. If you got hurt you really had the squeeze put on. These guys were really smart in that they had business degrees and/or were pursuing and developing their post vault careers while they were still jumping. As a result they weren’t so impacted and are all doing very well today. Bubba
In the “old days” guys got appearance fees plus bonuses. Then it got to the point that you would have to refund half of your appearance fees if you nh’d, then there was a penalty if you didn’t jump a certain height, then it was pay for expenses and places only with no appearance fees unless you were a Marion Jones (lol). One weekend at my house in Southern California I had Dean Starkey, Simon Arkell, Pat Manson and Scott Huffman over and we were discussing how this change was affecting them. Photo here from that weekend - also Jill Starkey and NeoVault's Sean Brown - http://www.bubbapv.com/Images/poolside.jpg Pat says he’s already traveled the world many times over so it wasn’t worth it anymore to compete for prize money and no other guarantees. Huffman said that pretty much first place was Bubka and second was Tarasov so the rest were competing for 3rd place prize money – again, hardly worth it. After the WC’s in 1997 in Athens, after getting the bronze, I think Dean said he was getting $8K a meet and trying to jump three meets a week. If you got hurt you really had the squeeze put on. These guys were really smart in that they had business degrees and/or were pursuing and developing their post vault careers while they were still jumping. As a result they weren’t so impacted and are all doing very well today. Bubba
Last edited by Bubba PV on Tue Oct 07, 2008 11:35 am, edited 1 time in total.
- rainbowgirl28
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Re: money
The shoe company sponsorships have moved toward more product and less money. Appearance fees and prize money have shrunk. The only pole vaulter out there who is really raking it in is Isinbayeva.
I don't know how much Brad makes. He's done OK over the past few years, certainly enough to live off of, but he's definitely not getting rich off of it.
I don't know how much Brad makes. He's done OK over the past few years, certainly enough to live off of, but he's definitely not getting rich off of it.
- Bubba PV
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Re: money
That's about what I've heard too. Pole vaulters are strange people - we truly jump for the love of sport, yet we do need money to live. Conversely, many in other countries that have club support feel like it's a job and aren't that motivated. I remember when Alan Launder brought a group of elite juniors over from Australia to stay with us for 10 days. A couple of them were actively looking for ways to get out of jumping and even planning who would tell Alan what and when to get out of it for the day. Bubba
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