another broke jock

Discussion in 'In the News' started by goodlove, Feb 14, 2012.

  1. Stizzy

    Stizzy Well-Known Member

    Cosign
     
  2. The Dark King

    The Dark King Well-Known Member

    Holy shit we finally agree. Hell is gonna freezin tonight damn.
     
  3. pettyofficerj

    pettyofficerj New Member

    They don't call him the admiral for nothing

    And yeah unlike Harvard, you have to be as physically capable as you are intelligent. Unless you count the movie Annapolis, where that one guy was way out of shape. Plus you need the endorsement of senators. Most guys I know said fuck it and went the ROTC route. guys were getting rotc scholarships and free money is free money. Who cares if you can only wear academy rings when others can't be :p
     
  4. Loki

    Loki Well-Known Member

    Very true, as someone who consults with many pro athletes I see this self destructive behavior time and time again. Most Player's Unions have mandatory financial planning classes for rookies, but the curriculum is a joke, very basic, and is taught by so called "approved" financial planners. In reality it is an advertisement for those planners to slam them into the highest commission financial products whether or not said investments are what's best for the athlete. It is downright criminal.
     
  5. The Dark King

    The Dark King Well-Known Member

    One of my best friends went to the Merchant Marine Academy here in NY and dude is set for life. Incredible job with the government. He's been in that six figure bracket since our mid twenties. And a major bonus is girls fucking love that shit. They can't do anything but respect it.
    Only down side was he had to go to Afgan for 18months. That really sucked.
     
  6. Iggy

    Iggy Banned

    Can't feel sorry for him. He blew thru his money. Its his own fault.
     
  7. GFunk

    GFunk Well-Known Member

    Meh, whatever.

    Set up a stand and start selling jerseys or some shit, Iverson. Dipshit.
     
  8. ArmyRanger

    ArmyRanger Member

    One of the things a lot of rich ball players are doing now is put all of their money in their wives or family name. ON PAPER, you are broke but actually you're not.

    I have a friend who is a attorney and have done this several times for some of his clients. It's very difficult to burn through $154 million dollars in 10 years. If you put that money in CONSERVATIVE government bonds that pay 5% annual interest that would be 7.5 million dollars a year, ALL INTEREST. You don't have to touch the principal at all.
     
  9. Soulthinker

    Soulthinker Well-Known Member

    It is tragic and it happens over and over again. Why can't those players live small instead of livin large? You can count with your fingers on a number of Black atheletes who made money like Micheal Jordan,Magic Johnson etc. Untold billions are spent on cars,cribs,lawyers,baby mothers(should had thought of birth control via jimmy hats),and other expensive things. Had some gotten some business sense or good investments there will not be any bychin by the broke bro who plays a big sport.
     
  10. JordanC

    JordanC Well-Known Member

    The thought crossed my mind.....right after he left Denver his wife filed for divorce. Did that happen....maybe he is trying to keep her from taking it. Was it just like 3-4 months ago his ex wife was saying he was saying he's broke and he's buying expensive diamond jewelry??!!
     
  11. ArmyRanger

    ArmyRanger Member

    Thank you.

    Lawyers have so many different tricks to hide their clients money. The government is trying to crack down on it but they have only scratched the surface.

    You've got people with secret bank accounts overseas, bogus shell companies, etc. I doubt if we will ever know the truth.
     
  12. LA

    LA Well-Known Member

    That's what I don't understand with some of these guys.

    They could live off of the interest alone and never have to work another day in their life.

    Instead, they squander all of their earnings until they're left with less than $1 million in capital. :confused:
     
  13. The Dark King

    The Dark King Well-Known Member

    Living off interest is a kind of a misnomer. Usually any money that yields enough you money in returns their are some risks. And I think there's a limits on how many bonds you could buy or otherwise everyone would be doing that instead of diversifying their portfolios. But even if he never invested a dime that money was more than enough to live on. I especially don't get why he got married. Dumb move
     
  14. LA

    LA Well-Known Member

    How about taking the interest from a savings account?
     
  15. The Dark King

    The Dark King Well-Known Member

    Its never wise to invest into a savings account especially when all they can over is 250k protection on your money especially with interest rates below a percent. The rich seem to buying real estate again and investing a lot in emerging markets like India and Brazil.
     
  16. ArmyRanger

    ArmyRanger Member

    This is why a lawyer can create a "shell" company, an entity totally different from the individual. Hell, YOU can even do it.

    Go to your nearest county building and register a business name, any name you can think of. It usually costs $20. Then go to www.irs.gov and get that business name an EIN number, its like a social security number but its for a business. To get an EIN number is free.

    Take that new name and the EIN number to any bank and you will be able to open up an account under that name. Yes, for $20, its that simple. You would have to file taxes for that business just like you would for you own personal taxes. You can get a credit limit, credit card, etc. under that new name you created.

    Lawyers can do this multiple times for ONE client. He could invest to the LIMIT on each different entity.
     
  17. orejon4

    orejon4 Well-Known Member

    Careful, though, or you'll end up like me, with a house worth less than the mortgage's principal balance during a soft market trying to unload it during a divorce when it's illiquid.
     
  18. The Dark King

    The Dark King Well-Known Member

    trust me it's always better to own unless you need a lot of mobility to explore job options. Unlike us renters you'll always come out ahead because no matter what you get something for your asset.
     
  19. orejon4

    orejon4 Well-Known Member

    Except for right now. I'm short-selling. Can't move it for anything higher than $50K below the note. Another slap from the Invisible Hand of the Market.

    The best strategy is a mixed-bag of assets. Max out your savings at whatever the FDIC limit is at the time, then pick up property and a mixed portfolio of small/mid/large cap companies, plus commodities and a bit of exchange arbitrage while you're at it. Funny, college helped me understand how to invest, but not how to get enough dough to do any investing. lol
     
    Last edited: Feb 16, 2012
  20. goodlove

    goodlove New Member

    that would be boring and too much like right
     

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