No one wanted this
As a person that’s 30 and played college baseball, what athletes wanted was the ability to earn off our likeness just like any other student.A majority of people over 65 didn't want this.
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New study shows younger fans embrace NIL, with brands positioned to benefit
Opinions about paying college players vary largely by age group. The majority of college sports fans who are 18-34 believe that college athletes should be paid a salary on top of their name, image and likeness sponsorships. But fans 65-and-over don’t show the same enthusiasm for paying players...www.sportsbusinessjournal.com
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Poll: Americans Support NCAA NIL Rights - Global Sport Matters
While 2021 was a year of change, the adoption of NIL is widely supported but has yet to transform Americans’ perception of college sports.globalsportmatters.com
It was always interesting to me how loudly a lot of voices on ESPN or other sport media would tear apart the NCAA or universities for profiting off of college sports while their employers wrote the big checks that precipitated the end of amateurism.As a person that’s 30 and played college baseball, what athletes wanted was the ability to earn off our likeness just like any other student.
That was the intent of the rule, but for some reason the idea that kids can operate in free agency without guardrails is now acceptable to everyone that reports on the sport. It’s become a madhouse and kids are going to be taken advantage of (ie: Jordan Addison) which none of the proponents of pay the players (looking at you Jay Bilas) will talk about. Pay for play tied to a specific school is not allowed, but that is what this turned into and everyone’s just turning a blind eye to it.
They damn sure won’t talk about the drop in kids graduating because the transfer portal is so easy now. It’ll be interesting to see what the numbers are after a couple of years of this. There’s already a large % of kids who enter the transfer portal and never find a new school to enroll into.
Things could get real interesting when some of these Big NIL players stumble. Coach benches the Big NIL player because he views it as best for the team. Meanwhile, the big money boosters who are on the hook for 8 million dollars, want a return on their investment, pressure the coach to keep their guy in the starting lineup.
It's difficult. I thought that too, however, there are tons of non athletes using their image/likness to make a ton of money. Who is to say these athletes shouldn't get paid more than them?Need some sort of "salary cap"
Don't count on it. At a multinational corporation like Nike, it's trivially easy to put him on the payroll for a no-show "work from home" job. I'd be very surprised if Dante's parents ever end up doing any actual work for Nike.And just wait til you get some of these stupid corporations like Nike that are giving parents jobs to buy the kids to their university. I can’t wait til they start show favoritism to these parents and the employees get feed up quit or even better sue the Corporations. (And I think most lawsuits are bullshit).
He can be a "brand ambassador" in Michigan or something. Whatever.Don't count on it. At a multinational corporation like Nike, it's trivially easy to put him on the payroll for a no-show "work from home" job. I'd be very surprised if Dante's parents ever end up doing any actual work for Nike.
What’s wrong with that? NIL was always supposed to make sure, if a school or company makes money off your Name, Image or Likeness you should get paid. If you come in as a 5* recruit but suck and never get on the field, no one is buying your jersey, bobble head, etc so no one is making money off you. That means you don’t get paid. That was the whole point of NIL before some asshole agents and boosters turned it into something else.So are these NIL deals written contracts or just "handshake agreements"?
If there are contracts who's writing them? I doubt if its the players. So the contracts probably give the payor an out clause which means the kid who never wins the starting job gets cut off from the cash flow.
Pretty stinky if you ask me.
Wouldnt the counterpoint be that isnt it basically the same thing then if you have the majority of schools out there trying to play by one set of rules, and a “handful of schools” playing outside of those lines? Seems like its just kicking the can further down the street.Looks like this might be an unpopular opinion, but I actually prefer the era of NIL to the era of "these dozen schools are rampantly cheating while everyone else tries reasonably hard to follow the rules." At least this is all above board (with the notable caveat that a handful of schools [A&M, Texas, Miami, Oregon, Tennessee, Louisville, etc.] are not following the same "guidance" about what you can offer in writing up front).
Thank you.Looks like this might be an unpopular opinion, but I actually prefer the era of NIL to the era of "these dozen schools are rampantly cheating while everyone else tries reasonably hard to follow the rules." At least this is all above board (with the notable caveat that a handful of schools [A&M, Texas, Miami, Oregon, Tennessee, Louisville, etc.] are not following the same "guidance" about what you can offer in writing up front).
i dont disagree but there is some part of this that just sounds like its the same but different.Looks like this might be an unpopular opinion, but I actually prefer the era of NIL to the era of "these dozen schools are rampantly cheating while everyone else tries reasonably hard to follow the rules." At least this is all above board (with the notable caveat that a handful of schools [A&M, Texas, Miami, Oregon, Tennessee, Louisville, etc.] are not following the same "guidance" about what you can offer in writing up front).
i dont disagree but there is some part of this that just sounds like its the same but different.
Nah, it’s going to be more transparent now. We’ve seen HC leave for more money, now we get to see teenagers leave for more money. Meanwhile, it brings schools like ND to the forefront as a university that student-athletes choose vs choosing a HC (& now NIL deal). Make no mistake, the majority of the top recruits choose a HC…not the school (prior to NIL). That’s why the Sabans, Fishers, Swinneys, Rileys etc command the big money. Now if/when a kid chooses a school based on NIL, what happens when that kid doesn’t produce? Business people aren’t going to fork out money for busts for very long. Or what happens when he out performs his expectations? He’s leaving for a better deal. This is what everyone wanted. Now we have it so sit back and enjoy whining & gnashing of teeth.
Tennessee finding out that he wants to renegotiate his contract:It’s funny because he wasn’t good, like at all last year
Damn
2024 Stats:
- YDS
2,616- TD
19- INT
5- QBR
70.5
Tied-36th
This is/could be getting really gross for CFB. I don't like it where this is heading.