- A brand new Gardner Coverage Institute research discovered Utah’s Division I athletic packages generate tons of of tens of millions of {dollars}.
- The report reveals school sports activities supply greater than monetary returns, highlighting social capital and group cohesion.
- As school sports activities enter a brand new period, Utah faculties are adapting whereas preserving social and tutorial advantages.
It’s no secret that Division I school athletics in Utah are a reasonably large deal, pushed by 1000’s of premier athletes throughout two dozen sports activities that generate tens of tens of millions in ticket gross sales and tons of of million {dollars} in income yearly.
However for the primary time, an expansive research carried out by the College of Utah’s Kem C. Gardner Coverage Institute has captured the depth and breadth of big-time school sports activities’ impacts, and the advantages stretch far past the monetary tallies.
Gardner Institute director Natalie Gochnour mentioned the report, “Contributions of Faculty Sports activities in Utah”, was over a 12 months within the making and represents a first-of-its-kind evaluation that arrives within the midst of swirling debate and narratives centered on the enterprise of faculty athletics.
Gochnour underscored that whereas the athletic portfolios amongst Utah’s six public faculties that take part in Division I competitors is an financial powerhouse, there are quite a few, and more durable to measure, elements that present advantages throughout the state.
Gochnour shared a quote from Oscar Wilde’s “The Image of Dorian Grey” to assist illustrate her level: “These days individuals know the value of the whole lot and the worth of nothing.”
“Faculty sports activities is greater than {dollars} and cents,” Gochnour mentioned. “They’re additionally about social capital and the facilities they convey to our group to have enjoyable and take part in shared experiences.”
College of Utah President Taylor Randall echoed Gochnour’s sentiments in regards to the report’s findings, noting school sports activities are a “unifying drive” that may elevate pupil success whereas bolstering social capital and enhancing Utah’s nationwide visibility and repute.
“It’s a tremendous expertise to take a seat in a ladies’s gymnastics meet and look out within the crowd and see grade-schoolers with painted faces and households cheering,” Randall mentioned. “It’s why we make investments and care about school athletics.”
Utah school sports activities by the numbers
Whereas Utah leaders underscore the community-building elements of faculty sports activities, the report uncovers the profound financial impacts that Division I athletics carry to the state.
The six public faculties lined by the report are the College of Utah; Utah State College; Utah Valley College; Weber State College; Southern Utah College, and Utah Tech College. Whereas Brigham Younger College wasn’t a part of the research, Gardner researchers be aware the varsity’s Division I athletic program additionally contributes in significant methods to its college and the group.
Gardner analysts estimate that in 2024 the Utah faculties’ 2,100 athletes taking part in 24 NCAA Division I sports activities generated $19 million in ticket gross sales for occasions and athletic actions contributed $409 million in financial output, $229 million in gross home product and over 3,000 jobs to the Utah economic system.
The report finds the financial contributions of every college mirror the quantity of spending related to every athletic division.
At 51.8% and 1,564 jobs, the College of Utah represents roughly half of the overall sports-related contribution in jobs, adopted by USU at 18.1%, 548 jobs, UVU at 10.8%, 326 jobs, Weber State at 7.3%, 220 jobs, SUU at 6.2%, 187 jobs and Utah Tech College at 5.9%, 177 jobs.
Researchers discovered that Utah’s Division I faculties fall into three tiers based mostly on measurement and financial impacts. Income tallies on the College of Utah in 2024 reached $109.8 million with $55.8 million at USU and between $17.7 and $18.8 million on the different 4 faculties.

Media offers matter for universities
The report discovered the College of Utah whole athletic revenues characterize near half of whole athletic revenues for all six faculties mixed. It displays, partially, fan base and convention affiliation variations and conference-associated media offers and distributions to varsities.
Whereas the college earned some $23 million as a part of the Pac-12’s media deal, a Energy 5 convention on the time, the subsequent highest media quantity went to USU, $3.4 million as a part of its affiliation with the Mountain West Convention, a non–Energy 5 league. About $6.2 million of the College of Utah’s $10.5 million in distributions got here from the Pac-12, in contrast with $2.2 million of USU’s $3.8 million in distributions coming from its convention.
So what number of followers do school sports activities entice?
Nielsen Media Analysis estimates that followers throughout the U.S. collectively watched 2.5 billion hours of faculty soccer in 2024, in line with the report. Practically 250 million viewers watched Large 12 soccer video games, at present the convention dwelling of the College of Utah and BYU and 40 million watched Mountain West video games, USU’s present convention. Utah’s six public universities collectively bought over 1.4 million tickets to Division I athletic occasions in fiscal 12 months 2024, producing practically $19 million in income.

And all that focus counts for extra than simply advertiser {dollars}.
Randall mentioned his college’s transfer to the Pac 12 in 2011 and subsequent back-to-back Rose Bowl appearances by the Utes in 2022 and 2023 led to substantial will increase in potential pupil software quantity. The migration to the Large 12 final 12 months has been “spectacular” when it comes to reputational lifts, Randall mentioned, and the transfer has supplied new publicity in several areas of the nation.
Gardner’s director of financial analysis, Nate Lloyd, famous a newer instance of the ability of media publicity in a Deseret Information interview. Lloyd mentioned the Fox Sports activities Large Midday Kickoff recreation in September between the College of Utah and Texas Tech generated between $1.8 million and $3.5 million in earned media worth for the varsity.
What do school athletics packages value?
The report notes athletic program expenditures at Utah’s Division I faculties operate as a significant advertising and marketing price range and drive revenues by way of ticket and merchandise gross sales, broadcast media offers and donations. Profitable coaches function a key ingredient for a profitable program and in a aggressive market garner comparatively excessive salaries for top-tier expertise, per the report. Teaching salaries constantly characterize about one-fifth of athletic departments’ bills, 22% general, adopted by pupil support, 16% and assist employees/administrative compensation at 15%. Soccer coaches account for 47% of whole teaching compensation throughout all sports activities.

Randall highlighted the significance of sturdy teaching, noting that “as a result of we’re interacting with an age group that’s in unimaginable improvement, teaching expertise is extraordinarily vital.”
Whereas acknowledging the strain of escalating salaries, he added, “We don’t wish to underpay however we actually know the challenges of overpaying. (Coaches) do extra than simply placing successful groups on the sphere.”
How a lot do school athletes get?
Practically 2,100 college students in Utah had the chance to entry and finance greater training in 2023–2024 due to sports activities, in line with the report. Analysis by the NCAA reveals that 15% of Division I athletes within the U.S. are first-generation school college students.
Collectively, athletes at Utah’s six Division I faculties acquired $41 million in scholarships through the 2023–2024 tutorial 12 months to assist fund their educations. In some instances, the report notes, the college covers the scholarship prices and in others the athletic division pays for the help. Total, it’s a mixture of the 2 situations with the ratio differing throughout faculties. Athletic support can cowl tuition, charges and room and board. Most per-student limits fluctuate by college and never each athlete receives support protecting all bills.
Whereas some analysis has discovered participation in school sports activities can carry down athletes’ grade level averages, Utah faculties supply assist by way of tutorial advisors, tutors, research corridor instances and different assets to assist them excel of their tutorial pursuits and in the end attain their diploma.
Athletes on the faculties within the research achieved a median GPA of at the very least 3.32 for the 2023–2024 college 12 months. Weber State athletes had the best general GPA, 3.56, that 12 months. When parsed by sport, Weber State’s ladies’s cross-country group achieved the best common GPA of any group statewide with a 3.90. College of Utah ladies’s cross-country ,USU’s males’s cross-country and girls’s tennis gamers at Weber State tied for the subsequent highest sport-specific GPA with 3.84.
A quick-changing school sports activities panorama
Utah’s Division I faculties are going through the identical challenges as their nationwide counterparts in terms of a shifting operational panorama fueled by ongoing convention realignments and profound modifications to third-party and direct-from-their-schools compensation for athletes.
A 2024 settlement between the NCAA and Energy 5 conferences and former school athletes, value $2.8 billion, touched off a brand new period for methods designed to funnel remuneration to athletes, together with the institution of a revenue-sharing mannequin. The settlement creates a system to permit faculties to share as much as 22% of the typical Energy 5 media, ticket and sponsorship revenues immediately with their athletes. The system quantities to $20.5 million per college through the 2025–2026 college 12 months. Nevertheless, the report notes the settlement doesn’t resolve points such because the employment standing of athletes or their collective bargaining rights, guaranteeing extra modifications in school sports activities within the foreseeable future.
Randall famous additional modifications are imminent with unresolved points being thought-about in present proposals earlier than federal legislators at the same time as his college takes a proactive stance to adjusting to new compensation methods.
“As I take into consideration what’s going on in Congress proper now, there are a set of payments that can give certainty round a variety of these guidelines,” Randall mentioned.
The College of Utah isn’t alone in that effort as the opposite 5 faculties within the research plan to take part in income sharing with their athletes regardless of the lack of most of them to achieve the utmost revenue-sharing quantity, at the very least initially, in line with the report.
How school athletics assist construct group bonds
The report highlights how school athletics contribute to social capital by enhancing a way of connection amongst college students, employees, school, alumni and the group. For a lot of, this connection extends over a few years and even a lifetime. The community of assist facilitates future profession alternatives, volunteerism, emotional and bodily well-being, enterprise connections and different advantages. The advantages of social connection and cohesion prolong far and vast.
The report references a Utah Basis discovering that “excessive ranges of social capital are related to higher useful resource allocation and social cohesion, accelerated financial improvement and mobility, improved training and well being outcomes, stronger group engagement and catastrophe resilience and lowered reliance on authorities providers.”
A Utah Basis report, launched final month, decided Utah leads the nation on the Social Capital Index, practically doubling the rating of the subsequent highest state, Wyoming.
Gochnour mentioned sports activities create “networks of connection, communication and lived expertise,” and provided an instance. “You go to a College of Utah ladies’s soccer match and have a dialog on the sidelines that results in a brand new enterprise alternative — that’s social capital.”
Whereas the report particulars the expansive financial impacts of Utah school sports activities, Randall mentioned the large takeaway is the way it underscores the civic worth of athletics.
“It’s not exhausting to see the vital position of faculty sports activities in group constructing … individuals of all styles and sizes cheering for a standard trigger,” Randall mentioned. “It brings us collectively and provides to social mobility and the social cohesion of our communities. And it issues as a lot in Salt Lake Metropolis because it does in Cedar Metropolis or Logan or Ephraim.”
