NCAA by the numbers
US

NCAA by the numbers

Published 1444 GMT (2244 HKT) July 8, 2015
Share
01 NCAA Coach K01 NCAA Coach K
1 of 8
$3.2 million: The 20 highest-paid college football and basketball coaches in Division I athletics each make more than $3.2 million, according to The Best Schools. The highest paid is Duke Basketball coach, Mike Krzyzewski, who reportedly rakes in $7.2 million in salary alone, not including endorsement deals. Joe Robbins/Getty Images
$74 million: The University of Texas had the biggest profit of any college football program last season, earning $74 million, while the University of Michigan, which pocketed $64.6 million, was number two. Erich Schlegel/Getty Images
$24 million: The top-earning men's college basketball team, the Louisville Cardinals, posted $24 million in profits on revenue of about $40 million during the 2013-2014 school year, according to a CNNMoney analysis of figures filed with the U.S. Department of Education. Elsa/Getty Images
40 hours: During in-season, Division I football players spend more than 40 hours participating in athletic activities each week, according to a 2011 NCAA report. Christian Petersen/Getty Images
38: Women's basketball players spend just under 38 hours per week on athletic activities during their season. Brian Blanco/Getty Images
460,000: That's the number of NCAA student-athletes. They compete in 23 sports. Peter Aiken/Getty Images
0.9%: Less than 1% of NCAA women's basketball players will be drafted by the WNBA. Christian Petersen/Getty Images
1.6%: That's the percentage of college football athletes who will be drafted by the NFL. Elsa/Getty Images