USC working on 7-figure NIL deal for Dylan Stewart

18IsTheMan

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Jan 19, 2022
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Getting ahead of it I guess.

I hate that this is what college football has become. Even our own folks know he doesn't give a crap about USC and would likely happily go play elsewhere next year if the money made enough sense to him.
 
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PrestonyteParrot

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May 28, 2024
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Getting ahead of it I guess.

I hate that this is what college football has become. Even our own folks know he doesn't give a crap about USC and would likely happily go play elsewhere next year if the money made enough sense to him.
Can't rely exclusively on the ''Beamer Family Atmosphere''.
 
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18IsTheMan

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Just go ahead and fold the power 4 into the NFL.

A question becomes, how many can we afford? If Stewart gets a $1-1.5 million deal. Sellers "people" will surely think he's deserving of something comparable. And that sets the bar for any other big time recruits we get.

It eventually becomes analogous to the big market/small market team issue in pro sports. Here you're not talking about market size but booster support. We certainly lag woefully behind teams like Bama, UGA, Texas, Oregon, etc. We just don't have, and never will have, the kind of money those teams do.

Once you get into buying quality players. How many can we afford at one time?
 

RUMMENIGGE

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Jan 31, 2022
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Getting ahead of it I guess.

I hate that this is what college football has become. Even our own folks know he doesn't give a crap about USC and would likely happily go play elsewhere next year if the money made enough sense to him.
I hate that this kind of information goes public. This could cause a few players to transfer out of South Carolina looking for their million dollars.

On a different note Gilber Edmond Likely is glad he returned to Columbia instead being part of a one win Seminoles team.
 

18IsTheMan

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I hate that this kind of information goes public. This could cause a few players to transfer out of South Carolina looking for their million dollars.

On a different note Gilber Edmond Likely is glad he returned to Columbia instead being part of a one win Seminoles team.

That's the other factor. Once you start investing this kind of money in one player, every other player who had played reasonably well starts to wonder about their payday.

And it's human nature for any athlete to think they're value is more than it is.
 

LonghornsGamecocks

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Feb 24, 2024
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Getting ahead of it I guess.

I hate that this is what college football has become. Even our own folks know he doesn't give a crap about USC and would likely happily go play elsewhere next year if the money made enough sense to him.
It doesn't mean he doesn't give a crap about us. It just means he has a market value and he should get paid what he's worth while he can. I like my employer but I'll go somewhere else to maximize my comp in a heartbeat.
 

18IsTheMan

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It doesn't mean he doesn't give a crap about us. It just means he has a market value and he should get paid what he's worth while he can. I like my employer but I'll go somewhere else to maximize my comp in a heartbeat.

It really does, though.

If you'll leave one place for another place for more money, then you really don't give a crap about the place you currently are. You might like it there. Might even be happy and like the people. But if you can drop it and leave for money, then you didn't really care about the first place. The Bible say "Where your treasure is, there will your heart be". If your treasure is money, then your heart goes where the money goes.

As it is here, with modern players their treasure is market value, so their heart is with whoever says they have the higher market value.
 

will110

Joined Aug 17, 2018
Jan 20, 2022
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It's a good point, though. If players are making money, why can't they be fined for stuff like pro players?
Mike Gundy implied Ollie Gordon would lose NIL money because of his DUI arrest before the season.
 

will110

Joined Aug 17, 2018
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It really does, though.

If you'll leave one place for another place for more money, then you really don't give a crap about the place you currently are. You might like it there. Might even be happy and like the people. But if you can drop it and leave for money, then you didn't really care about the first place. The Bible say "Where your treasure is, there will your heart be". If your treasure is money, then your heart goes where the money goes.

As it is here, with modern players their treasure is market value, so their heart is with whoever says they have the higher market value.
Ehhh while I agree in theory, in practice this just isn't really reasonable. If USC offers Stewart $1.5 million and Alabama offers him $1.7 million and he leaves, then yeah he didn't give a crap about us. But if USC offers Stewart $50,000 and Tennessee offers him $2.5 million, only a fool would turn that down. It's life changing money.

The system sucks.
 

3USC1801

Joined Dec 10, 2020
Jan 17, 2022
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Ehhh while I agree in theory, in practice this just isn't really reasonable. If USC offers Stewart $1.5 million and Alabama offers him $1.7 million and he leaves, then yeah he didn't give a crap about us. But if USC offers Stewart $50,000 and Tennessee offers him $2.5 million, only a fool would turn that down. It's life changing money.

The system sucks.
Not trying to argue but in reality, there isn’t a system or governing body. It’s a free-for-all with limited guidelines or restrictions. The few regulations in place do not level the playing field. In fact, it’s a situation where the rich programs have gained even a stronger hold on recruiting.

And, if Stewart were offered $200,000 more at Alabama, most would agree he’d be foolish not to take it. Why wouldn’t he? There isn’t any loyalty to a university anyway. That’s all in the past now. As fans, we are delusional if we think a highly sought after player is loyal to the team. The only way to overcome this mess is for universities/conferences to set contractual obligations and serious restrictions, including cap limitations.
 

PrestonyteParrot

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May 28, 2024
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It's actually not a "system" at all. It's an environment.
Somehow, we have turned a free college education and all the associated perks into victimhood requiring retribution.
Might as well turn CFB over to the NFL for funding and make it professional football.
NFL teams can adopt their chosen college teams and maybe at least bring some stability to college rosters with binding contracts.
 

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