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Inside the NFL | With labor troubles looming, NFLPA institutes new financial education program

By Ethan Landy

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Published: Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Updated: Tuesday, November 10, 2009

McAllister Runs with Football

MCT

Former New Orleans Saints running back Deuce McAllister is one of several NFL players who encountered financial troubles in the last few years. A new program is providing education for the league’s players.

Sports fans often feel that the life of a pro athlete is glamorous. But behind the scenes, athletes are forced to deal with problems that arise from their money and fame.

That is where a company like California-based Financial Finesse comes in. The financial education firm, founded in 1999, has recently partnered with the NFL Player’s Association (NFLPA) to offer players and their families financial guidance.

It is the culmination of numerous attempts by the NFLPA to join with Financial Finesse to develop a program to help its players. It comes at a time when NFL players are in a precarious position, dealing with the reality of a potential lockout for the 2011 season. As stated in the press release for the program, the NFLPA and its Executive Director DeMaurice Smith felt that the players needed financial education in preparation for what could be coming in the foreseeable future.

“We have actually been talking to them [the Player’s Association] for a while,” Nancy L. Anderson, a Certified Financial Planner™ at the firm, told the Daily. “At Financial Finesse we only do education — we are a financial education firm. The NFL already has programs where advisors work with the players. They were looking to add a piece with education that is completely unbiased.”

The potential of a looming lockout, coupled with the reality that NFL players do not receive guaranteed contracts, is enough to cast some doubt on the financial security of these players. And while the average salary of a player is $1.1 million, many NFL players find themselves in precarious positions once they leave the game of football; 78 percent of players are in some financial turmoil — going either bankrupt or suffering from the financial burdens of unemployment or divorce — within two seasons after retiring, according to a March 2009 issue of Sports Illustrated.

“First of all, if you think about an NFL player, as you can imagine it is highly competitive,” Anderson said. “When you think about this player all of a sudden making hundreds of thousands of dollars … some of the problems they run into [are] spending the money when they don’t have it, identity theft, fraud and different business opportunities that were put together when they don’t understand how to look at a business opportunity to compare it.”

With NFL careers being fleeting — the average career lasts less than four seasons — the NFLPA also hopes that Financial Finesse can prepare its players for their life after football. Many of the players’ financial problems stem from poor investments or money mismanagement.

The NFL has had its fair share of prominent players who have suffered financially, from former New Orleans Saints running back Deuce McAllister’s bankrupt car company to former NFL running back Travis Henry’s myriad child support payments to former wideout Raghib “Rocket” Ismail’s numerous poor investments. But the league is hoping that more information will prevent such problems in the future.

“These guys have their peak earning years early when it is really hard to realize how much money that is, so if they can save half of that, it can be a huge win for their future,” Anderson said. “Every NFL player needs to start their career thinking about how they will transition into their second career, and that is something where we have some steps for them and resources for them on the financial learning center.”

The financial learning center that Anderson alludes to is a computer program that, through Financial Finesse, allows both players and their families to log on and input their unique personal information to help determine what steps they must take to keep their finances in check. Anderson says that the goal of the learning center is to get players to develop good spending habits early on in their careers so as to avoid problems further down the road.

“It is really important for them to have both [the] basic and planning tools they need to really understand about living on a budget,” Anderson said. “One of the things we are encouraging players to do is to save 25 percent of their income this year and 25 percent next year. They should be doing it anyway, and what they are doing is to have the players have extra cash if there is a lockout.

“We are providing tools for them to figure out how to put together a budget and how to save and where to save,” she continued.

With athletes’ lives off of the playing field becoming increasingly more scrutinized, the NFL is doing something to try to keep its players out of the headlines for any off-field exploits, particularly when it comes to financial circumstances.

“You think of the NFL player, and you don’t usually think of financial problems,” Anderson said. “You think they are making hundreds of thousands of dollars, and they have it made, but it is really important for the players to take the best advantage of that money.”

Comments

2 comments
An Alum
Fri Nov 13 2009 08:42
This is a completely and utterly pathetic comment Former Journalist. Which is why you're a former journalist. As an alum I'm embarrassed by the comments I see on this website. The criticism is completely uncalled for in this case. It doesn't even comment on the article's purpose, which is why the comments section exists. You really think the NFL doesn't care about the perception of its players and league to the point where the statement is false? This is the league that won't allow its players to celebrate because it "tarnishes" their image. This is a league that allows an owner to censor their fans. So while the article is about the NFLPA you have to account for the league as a whole. The NFL cares about its players, even if it appears as if they don't care about former players.
I guess you think the NBA isn't ashamed of the Antoine Walker saga either? No, just the NBAPA should care about that, or actually no one Walker isn't in the league.
Stop stressing the little things, this was a well written and researched article by this young man. The reader understands the point being made, and it's clear this is a new project created by the NFLPA. But since you want to play games, maybe we should edit your comment too. Let's take a look, shall we? "...the statement... 'With athletes’ lives off of the playing field becoming increasingly more scrutinized, the NFL is doing something to try to keep its players out of the headlines for any off-field exploits, particularly when it comes to financial circumstances.'" That's not a sentence former journalist. How dare you post a comment without first toiling over the grammatical intricacies. Just stop already Tufts, just stop with the pretentiousness. You make us all look petty and asinine.
Former journalist
Thu Nov 12 2009 15:20
You should probably recheck statements or facts before posting it online or publishing it...the statement ..."With athletes’ lives off of the playing field becoming increasingly more scrutinized, the NFL is doing something to try to keep its players out of the headlines for any off-field exploits, particularly when it comes to financial circumstances." You need to remember that the NFL and NFL Players Association are two different organizations....