I don't envy Dez or any other G5 coach. Kind of hard to build and sustain culture when each player is working for an NIL call and worrying about a friend on the team working on an NIL call. And I think we need a new term: P5 contract. True NIL was intended to allow popular players (Manziel) to sell autographs and do endorsements due to true national recognition.
A Trey Amos and a Kam Pedescleaux don't have name recognition for endorsements. They are looking for P5 contracts.
I don’t think the US Supreme Court intended to only protect the abilities of the limited few you identify when they came down with the NIL decision.
Did anyone at any point actually think that NIL and the portal was ever going to be a positive for college athletics ? You could see this train wreck coming from miles away and it's going to get worse. Again, like some of you including myself have said, mid majors have no shot. It's all part of the grand scheme. Nothing but a bunch of farm systems for the bigger universities that can afford to pay. Mid majors will never match up with the checkbooks of others. It will never happen. It's truly a sad deal.
….THERE IS A GOOD UL SITUATION——-ALMOST……We are in a strong g-5 conference….we have great facilities (I don’t even count the football stadium)….training table …..school academics…..history….culture if used correctly……our only problem is lack of attendance…..that is it!!!!! If we would pack the house, we have it over all the g-5s, or very close……damn students, alumni, and Acadiana residents……how about a “PACK THE STADIUM CROWD/GAME/?? Sometimes we are so close yet so far away!
The Supreme Court had absolutely no interest in the concept of amateurism except for the fact that it unconstitutionally deprived certain citizens of the right to make money.
The problem is that once controlled access to money is removed from amateurism, it in reality destroys the concept.
I’m not sure where college sports goes from here but rest assured that there will be no limitations, controls, rules on money making.
In fact, if the NCAA tries going back to restricting eligibility to play upon transfer as a means to curb the effects of open NIL, I’m not sure that the US Supreme Court may not go one step further and rule that such restrictions are indirectly unconstitutional on the same basis.
No. Like the Supreme Court never ruled that any player is entitled to play college sports, they will not rule that any player is entitled to play professional sports.
What they ruled is that college sports (NCAA) can’t abridge a players right to make money just because they play that sport.
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