Morgan & Morgan, for the fans.Forget fans donating to NIL, we can litigate to fund it. Everybody tampers with anybody decent on our roster.
I was going with ONE CALL THATS ALLMorgan & Morgan, for the fans.
Which still creates a problem, because there’s nobody currently tampering with us.Forget fans donating to NIL, we can litigate to fund it. Everybody tampers with anybody decent on our roster.
Either that or a transfer fee system. Player under contract wants to transfer, the schools can work out a fee. If a player wants to transfer at the end of his contract, it’s a free transfer.Tampering suits are not the answer to this. Put buyout clauses in the NIL contracts and enforce them—end of story.
I vote tamper suits. Otherwise teams have no reason not to reach out to our guys and drive the price up. We need bothTampering suits are not the answer to this. Put buyout clauses in the NIL contracts and enforce them—end of story.
Do we even have buyout clause with our Coaches?Tampering suits are not the answer to this. Put buyout clauses in the NIL contracts and enforce them—end of story.
They are, and the buyout will count against the new school's revenue sharing cap. But there's a limit to how high the buyout can be.Tampering suits are not the answer to this. Put buyout clauses in the NIL contracts and enforce them—end of story.
Lucas breached the contract, but Miami is being sued for intentionally interfering with the contract by enticing him to transfer.Did Miami break the contract or did Lucas?
Would rather see Miami come to the SEC. Would give UF some instate competition and in a part of the state where it would be nice to take a road trip vacation for us and other SEC fans. South Beach is nice ANY time of year! FSU would be in a very average part of the state, and an hour and a half from the beach. I also think we'd be better able to compete with Miami than FSU. Round trip air tickets to Miami from Memphis are some of the cheapest around and several non-stops available.So that’s one “No” vote if Miami wants to go to the Big 10 when the ACC grant of rights expires. **
Seriously, this will be interesting. It seems that legally Wisconsin has a solid case. And this kind of thing is rampant in college sports.