Good. They're ruining what should be a good thing. And those players that are breaking the rules should be ineligible for college athletics.twocoach wrote: ↑Tue May 03, 2022 6:55 pm Here you go, Illy. "Enforce the rules"
https://www.si.com/college/2022/05/03/t ... -be-coming
Transfer portal 2022
Re: Transfer portal 2022
Re: Transfer portal 2022
College leaders are beginning to speak out publicly about the situation, airing their frustrations over an NIL concept that has quickly evolved from its original intent of star athletes sponsoring a local business to crowdfunding models doling out four- and five-figure payments for appearances.
“Everybody wants to hide under the NIL umbrella. This isn’t NIL,” Colorado AD Rick George told SI last week. “As the leaders of the industry, we have to say, ‘This is not acceptable.’”
“The only ones getting penalized are the ones trying to follow the rules,” said Todd Berry, the executive director of the American Football Coaches Association. “If a booster decides it’s worth $100,000 for a player to have a 30-minute autograph signing, and you say he can’t do that, I don’t know if that’s going to fly in the courts.”
“Everybody wants to hide under the NIL umbrella. This isn’t NIL,” Colorado AD Rick George told SI last week. “As the leaders of the industry, we have to say, ‘This is not acceptable.’”
“The only ones getting penalized are the ones trying to follow the rules,” said Todd Berry, the executive director of the American Football Coaches Association. “If a booster decides it’s worth $100,000 for a player to have a 30-minute autograph signing, and you say he can’t do that, I don’t know if that’s going to fly in the courts.”
Re: Transfer portal 2022
"...that has quickly evolved from its original intent of star athletes sponsoring a local business..."pdub wrote: ↑Wed May 04, 2022 7:41 am College leaders are beginning to speak out publicly about the situation, airing their frustrations over an NIL concept that has quickly evolved from its original intent of star athletes sponsoring a local business to crowdfunding models doling out four- and five-figure payments for appearances.
“Everybody wants to hide under the NIL umbrella. This isn’t NIL,” Colorado AD Rick George told SI last week. “As the leaders of the industry, we have to say, ‘This is not acceptable.’”
“The only ones getting penalized are the ones trying to follow the rules,” said Todd Berry, the executive director of the American Football Coaches Association. “If a booster decides it’s worth $100,000 for a player to have a 30-minute autograph signing, and you say he can’t do that, I don’t know if that’s going to fly in the courts.”
Eh, that was not "the original intent" of NIL at all. Gimme a freaking break. Whether that was a person's original vision is another thing but it was 100% NOT the intent of the allowance of NIL.The intent was for athletes to be eligible to receive whatever the market felt they were worth, period. And that is what is happening. Now the ncaa just needs to figure out how to better define the parameters in which that can happen and still retain college eligibility, how to monitor adherence to those parameters and how to enforce it. Which they should have done from Day One.
Re: Transfer portal 2022
1 - Oh I'll bet they are.pdub wrote: ↑Wed May 04, 2022 7:41 am College leaders are beginning to speak out publicly about the situation,*1* airing their frustrations over an NIL concept that has quickly evolved from its original intent of star athletes sponsoring a local business to crowdfunding models doling out four- and five-figure payments for appearances.
“Everybody wants to hide under the NIL umbrella. This isn’t NIL,” Colorado AD Rick George told SI last week.*2* “As the leaders of the industry, we have to say, ‘This is not acceptable.’”*3*
“The only ones getting penalized are the ones trying to follow the rules,” said Todd Berry, the executive director of the American Football Coaches Association. “If a booster decides it’s worth $100,000 for a player to have a 30-minute autograph signing, and you say he can’t do that, I don’t know if that’s going to fly in the courts.”*4*
2 - But yes, it is. It is an agreement between a player and a third party, under which the player gives the third party negotiated rights to use the player's name, image and likeness, in exchange for money. That's NIL.
3 - The "leaders of the industry" cannot shed a tear over this, as they're the ones who steered the bus over the damn cliff rather than figure out a detour that made sense.
4 - The courts? Huh?
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Re: Transfer portal 2022
When I read that article I couldn't help but think some of those guys sounded like K-Staters crying about the unfairness of it all after realizing they are small-timers.
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2. Eye roll.
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I think, more than anything else, what you're seeing are very naive (or self-serving) reactions to the black market coming into the light.
Do I think things will stay Pack-hot forever? I do not.
But the existence of a market this strong speaks for itself (and makes doing nothing for so long all-the-dumber; you can't stamp out this sort of demand by heavy-handed fiat). You can't wish or ban it out of existence.
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I never have said that I could.
I think you'll loose some fans but not enough to make a difference.
I think you'll loose some fans but not enough to make a difference.
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The most annoying part of speaking with you both about it, is the complete disregard, so pretentiously giggly, of the people who dont like the state of what the sport is becoming.
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Re: Transfer portal 2022
The “leaders of the industry” part is so comical.jfish26 wrote: ↑Wed May 04, 2022 9:54 am1 - Oh I'll bet they are.pdub wrote: ↑Wed May 04, 2022 7:41 am College leaders are beginning to speak out publicly about the situation,*1* airing their frustrations over an NIL concept that has quickly evolved from its original intent of star athletes sponsoring a local business to crowdfunding models doling out four- and five-figure payments for appearances.
“Everybody wants to hide under the NIL umbrella. This isn’t NIL,” Colorado AD Rick George told SI last week.*2* “As the leaders of the industry, we have to say, ‘This is not acceptable.’”*3*
“The only ones getting penalized are the ones trying to follow the rules,” said Todd Berry, the executive director of the American Football Coaches Association. “If a booster decides it’s worth $100,000 for a player to have a 30-minute autograph signing, and you say he can’t do that, I don’t know if that’s going to fly in the courts.”*4*
2 - But yes, it is. It is an agreement between a player and a third party, under which the player gives the third party negotiated rights to use the player's name, image and likeness, in exchange for money. That's NIL.
3 - The "leaders of the industry" cannot shed a tear over this, as they're the ones who steered the bus over the damn cliff rather than figure out a detour that made sense.
4 - The courts? Huh?
Also, #2, yeah that’s 100% what NIL is. This guys a fucking butt hurt clown.
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Re: Transfer portal 2022
The young black kids making the money is threatening everything they have ever believed in. The walls they built are crashing in on them and they are lashing out--you can feel that anger. The leaders of the industry have had enough!
There are obvious parallels to other parts of society, particularly in the last 5-10 years.
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Real leaders of the industry would have seen this coming and moved to unionize the labor force. This would have led to a CBA the would have help control this mess we’re in now.CrimsonNBlue wrote: ↑Wed May 04, 2022 10:58 amThe young black kids making the money is threatening everything they have ever believed in. The walls they built are crashing in on them and they are lashing out--you can feel that anger. The leaders of the industry have had enough!
There are obvious parallels to other parts of society, particularly in the last 5-10 years.
But, nah brah, head in the sand is a better approach!
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(directed at CnB; I agree with Cascadia)
I see it more like Bills and Packers fans fighting to keep their teams in small markets. Sure, there is revenue sharing from the league and there is all that history with their fans, but there is always the lure of the other markets that can offer bigger bucks.
I see it more like Bills and Packers fans fighting to keep their teams in small markets. Sure, there is revenue sharing from the league and there is all that history with their fans, but there is always the lure of the other markets that can offer bigger bucks.
Last edited by DrPepper on Wed May 04, 2022 11:06 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Transfer portal 2022
The more sinister rationale is that they thought they could keep the status quo. Convince the fans and masses that the way it has always been done is the right, just way. Keep the dirty money quiet by making arbitrary and archaic rules and market it as "the purity of the game." Purity of the game was their weapons of mass destruction.Cascadia wrote: ↑Wed May 04, 2022 11:02 amReal leaders of the industry would have seen this coming and moved to unionize the labor force. This would have led to a CBA the would have help control this mess we’re in now.CrimsonNBlue wrote: ↑Wed May 04, 2022 10:58 amThe young black kids making the money is threatening everything they have ever believed in. The walls they built are crashing in on them and they are lashing out--you can feel that anger. The leaders of the industry have had enough!
There are obvious parallels to other parts of society, particularly in the last 5-10 years.
But, nah brah, head in the sand is a better approach!
Then, like so often, the FBI ruins everything.
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Re: Transfer portal 2022
Their student athletes are also allowed to participate in NIL.DrPepper wrote: ↑Wed May 04, 2022 11:05 am I see it more like Bills and Packers fans fighting to keep their teams in small markets. Sure, there is revenue sharing from the league and there is all that history with their fans, but there is always the lure of the other markets that can offer bigger bucks.
Good leaders make their place an attractive place to be.
Bad leaders create immoral and sometimes illegal rules to force people to stay.
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I think the "real" explanation is likely to be much much more mundane: the NCAA became such a grotesquely overwrought beast, with so many irons in the fire, cooks in the kitchen, competing priorities and so on, that it was effectively paralyzed, incapable of prudently managing coming change.CrimsonNBlue wrote: ↑Wed May 04, 2022 11:05 amThe more sinister rationale is that they thought they could keep the status quo. Convince the fans and masses that the way it has always been done is the right, just way. Keep the dirty money quiet by making arbitrary and archaic rules and market it as "the purity of the game." Purity of the game was their weapons of mass destruction.Cascadia wrote: ↑Wed May 04, 2022 11:02 amReal leaders of the industry would have seen this coming and moved to unionize the labor force. This would have led to a CBA the would have help control this mess we’re in now.CrimsonNBlue wrote: ↑Wed May 04, 2022 10:58 am
The young black kids making the money is threatening everything they have ever believed in. The walls they built are crashing in on them and they are lashing out--you can feel that anger. The leaders of the industry have had enough!
There are obvious parallels to other parts of society, particularly in the last 5-10 years.
But, nah brah, head in the sand is a better approach!
Then, like so often, the FBI ruins everything.
Which can of course be by design; that sort of inertia is ripe for exploitation. Chaos is a great cover.
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Re: Transfer portal 2022
Where the NCAA differs from other sports governing bodies is that the bylaws were outrageously numerous. Chaos is right. Every situation: new bylaw! Every crisis: committee!jfish26 wrote: ↑Wed May 04, 2022 11:11 amI think the "real" explanation is likely to be much much more mundane: the NCAA became such a grotesquely overwrought beast, with so many irons in the fire, cooks in the kitchen, competing priorities and so on, that it was effectively paralyzed, incapable of prudently managing coming change.CrimsonNBlue wrote: ↑Wed May 04, 2022 11:05 amThe more sinister rationale is that they thought they could keep the status quo. Convince the fans and masses that the way it has always been done is the right, just way. Keep the dirty money quiet by making arbitrary and archaic rules and market it as "the purity of the game." Purity of the game was their weapons of mass destruction.
Then, like so often, the FBI ruins everything.
Which can of course be by design; that sort of inertia is ripe for exploitation. Chaos is a great cover.
Re: Transfer portal 2022
And its the sort of thing that one might find quite useful, had one found a comfortable, cushy space.CrimsonNBlue wrote: ↑Wed May 04, 2022 11:14 amWhere the NCAA differs from other sports governing bodies is that the bylaws were outrageously numerous. Chaos is right. Every situation: new bylaw! Every crisis: committee!jfish26 wrote: ↑Wed May 04, 2022 11:11 amI think the "real" explanation is likely to be much much more mundane: the NCAA became such a grotesquely overwrought beast, with so many irons in the fire, cooks in the kitchen, competing priorities and so on, that it was effectively paralyzed, incapable of prudently managing coming change.CrimsonNBlue wrote: ↑Wed May 04, 2022 11:05 am
The more sinister rationale is that they thought they could keep the status quo. Convince the fans and masses that the way it has always been done is the right, just way. Keep the dirty money quiet by making arbitrary and archaic rules and market it as "the purity of the game." Purity of the game was their weapons of mass destruction.
Then, like so often, the FBI ruins everything.
Which can of course be by design; that sort of inertia is ripe for exploitation. Chaos is a great cover.
Re: Transfer portal 2022
If you had to print out the NCAA "Rule Book" how many pages are we talking? In the thousands, yeah?CrimsonNBlue wrote: ↑Wed May 04, 2022 11:14 amWhere the NCAA differs from other sports governing bodies is that the bylaws were outrageously numerous. Chaos is right. Every situation: new bylaw! Every crisis: committee!jfish26 wrote: ↑Wed May 04, 2022 11:11 amI think the "real" explanation is likely to be much much more mundane: the NCAA became such a grotesquely overwrought beast, with so many irons in the fire, cooks in the kitchen, competing priorities and so on, that it was effectively paralyzed, incapable of prudently managing coming change.CrimsonNBlue wrote: ↑Wed May 04, 2022 11:05 am
The more sinister rationale is that they thought they could keep the status quo. Convince the fans and masses that the way it has always been done is the right, just way. Keep the dirty money quiet by making arbitrary and archaic rules and market it as "the purity of the game." Purity of the game was their weapons of mass destruction.
Then, like so often, the FBI ruins everything.
Which can of course be by design; that sort of inertia is ripe for exploitation. Chaos is a great cover.