I love how most are just ignoring the fact that it is ILLEGAL and an NCAA violation, per the NIL governing documents, to recruit players signed to scholarship at other programs via NIL deals.
I'm hoping Cajun T can come on and add some context to this because I'm still struggling to see why people view this as an NIL deal. NIL is not between you and the university. It's about your ability to sell your image or likeness to promote products from outside vendors. I'm not sure how Torrence would benefit more by going to Florida where he is not known there as some way for him to make more money.
I think some of you are taking a very naïve views about the NIL legislation. The number one cornerback got a $1MM endorsement deal from barstool sports to go to Jackson State. There isn't a universe where Jackson State makes him a bigger commodity than Florida State, but Barstool pushed him there because of its relationship to Deion. The third parties giving money are going to tie that money to an athlete's attendance at a certain institution (for the most part). There will be some legit NIL deals like McCall got at CCU.
We can either gripe or figure out how to compete. What Des needs to do now (and what I'm sure he and his staff have been doing) is to find replacements in the portal to offset the losses.
Slappy, if you are speaking of naive, go back and read that story. He is NOT getting a deal from Barstool or if he does somewhere down the line, it was not done prior to him going to JSU.
https://news.yahoo.com/source-travis...005654316.html
NIL at SEC schools is more like a pool of money raised for Napier to spend on paying any recruits he wants. They don't care if the kid is known or not, they are giving money to make the program win. TAMU supposedly spent between 25-30m on signing day last month to get the number 1 class in the country.
There's alot more people and money willing to pay a guy to make sure he plays for their preferred SEC school than there are people and money willing to pay a guy to make sure he plays for their preferred Sunbelt school.
Sixteen OL-men at Texas are now going to get paid $50k each so they can be headlined for certain charities. I know we want to think that our program now recognizable and a draw, even if locally, but no one in the Acadiana area is going to offer sixteen linemen (offense or defense) that same deal.
I'm not trying to argue but I read up on it a bit more. Napier can't pay anybody. The university can't pay anybody direct but it seems that the larger schools may be involved in setting up deals and letting the the players and vendor work it out on their end. Kind of like a brokerage.
NIL will not ruin college football but it will make the product on the field worse and the sport less interesting. Just like HS to the the pros and one/done hugely affected college basketballs popularity, these changes will only benefit a few teams and diminish fan interest over time.
As for our situation I see this as a back breaker for building a program. Let’s take Torrence for example…he goes from a “project” prospect to a superstar in 3years. He is now widely considered an NFL talent who could get a high draft grade. Now when he gets drafted it will say Florida next to his name. Another way we lose out on marketing our team and school.
I know some will say, this is best for the players…and it probably is, but this is not good for college football. We already have a free agent league in the nfl which puts on a much better product and has superior players. Why invest time and money into something so blatantly flawed and extremely watered down?
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)