NIL Twist?

#26
#26
The sky is the limit on what can be done. Pandora's box is wide open.

Yea I think NIL = $$ laundering for boosters… tgey can pay recruits legally through a company for their NIL which just amounts to paying recruits off….

The NCAA will now hv to create a whole new set of rules or it will be 10x worse and more blatant cheating than before! Lol 😂
 
#29
#29
Yea I think NIL = $$ laundering for boosters… tgey can pay recruits legally through a company for their NIL which just amounts to paying recruits off….

The NCAA will now hv to create a whole new set of rules or it will be 10x worse and more blatant cheating than before! Lol 😂
Do note it is no longer cheating.

The only thing they can do now is limit how many kids can be on the team to try to level the playing field. I don't see how they can do a salary cap like the NFL. There are no other levers.
 
#30
#30
This is how UCLA and USC will dominate the recruiting.

Maybe. I think the dominating will be done by Texas, Alabama, OSU, and possibly Oklahoma. Fueled by oil money and cheating expertise made legal. The California schools may be in the running, but the state's economic decline, already started, is being accelerated by climate change disaster that will worsen.
 
#33
#33
I can see players selling their "artwork" for couple hundred thousand or more to boosters.
 
#34
#34
Mainly, the focus has been on players benefiting from sponsor type income sources. However, it appears income isn't limited to that. Marhsall's OL, Will Ulmer apparently desires to be a country music artist and relishes being able to openly perform instead of doing so sneakily. SMU defensive back Ra-Sun Kazadi fancies himself an artist and seeks to be able to finally sell his art without fear of penalties. So I suppose, players not latching onto product sponsors but having some type of marketable skill can finally market their skills openly for the first time. Might reduce any possible jealousy in the locker rooms.

Source: ABC News.
Cleared to earn money, college athletes tap creative sides
The NCAA recently dropped its ban on athletes being able to earn money for their fame and celebrity
By JOHN RABY AP Sports Writer
August 18, 2021, 11:58 AM
Seems like a great way to sell a painting for a 100k.
 

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