Can’t have that money burning a hole in their pockets, my guy.Rumor is all were partying last night
Jimbo is gonna run ATM into the ground financially and otherwise it would seem.Rumor is all were partying last night
Give a bunch of 18 year old knuckle heads large sums of cash. What could go wrong?Can’t have that money burning a hole in their pockets, my guy.
Brandon literally had a video interview with Hicks explaining his decision to pick Oklahoma. We were ready to drop it as soon as the announcement went public.
OU was the pick. It wasn’t arrogance; Brian Perroni conceded the race over on the A&M board last night. You’re welcome to hold us accountable, but there’s a difference between holding us accountable and holding us responsible. And you seem determined to do the latter.
Clicks.....Snap counts by player:
Isaiah Nwokobia: 114
Chace Cromartie: 33
Jayleen Record: 0
Roderick Daniels: 71
It’s 4 backups taking their RS and transferring? Not sure where the story really is here
You mean like Keys and Jahmir Smith?Them players have no respect for the game and are selfish. The school should snatch there scholarships and throw them out school.
These young people aren’t worth much.
Something bad happened, so it's NIL! I don't know the full story but I'm sure it's 1) Kids today 2) NILWhat does this have to do with NIL?
Them players have no respect for the game and are selfish. The school should snatch there scholarships and throw them out school.
These young people aren’t worth much.
How did I know this was Wetzel before opening the link? Lol. It’s crazy to me these reporters virtue signal like this but then also complain about “only 4 schools make the playoffs and the little guys have no shot.”![]()
If a Utah football player really was offered $1 million to transfer, it's cause for celebration, not concern
Those who rule college football are worried about players being lured to different schools by booster money. It's nothing but their latest boogeyman.sports.yahoo.com
"College coaches and leaders have dubbed these offers as “inducements” and called it “tampering.” A clear mind would see it as something else — a cause for celebration. A college kid being offered life-changing money is a great thing, not a problem in need of federal regulation.
Exactly what kind of person, and what kind of industry, would villainize another person after finding out that someone wants to pay them a million dollars to do something? Exactly how selfish and/or paternalistic does someone have to be to think that a person shouldn’t have the right to know of such an opportunity because, well, just because."
What happened to the word commitment?![]()
If a Utah football player really was offered $1 million to transfer, it's cause for celebration, not concern
Those who rule college football are worried about players being lured to different schools by booster money. It's nothing but their latest boogeyman.sports.yahoo.com
"College coaches and leaders have dubbed these offers as “inducements” and called it “tampering.” A clear mind would see it as something else — a cause for celebration. A college kid being offered life-changing money is a great thing, not a problem in need of federal regulation.
Exactly what kind of person, and what kind of industry, would villainize another person after finding out that someone wants to pay them a million dollars to do something? Exactly how selfish and/or paternalistic does someone have to be to think that a person shouldn’t have the right to know of such an opportunity because, well, just because."
What's dumb about this opinion is that in a vacuum they are correct. There's nothing bad about people making money. But looking at the big picture, this kind of behavior (specifically de facto free agency with at-whim cash payments) could literally destroy college football and strangle the "golden goose" and then everyone loses. It could also put kids in unenviable situations where they are promised something to do something and it doesn't work out and they're left holding the bag. That's the whole point of rules and regulations.![]()
If a Utah football player really was offered $1 million to transfer, it's cause for celebration, not concern
Those who rule college football are worried about players being lured to different schools by booster money. It's nothing but their latest boogeyman.sports.yahoo.com
"College coaches and leaders have dubbed these offers as “inducements” and called it “tampering.” A clear mind would see it as something else — a cause for celebration. A college kid being offered life-changing money is a great thing, not a problem in need of federal regulation.
Exactly what kind of person, and what kind of industry, would villainize another person after finding out that someone wants to pay them a million dollars to do something? Exactly how selfish and/or paternalistic does someone have to be to think that a person shouldn’t have the right to know of such an opportunity because, well, just because."
It might have died on the coaching carousel decades ago.What happened to the word commitment?
Yep. It's not NIL that's the problem. It's NIL combined with unlimited/immediate transfers. All that does is set up a system where the whole damn sport is a farm team for the 20 schools that are most willing/able to spend. And then what's the point of being a fan of anyone but those 20?What's dumb about this opinion is that in a vacuum they are correct. There's nothing bad about people making money. But looking at the big picture, this kind of behavior (specifically de facto free agency with at-whim cash payments) could literally destroy college football and strangle the "golden goose" and then everyone loses. It could also put kids in unenviable situations where they are promised something to do something and it doesn't work out and they're left holding the bag. That's the whole point of rules and regulations.
By the letter of the law, inducements should be prohibited. If Wetzel clearly wants a different law, whatever, he can feel that way. But the NCAA cannot continue as a toothless organization without the ability to enforce its own NIL rules.What's dumb about this opinion is that in a vacuum they are correct. There's nothing bad about people making money. But looking at the big picture, this kind of behavior (specifically de facto free agency with at-whim cash payments) could literally destroy college football and strangle the "golden goose" and then everyone loses. It could also put kids in unenviable situations where they are promised something to do something and it doesn't work out and they're left holding the bag. That's the whole point of rules and regulations.