Site Navigation

Saturday, November 22 2008
The Seymour Herald — Seymour, TN

Did you know?

published: April 10 2006 12:00 AM updated:: April 10 2006 12:00 AM
Female professional athletes earn significantly less than do their male counterparts. In their 2003 collective bargaining agreement (CBA), the WNBA Players’ Association established parameters on minimum and maximum earnings for WNBA players. Under the guidelines of the agreement, a team’s salary cap for 2005 was $673,000. Under the same agreement, players with 0 to 3 years of experience were guaranteed a minimum salary of $30,600 in 2004, while those with 4 or more years of experience earned no less than $43,700 and no more than $87,000 per season. In contrast, the highest paid player in the NBA, Miami Heat center Shaquille O’Neal, earned $20,000,000 in 2005 and is one of 17 players across the league who earned more than $15,000,000 for the 2005 season. O’Neal alone earns more in salary than the entire WNBA combined. Also, the minimum salary for an NBA rookie, defined as a player with 0 years of NBA experience, was $385,277 in the 2004-05 season, while a four-year veterancould earn no less than $745,046, according to the CBA reached between the NBA and the NBA Players’ Association. Each year, on the first Saturday in May, Churchill Downs, in Louisville, Kentucky, plays host to the Kentucky Derby, arguably thoroughbred racing’s most storied event. Widely referred to as “The Most Exciting Two Minutes in Sports,” the Kentucky Derby is the first leg of thoroughbred racing’s Triple Crown. More than 150,000 fans turn up on average for the race, which comes with a number of traditions spectators are expected to observe. Perhaps the most widely known tradition involves the beverage of choice, the mint julep. An iced drink consisting of bourbon, mint and a sugar syrup, the mint julep is as much a Kentucky Derby tradition as the horses themselves. Another tradition is singing along to Stephen Foster’s “My Old Kentucky Home,” played by the University of Louisville marching band.

User Comments - Be the first to comment!

Add Your Comment!


Verfication will be numbers and CAPITAL letters
 

Contact The Seymour Herald

The Seymour Herald
500 Maryville Hwy.
Seymour, TN 37865
(865) 577-6609
info@seymourherald.com
 
ADVERTISE HERE - Call 577-6609 to find out how!