With NIL, I wanted to share some history about how the sausage was always made. National outlets have decried paying college players for 100+ years.
LATE 1800s:
Yale and Harvard alumni tried to outspend each other for players every year and (amazingly enough) kept winning the "national championship" (sport was mostly regional at the time).
EARLY 1900s:
One star player was constantly "suspended" by a Big Ten school for missing or poor academic work, yet somehow these suspensions were never during the season.
A California college offered a Midwest prep star crazy money for himself AND a "companion" but they were turned down when local alumni paid him to attend a nearby Midwest school instead.
AFTER WWI:
I have original research (not yet shared!) showing that Coach Sam Willaman made certain "funds" available for his East Tech boys, including Jack Trice, to come to ISU. Only a few years later, ISU tried bowling their stadium, but due to lack of alumni support, failed.
Alumni made money available for Hawkeye star Duke Slater.
AFTER WWII:
Shortly after World War II, Michigan State literally bought their way into the Big Ten by tapping a donor to create a slush fund. They were quickly put on probation, but no one cared. They were in the club.
It's nothing new. Players deserve their money and it has always been alumni paying them. They are the ones suffering long-term health consequences to entertain and enrich massive media conglomerates worth billions. Yes, we can quibble about how NIL is currently being administered, but it's LONG OVERDUE for all of this stuff to be visible. The facade of "amateurism" has always been a joke. Always.
LATE 1800s:
Yale and Harvard alumni tried to outspend each other for players every year and (amazingly enough) kept winning the "national championship" (sport was mostly regional at the time).
EARLY 1900s:
One star player was constantly "suspended" by a Big Ten school for missing or poor academic work, yet somehow these suspensions were never during the season.
A California college offered a Midwest prep star crazy money for himself AND a "companion" but they were turned down when local alumni paid him to attend a nearby Midwest school instead.
AFTER WWI:
I have original research (not yet shared!) showing that Coach Sam Willaman made certain "funds" available for his East Tech boys, including Jack Trice, to come to ISU. Only a few years later, ISU tried bowling their stadium, but due to lack of alumni support, failed.
Alumni made money available for Hawkeye star Duke Slater.
AFTER WWII:
Shortly after World War II, Michigan State literally bought their way into the Big Ten by tapping a donor to create a slush fund. They were quickly put on probation, but no one cared. They were in the club.
It's nothing new. Players deserve their money and it has always been alumni paying them. They are the ones suffering long-term health consequences to entertain and enrich massive media conglomerates worth billions. Yes, we can quibble about how NIL is currently being administered, but it's LONG OVERDUE for all of this stuff to be visible. The facade of "amateurism" has always been a joke. Always.