Several things and people to blame but little good that does. Right now it isn't all that much fun being a fan of a university that doesn't have the NIL funds most others in the conference do.
Obviously it's not.We need to go back to free education, degree, food, books, room & board, job market, ect and if they don't want that tell them good luck, for you can't come to college and play college athletics. No more paying players, whoever came up with the idea that 18, 19, 20-year-olds needs to get paid to play ball on Saturday is nuts. That expensive free education is enough!
Particularly NIL(pay for play) and the transfer portal. This guy blames everyone from Mark Emmert to Teddy Roosevelt but "doesn't blame" Nico ima or Tennessee. See below
My view:
The ncaa for years tried to avoid corruption of college athletics by having rules around all this. They knew for many years if players were allowed to make money outside the sport, boosters would take advantage of that loophole. We see that now. Nico ima case isn't about getting better endorsement deals at another school. It is all about pay for play.
Now this guy says, there are no rules but doesn't understand why there isn't rules.
There are no rules because the players sued the NCAA for nil, transferring and other things. The ncaa lost in court. The ncaas hands are tied. The courts via lawsuits created this system.
I don't understand how anyone blames the ncaa when for years they had guard rails up.
One things for sure, LT would sell off half the home schedule this year and have the rev share paid for next year.Larry Templeton
I saw a video clip of him being interviewed by Dan Patrick where Newton basically asks why he isnt in the NFL and Patrick is pretty direct. It was from late '23.First name that comes to mind is Cam Newton.
(It’s not actually a reasonable answer, but it was the first name that came to mind and he’s an easy villain.)
This guy gets it. The NCAA is the schools. NCAA only has the power the schools give it.The schools for resisting an employment model and the courts for thinking this is NIL
The schools saw this coming for 25 years and stuck their heads in the sand. It should have never reached the courts.The Supreme Court rendering an opinion on the matter and Congress passing law fixing it.
He should be able to transfer but he should have to sit for one year barring extenuating circumstances with the school or coaching staff.I look at it from the perspective of a parent. If my son wanted to negotiate his value to another team I would want him to be able to do it. If he wanted to leave school A after one year and go to school B to earn more money I'd want him to be able to do it. And if he was getting a seven-figure NIL deal I certainly wouldn't feel bad for him or my family. So I can't say anything is broken. If all that is true, I can't say NIL or the portal is bad for college football as long as it's right for my son. If there are two things I'm for, it's capitalism and free markets and the ability to pivot to secure a new contract. Now if he broke the terms of a contract then he's got what's coming to him. That's a legal issue not an NCAA issue.
You can't do any of that until you have collective bargaining. One side can't make the rules that restrict the other side without their consent is what we have learned from all of this.The schools and NCAA all got greedy. I agree with others that the portal combined with NIL is the biggest issue.
My idea is that if you take NIL money, then you’re locked in for 2 years. The school also is locked into you. This will make the negotiations and amounts a little more conservative. If you don’t get to play, get hurt, have a better player take your spot, etc., you still get paid for two years. If you decide to leave after a year, you must sit for a year, you lose your NIL money and you can’t get money from the new school or their boosters until you are on the roster. There are a few benefits. Coaches don’t have to recruit you for at least one of the years of your tenure. You might actually buy into the team’s culture and want to stay instead of shopping around every November. It’s still not perfect but it would be a start. I’m sure the boosters would game the system to get an athlete to sit a year. I just hope that the high level of competitiveness would make that very unfavorable.