This is a total and utter dick move by the Dawgs. The kid only received $30K from them for the NIL deal and now they're trying to collect $390K from the player in what amounts to punitive damages because he transferred.
I doubt an arbitration judge will find for GA, as they have to prove how this kid transferring caused them $390K in damages. And plus this action amounts to liquidated damages which is illegal.
Ultimately, this stupid action by the Dawgs will probably be used as a legitimate tool by other teams against them with recruits moving forward... the premise being that if you sign an NIL deal with Georgia, you are effectively trapped with the team if you're unhappy and will be financially punished if you try to transfer.
Wilson signed a term sheet with Classic City Collective in December 2024, shortly before Georgia lost in a quarterfinal playoff game to Notre Dame, ending his sophomore season. The 14-month contract -- which was attached to Georgia's legal filing -- was worth $500,000 to be distributed in monthly payments of $30,000 with two additional $40,000 bonus payments that would be paid shortly after the NCAA transfer portal windows closed.
The deal states that if Wilson withdrew from the Georgia team or entered the transfer portal, he would owe the collective a lump-sum payment equal to the rest of the money he'd have received had he stayed for the length of the contract. (The two bonus payments apparently were not included in the damages calculation.) Classic City signed over the rights to those damages to Georgia's athletic department July 1 when many schools took over player payments from their collectives.
Georgia's filing claims Wilson received his first $30,000 payment Dec. 24, 2024. Less than two weeks later, he declared his plans to transfer.
Legal experts say Georgia's attorneys will have to convince an arbitrator that $390,000 in damages is a reasonable assessment of the harm the athletic department suffered due to Wilson's departure. Liquidated damages are not legally allowed to be used as punishment or primarily as an incentive to keep someone from breaking a contract.