No because injuries are usually the athlete’s fault. Unless the training that the college or professional league is providing is what’s causing the injuries, then they should not be responsible for the athlete’s injuries. It is the athlete’s responsibility to take care of themselves.
Enterprise Risk Management (ERM) incorporates four key
attributes:
<span>1.
</span>Comprehensive Assessment
This key driver emphasizes that all risks
should be equally taken into consideration.
<span>2.
</span>Consistent Evaluation
All risks must be criticized on a
consistent basis to efficiently identify the risks across the entire
enterprise.
<span>3.
</span>Consistent Risk Appetite
It maximizes risk-adjusted shareholder
value that is applied to all decisions. It highlights the capability of the whole
organization(versus individual component) to deal with the risks.
<span>4.
</span>Value-Driven
The organization must be united with the same
objective of risk management--shifting the risk-return profile of the business
toward greater upside.