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Why do teams guard how much they pay their pros and the like so fiercely?
In other sports it is common knowledge for the general public to know how much someone is getting paid and the other details on the contract, it puzzles me as to why it's so taboo to ask about it in a scene which strives to be looked at in the same way as any other mainstream sport.
   
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It could be a gentlemans agreement to make sure that people go to teams to play and not to gold dig, but mostly thats a conjecture. In real life, most people don't tell other people their wages, its considered rude to ask.
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It's to prevent players from knowing exactly how much they could potentially be worth, which causes a whole bunch of problems for teams.
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Its not just teams but the players themselves.
Asking how much someone makes in SC2 or BW or w/e is like the same thing as asking a woman what her age is.
Its just not really polite and 95% of the time you wont even get a vauge answer.
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Canada1637 Posts
Because its nothing worth bragging about in most cases.
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I don't know, but I will say the pro wc3 scene imploded due to inflated wages that only MYM could afford at the time, causing players on smaller teams to demand higher, causing lots of teams to go bust/drop lots of the roster
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On September 12 2012 01:14 Adebisi wrote: Because its nothing worth bragging about in most cases.
This and the post above me pretty much have it in a nutshell.
If eSports ever explodes and becomes as big as traditional sports I am 100% sure this current trend with change for transparency.
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On September 12 2012 00:41 DanLee wrote: It's to prevent players from knowing exactly how much they could potentially be worth, which causes a whole bunch of problems for teams. mostly this. Look how players quickly gauge each other's salaries in other sports, and demand comparable pay. This keeps costs down.
plus by not mentioning that most guys make peanuts, you don't ruin the hopes of some idiot college freshman gold league who dropped out to make it big!
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On September 12 2012 03:23 QuanticHawk wrote:Show nested quote +On September 12 2012 00:41 DanLee wrote: It's to prevent players from knowing exactly how much they could potentially be worth, which causes a whole bunch of problems for teams. mostly this. Look how players quickly gauge each other's salaries in other sports, and demand comparable pay. This keeps costs down. plus by not mentioning that most guys make peanuts, you don't ruin the hopes of some idiot college freshman gold league who dropped out to make it big! Thats pretty much it.
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On September 12 2012 03:45 Jaaaaasper wrote:Show nested quote +On September 12 2012 03:23 QuanticHawk wrote:On September 12 2012 00:41 DanLee wrote: It's to prevent players from knowing exactly how much they could potentially be worth, which causes a whole bunch of problems for teams. mostly this. Look how players quickly gauge each other's salaries in other sports, and demand comparable pay. This keeps costs down. plus by not mentioning that most guys make peanuts, you don't ruin the hopes of some idiot college freshman gold league who dropped out to make it big! Thats pretty much it.
They already knows eachothers salaries atleast I think Idra said something like that somewhere.
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I'm sure it isn't hard to go ask someone and use it as leverage, but it isn't as easy as going nhlnumbers.com and having it publically vieable
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On September 11 2012 23:55 Geordie wrote: Why do teams guard how much they pay their pros and the like so fiercely?
In other sports it is common knowledge for the general public to know how much someone is getting paid and the other details on the contract, it puzzles me as to why it's so taboo to ask about it in a scene which strives to be looked at in the same way as any other mainstream sport.
They really aren't that hard to find out, rumors and 'secrets' abound. The reason it isn't public knowledge or logged in on Liquipedia is because that first guy that reveals legitimate numbers is gonna be burned in return. Eventually the teams will come to a point where they want to reveal them, either through bragging rights or a reality check for the scene.
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On September 12 2012 03:23 QuanticHawk wrote:Show nested quote +On September 12 2012 00:41 DanLee wrote: It's to prevent players from knowing exactly how much they could potentially be worth, which causes a whole bunch of problems for teams. mostly this. Look how players quickly gauge each other's salaries in other sports, and demand comparable pay. This keeps costs down. plus by not mentioning that most guys make peanuts, you don't ruin the hopes of some idiot college freshman gold league who dropped out to make it big! It's been repeatedly stated by players on ITG and SotG that they all have a very good idea what everyone else makes.
I imagine Koreans have a somewhat inflated view of foreigner salaries (based on some previous posts about...Golden and Sleep?), but that's due to communication barrier more than hiding secrets.
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