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The money for the suits came from funds donated to the football program, and it was Monken's idea to do the good deed. It does, however, raise a teeny tiny question. Why do college football players need their coach to buy them suits in the first place? College football is a lucrative business. In the 2013-2014 season, teams in the top five conferences took in $2. 8 billion in revenue — about $1. 4 million of which was pure profit (though many smaller programs like Southern Miss essentially break even). And the players have a lot to do with this! I mean, who can't do that? Photo by Mike Zarrilli/Getty Images. In fact, all of the major NCAA sales items like tickets to games where players play, TV rights to those same games, and merchandise with players names and faces on it — things that allow coaches and school administrators to swim in a pool of money (or whatever it is they do) each week — involve the players' hard work. Yet college football players don't see a dime of that money. Zero.
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