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NIL act passed - NCAA allows athletes to monetise their name, image, likeness

Think of it as free advertising. Except their intended audience isn't college football fans. Their intended audience is college football players in the portal for whom and additional $75-100k moves the needle. Why wouldn't you reach to EMU's staff to see if they want to make an offer?
yep, that's exactly where my head is. this offer is a step toward EMU being perceived as a "player" in the new NIL landscape.
 
Looked into GameAbove. Basically all the principals and board members are EMU alumni, including the founder. Charlie Batch recently signed on as a VP. They are a venture capital and real estate investment company. One portion of their business is dedicated to promoting and giving back to EMU. Looks like they are trying to leverage that to promote their football program and university by trying to lure a top QB.

Why don't the moneyed CU alums care this much?
This is just the beginning. Wait till the Nebraska people step up.
 
Texas giving 50k (minimum) annually to every player via booster charities:


Can we get the Dark Horse to step up and pitch in a free burger 🍔 annually per player?
 
Williams dad has been explicit in their view, Caleb is going to play for the team/coaches that best set him up to develop and become the #1 pick in the 2023 NFL draft. Williams will get paid wherever he transfers too, but he and his dad are smart enough to play the long game and earn the massive wealth that goes along with the contracts that come after the rookie deal. ECU isn't going to offer him the path to #1 pick and neither are any more than a handful of schools.
Except I believe any generational QB is much better served NOT being the #1 pick if it isn't traded to a team that isn't the worst in the league.

Otherwise, they are smart to play the long game, and no $1M isn't going to land him at EMU.
 
How the hell are other teams going to keep up?
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Williams dad has been explicit in their view, Caleb is going to play for the team/coaches that best set him up to develop and become the #1 pick in the 2023 NFL draft. Williams will get paid wherever he transfers too, but he and his dad are smart enough to play the long game and earn the massive wealth that goes along with the contracts that come after the rookie deal. ECU isn't going to offer him the path to #1 pick and neither are any more than a handful of schools.
No shyt. Just saying that the 2nd or 3rd best QB in the nation (and only free agent) isn’t going to transfer for a tiny $1 million NLI deal. That’s the starting offer.
 
For me, this sums up perfectly CU’s blindspot as they flounder in the current collegiate athletics landscape. Slow to react. Fail to anticipate. Stubbornly cling to the past. Etc. Etc.

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It's a pretty apt take.

One of CU's biggest problems is that CU is still adhering to the lessons they "learned" when the NCAA "charged" them with lack of institutional control under Neuheisel. The lesson they learned then was that the key was to "self police and self report" any and all violations of the NCAA's rules.

CU has yet to unlearn that, and relearn that the way to handle the NCAA rules is to treat them as sort of guidelines, and then stonewall and lawyer up if the NCAA starts an "investigation."

At some point, CU might learn that - of course, if they do, they'll learn it right around the time that everyone else figures out that you don't actually need to lawyer up - that you can just straight up tell the NCAA to **** off and leave you alone.
 
NIL has basically turned out to be legalization of paying players to come to your school. Except now it's even a tax write-off. Unintended consequences.

As Yak mentioned earlier in this thread (or somewhere on the board) the intent of NIL was great, which was to allow players to make money off autographs or selling memorabilia without getting suspended, like Todd Gurley was ridiculously suspended for 4 games back in 2014. That's what NIL was for but it got put into place without any restrictions or guidelines so here we are. It's almost like the the days of the SWC.

All this aside, college football is not going anywhere.
 
NIL has basically turned out to be legalization of paying players to come to your school. Except now it's even a tax write-off. Unintended consequences.

As Yak mentioned earlier in this thread (or somewhere on the board) the intent of NIL was great, which was to allow players to make money off autographs or selling memorabilia without getting suspended, like Todd Gurley was ridiculously suspended for 4 games back in 2014. That's what NIL was for but it got put into place without any restrictions or guidelines so here we are. It's almost like the the days of the SWC.

All this aside, college football is not going anywhere.
And as I corrected him in that thread, I'll correct you:

NIL was not "intended" to do any of that little nonsense.

When the NCAA passed it, their only "intent" was to put out a policy that would comply with a Supreme Court ruling on a lawsuit that they had lost in epic fashion.

The NCAA wasn't trying to be good guys. They were complying with the court, because their previous policy was found to be flat out illegal.
 
NIL has basically turned out to be legalization of paying players to come to your school. Except now it's even a tax write-off. Unintended consequences.

As Yak mentioned earlier in this thread (or somewhere on the board) the intent of NIL was great, which was to allow players to make money off autographs or selling memorabilia without getting suspended, like Todd Gurley was ridiculously suspended for 4 games back in 2014. That's what NIL was for but it got put into place without any restrictions or guidelines so here we are. It's almost like the the days of the SWC.

All this aside, college football is not going anywhere.
I have said it before and I’ll say it again, anyone who didn’t see this coming is an idiot
 
Alternative theory that's probably correct:

They have the code cracked with the way things currently are, so change is a variable that only represents risk to their current status. With that, they know that the southeast economies can't match the money elsewhere. They don't have boosters and companies that can outbid Nike or Texas oil fortunes for top players.
 
Alternative theory that's probably correct:

They have the code cracked with the way things currently are, so change is a variable that only represents risk to their current status. With that, they know that the southeast economies can't match the money elsewhere. They don't have boosters and companies that can outbid Nike or Texas oil fortunes for top players.
Disagree. I have lived in every major market in the country. I highly doubt the silent money of the SEC cannot match anywhere else. This is all they have and there is a lot of it. Think about where the most money in the US resides and then consider how into college football those areas are (they are not).
 
Disagree. I have lived in every major market in the country. I highly doubt the silent money of the SEC cannot match anywhere else. This is all they have and there is a lot of it. Think about where the most money in the US resides and then consider how into college football those areas are (they are not).
That's the point. They have mastered using silent money through shadow boosters to buy talent while avoiding NCAA penalties. Now they're hoping the hillbilly mafia can match financial resources with Nike in a legit advertising battle.
 
That's the point. They have mastered using silent money through shadow boosters to buy talent while avoiding NCAA penalties. Now they're hoping the hillbilly mafia can match financial resources with Nike in a legit advertising battle.
I have been drinking and may be missing the point, but i dont think there is ever a doubt with the big boys of the sec that the money will always be as much as needed Regardless of who they are going against.
 
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