Coaches with winning records who graduate players were getting fired and their buyouts cost millions of dollars. Most of these schools are state schools and employ the highest paid employees in their states, usually the head football coach and men's basketball coach. Ridiculous contract extensions and buyouts. Cars, houses, country club memberships.
Suddenly, "college football needs change" because the athletes are negotiating terms and getting paid millions too.
I just don't get why some people take issue with what the athletes are doing. Professional sports franchises are owned by billionaires, many of whom are employing Ivy League graduates as their general managers and or VPs of Ops. Many CFB programs on the top end have millions of dollars flowing through them, and if the one's that don't want to start trying to keep up, that's their business.
I won't villainize the athletes, and I'll probably agree with them in most cases. That being said, you want to play in the mud, you're going to get dirty. I hope ND is smart about their business with this and doesn't go down any bad rabbit holes with any of these dudes.
I get where you're coming from, but you're missing a few key points both to Nico and this new era of college ball entirely:
1 - Coaches have buyouts in contracts and their salaries provide for a family. Nico has no buyout in the contract he signed with the UT collective and owes them nothing. NFL players have a union, collective bargaining, rules, regulations, etc. Hell, I would say they grossly overpaid given his production thus far.
2- There's no college or pro coach whose employer pays for their house. Cars and country club memberships are peanuts.
3- Most football fans have no issue with NIL as it was intended, but there are negative consequences. There are no guardrails, some of the kids' agents have zero qualifications, and there's no salary cap. Most are optimistic the House v NCAA case will change that, and yes it's absolutely needed.
4- On Nico, I'm not gonna blast the kid because we don't know if it was his decision, his dad's, the agent, etc. What I know for a fact is that he had an average year in 2024 and just missed on a chance to be taught/ developed by Josh Huepel, one of the best at the QB position in college. That's a HUGE mistake favoring short term gain over long term benefit.
5- If it's true, Nico threatening to sit out a playoff game because of wanting more money is absolute trash. Whether you're in sports, tech sales, or construction...any employee who only cares about money usually ends up self destructing and being resented by their colleagues.
6- The sad part here, and I hope this serves as a lesson for all the younger athletes coming up, is that Nico is the biggest loser. Has to move to a new school where he will be coached by inferior guys to Huepel, learn a new system, develop all new relationships, surrounded by inferior talent, playing an inferior league/ schedule, and looking like he's gonna take a pay cut too.