Larry Brown. Kansas & Detroit Pistons
Rick Pitino is a Hall of Fame basketball coach. He has coached on both the college and professional level.
Jim Thorpe
Probably have a good chance to coach at some level or hockey, be it college, juniors, of professional. Also it would probably be easier to get a scouting job or a front office job for a NHL team
No. If you want to be in sports during your college years you are certainly not required to turn professional. In fact less than 1% of all student athletes make it to the professional level.
No college is not required to be an NFL coach, but I do not know of anyone who is that has not graduated from college. You must have a high level of computer skills in various programs and ability to think outside of the box with little direction on tasks. It is really all about who you know
Some can argue yes, some no. They usually get paid about 1-3 million per season to coach professional basketball players (or college, depending on the level) who are making millions. Probably more yes's than no's on the vote.
These would include law, medicine, engineering, teaching below college level.
It has happened numerous times, most recently to Charles Woodson, who won the 1997 national championship with the University of Michigan and Super Bowl XLV with the Green Bay Packers.
There are many places where one could go to train to become a professional tennis player. One could go find a mentor or coach and just practice until they are at the professional level.
depends on how many years he been there and what college it is but bigger universities around 900k a yr or more depending on the sport not that much to multi million dollar contracts
The average salary for college graduate in Minnesota is $44,259. Actual earnings depend on degree types and level or professional experience also.
I have to assume that you are talking about NFL professional players. Since most of them come from college football teams, most have a college education.