When Taylor entered really early I assumed he’d go to a Florida school. Could easily see him at Miami since his uncle played thereI wouldn’t put Taylor there and to Penn St, Hansen would be marginal.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
When Taylor entered really early I assumed he’d go to a Florida school. Could easily see him at Miami since his uncle played thereI wouldn’t put Taylor there and to Penn St, Hansen would be marginal.
I think a lot of schools that are offering high NIL "packages" to new coaches have likely already secured the individual opportunities with corporate and individual "donors". They may spend less than before but I assume they have already made arrangements to have many of these deals ready to go through the clearinghouse.They only spent $50M this year because they spent it BEFORE the revenue sharing cap was instituted. They most definitely will not spend that next year. Their $20.5M might be supplemented with business NIL, but it won't come from the university.
So boosters only have to collectively agree in advance on an additional pool they would fund through their businesses in order to clear NIL-Go. Then just decide who gets which endorsement once the football coach promises it to the player? Sounds pretty pay-for-play to me....I think a lot of schools that are offering high NIL "packages" to new coaches have likely already secured the individual opportunities with corporate and individual "donors". They may spend less than before but I assume they have already made arrangements to have many of these deals ready to go through the clearinghouse.
Not really when some schools are promising their coaches they have separate inhouse NIL funds to pay players.I never said it wouldn't work here, just calling you out cause you clearly don't know as much as you think. The $20 million REVENUE SHARE is working just like they intended it to...
A portion of it is from the Penn State rev share and a portion is from NIL deals they have lined up. They'll have a certain number of companies committed that say "we'll donate $X to whichever players you tell us to." Then the coaches find the players and say "here's your man." It is not all coming directly from the University, since it can't, but at other schools the University is lining them up for the athletes.Not really when some schools are promising their coaches they have separate inhouse NIL funds to pay players.
Campbell got a $30M annual commitment from PSU. And I'd bet there are around 20 P4 programs making similar or higher investments.
There needs to be better guardrails to prevent the runaway spending in CFB & MBB. I don't know if CBA, sport spending caps, employee status, etc. are solutions. But pro sports structures are probably worth considering.
That's spin!A portion of it is from the Penn State rev share and a portion is from NIL deals they have lined up. They'll have a certain number of companies committed that say "we'll donate $X to whichever players you tell us to." Then the coaches find the players and say "here's your man." It is not all coming directly from the University, since it can't, but at other schools the University is lining them up for the athletes.
Correct/agreed on both points. It’s semantics really, but that’s how aggressive schools are playing the game under the current rules.That's spin!
The people raising the NIL money are being paid by the University. If the athlete would leave said school, do you think the NIL deal would remain in place? Very doubtful.
IMO NIL should be sourced by the players agency/agent and schools should be prohibited from having a role.
Which makes the so called cap a joke.A portion of it is from the Penn State rev share and a portion is from NIL deals they have lined up. They'll have a certain number of companies committed that say "we'll donate $X to whichever players you tell us to." Then the coaches find the players and say "here's your man." It is not all coming directly from the University, since it can't, but at other schools the University is lining them up for the athletes.
Or lack of them.Correct/agreed on both points. It’s semantics really, but that’s how aggressive schools are playing the game under the current rules.
lol, how many times are you going to meltdown? The flood hasn't even started yet, only 6 players have announced they are entering the portal, and I think only 1 of them was on the depth chart at the beginning of the year.Nothing but a flood of outgoing and no incoming, I am going to go melt down privately until the tide turns.
I think this depends on what you consider a "collective" under this new model. And all of this goes back to the difference between revenue share/NIL and what is/is not just "pay for play".Or lack of them.
I just wish there was a date on the calendar we could look forward to that we knew all this craziness would be over if Iowa State could hold on that long. I thought maybe it was when the House settlement went into effect and the collectives went away. Clearly not.
For sure, it's slowed things down somewhat, in the sense that you can't just have a Cody Campbell write a check for $40 million, and there is at least a hoop they have to jump through now, but it's a long ways from the format most (or, at least, I) hoped would come out of the settlement.Which makes the so called cap a joke.
They just have found another way around the so called rules. And there is absolutely no one in control.
NIL and the Portal are ruining college sports, without better controls in place.
All it has done is brought the bag man out of the shadows, and instead just rubs him in everyones faces. All this has done is made it ok to buy players, buy teams etc. How long before we see some big booster paying players big money then forcing them to shave points etc. There is just too damn much money involved and no actual control. There is theoretical guardrails, but everyone is just finding more ways to skirt them and no one is enforcing any kind of rules.
I think you're forgetting that it's super important for guys like Cody Campbell to get a ton of attention so that they can show how rich they are. Those egos don't stroke themselves.Which makes the so called cap a joke.
They just have found another way around the so called rules. And there is absolutely no one in control.
NIL and the Portal are ruining college sports, without better controls in place.
All it has done is brought the bag man out of the shadows, and instead just rubs him in everyones faces. All this has done is made it ok to buy players, buy teams etc. How long before we see some big booster paying players big money then forcing them to shave points etc. There is just too damn much money involved and no actual control. There is theoretical guardrails, but everyone is just finding more ways to skirt them and no one is enforcing any kind of rules.
The whole point of this $20 million was to reign in the spending, but now its only what the university will spend, and NIL is somehow outside this money and can be spent on top of it. So which is it, a hard cap, no school can go above the $20 million and all deals must be approved by this clearinghouse. Or is the $20 million the floor to get into the game, and then NIL deals above all of it?They only spent $50M this year because they spent it BEFORE the revenue sharing cap was instituted. They most definitely will not spend that next year. Their $20.5M might be supplemented with business NIL, but it won't come from the university.
I think it will be more of a floor than a ceiling in reality, price to pay as a P4. Not everyone will be able to afford it. I wouldn't want to know what that looks like in 5 years for those that can't. They will get absolutely gutted. I always try to remember that not all places are equal in this era. Quite a few schools have the media money alone to cover revenue share. ISU doesn't have the income to do that, but can make it work for awhile. They kinda have to.The whole point of this $20 million was to reign in the spending, but now its only what the university will spend, and NIL is somehow outside this money and can be spent on top of it. So which is it, a hard cap, no school can go above the $20 million and all deals must be approved by this clearinghouse. Or is the $20 million the floor to get into the game, and then NIL deals above all of it?
People on here have been stated this House deal is some how going to fix the system. Many of us think just the opposite, its all for show and will be nothing more than a barrier to get into the game, a buy-in, and then NIL will continue to flow like it currently is. I hope you are correct, and I am totally wrong, but this is money and sports, but keep hoping and believing you are correct.