NCAA approves rule to allow athletes to earn off their NIL
I've already seen some Cal athletes starting
I've already seen some Cal athletes starting
I think it is the only fair thing for student athletessocaltownie said:
LOL. YOu think this is actually above board???!!!
"Hey Bubba. Hi. I run a car dealership in Tuscalusa. I got me here an endorsement deal. Now my customers only care about endorsements from Crimson Tide players so if you sign I can give you $50K for taking a few pictures over here on the parking lot."
I just fail to understand how not everyone understands just how AWFUL this will be for the sport and how we are essentially back to the days before the NCAA.
I agree. Anything is better than coaches making millions of dollars per year and players making room and board. The absurdity of that system doomed it to eventual failure.HoopDreams said:I think it is the only fair thing for student athletessocaltownie said:
LOL. YOu think this is actually above board???!!!
"Hey Bubba. Hi. I run a car dealership in Tuscalusa. I got me here an endorsement deal. Now my customers only care about endorsements from Crimson Tide players so if you sign I can give you $50K for taking a few pictures over here on the parking lot."
I just fail to understand how not everyone understands just how AWFUL this will be for the sport and how we are essentially back to the days before the NCAA.
I've said before, the big question is how the ncaa will handle competitive balance?
I actually think all but about 30 schools (and that may be too high) will lose do to an arms race _AND_ limited interest in the networks of paying for rights for the "relegation league". I am not sure what that world actually LOOKS like but it is vastly different than todays and ARGUABLY will be better for institutions (not sure womens athletics though) - as everyone but the 30 starts to resemble the ivy league/D2 model.sluggo said:I agree. Anything is better than coaches making millions of dollars per year and players making room and board. The absurdity of that system doomed it to eventual failure.HoopDreams said:I think it is the only fair thing for student athletessocaltownie said:
LOL. YOu think this is actually above board???!!!
"Hey Bubba. Hi. I run a car dealership in Tuscalusa. I got me here an endorsement deal. Now my customers only care about endorsements from Crimson Tide players so if you sign I can give you $50K for taking a few pictures over here on the parking lot."
I just fail to understand how not everyone understands just how AWFUL this will be for the sport and how we are essentially back to the days before the NCAA.
I've said before, the big question is how the ncaa will handle competitive balance?
I think it will lead to an arms race that Cal will lose due to lack of fan support.
I am having trouble grasping or accepting this. This seems to discriminate against players who are not stars, and it discriminates against athletes who play on team sports which are not major sports, and they are discriminated against enough already with the smaller budgets they are forced to accept from their athletic departments.HoopDreams said:
https://www.espn.com/college-sports/story/_/id/31740112/rule-changes-mean-athletes-schools-more
What kind of things will college athletes be doing now to make money?
Athletes are anticipated to appear in national advertising campaigns; partner with brands to advertise through social media channels; start their own youth sports camps or teach lessons; launch their own businesses; sell memorabilia; make paid public appearances for speaking events or autograph signings; and use their NIL rights in a variety of other creative ways.
Who stands to benefit?
The top stars in college sports will have the opportunity to use their fame to sign deals worth hundreds of thousands of dollars, if not more. Others who have built a massive social media following also stand to make considerable amounts of money. But all college athletes will have opportunities for smaller amounts of money or to receive items or free meals in exchange for promoting local businesses. Experts are unsure exactly how much demand there will be for college athletes moving forward, but this previous story estimates the value of the types of opportunities that are now available for college athletes.
that was before college sports became a big business, and before social mediaSFCityBear said:I am having trouble grasping or accepting this. This seems to discriminate against players who are not stars, and it discriminates against athletes who play on team sports which are not major sports, and they are discriminated against enough already with the smaller budgets they are forced to accept from their athletic departments.HoopDreams said:
https://www.espn.com/college-sports/story/_/id/31740112/rule-changes-mean-athletes-schools-more
What kind of things will college athletes be doing now to make money?
Athletes are anticipated to appear in national advertising campaigns; partner with brands to advertise through social media channels; start their own youth sports camps or teach lessons; launch their own businesses; sell memorabilia; make paid public appearances for speaking events or autograph signings; and use their NIL rights in a variety of other creative ways.
Who stands to benefit?
The top stars in college sports will have the opportunity to use their fame to sign deals worth hundreds of thousands of dollars, if not more. Others who have built a massive social media following also stand to make considerable amounts of money. But all college athletes will have opportunities for smaller amounts of money or to receive items or free meals in exchange for promoting local businesses. Experts are unsure exactly how much demand there will be for college athletes moving forward, but this previous story estimates the value of the types of opportunities that are now available for college athletes.
Take a look at the current Cal basketball team. They have no stars. How many of their rotation players could get any kind of an endorsement deal? The players on the bench behind them have zero chance of getting any money out of this, do they? Modern basketball has its focus the individual, not the team, as it once was. Basketball on the offensive side has far less teamwork now. Coaches were smart to combat the rule changes favoring the offense, by introducing the concept of "help" defense, which in turn induced more teamwork on defense than in the past. But there are fewer recognized individual stars on defense compared to offense.
I wonder what this NIL will do to players in team sports. Will players who make little or no money out of this not become envious or even jealous of the stars who do make most or all of the money? If you were on a team with a star who makes a lot of money, and you had the ball, why would you pass it to a star player, so he could enhance his reputation by scoring another basket, rather than try and score a basket yourself?
What about football? Traditionally, pro linemen don't make as much money at the skill positions, QBs, RBs and receivers. In the case of linemen in college, very few will get endorsement money, IMO. And there is the bench. Cal has a huge roster, over 100 players. Cal looks like they might be a competitive team this season, but how many of these athletes could expect an endorsement of any kind? Only a handful of stars, I'd wager. If you are a player, why would you risk injury by blocking for a QB or a running back, when he makes a lot of endorsement money, and you don't even get a mention in the press, let alone any money your pocket?
Where will this end? Will high schools, AAU ball and be next in line to lobby for the right to make money off endorsements? Amateur team sports was once a noble idea. Kids learning to play a game for fun and with teamwork with others of all abilities, sizes, personalities, races, classes, etc to try and achieve success as a team. This NIL will be one more nail in the coffin of amateur athletics. There are only two things I have come across that destroy every institution in a free society that they touch, money and Communism. Think about it.
HoopDreams said:that was before college sports became a big business, and before social mediaSFCityBear said:I am having trouble grasping or accepting this. This seems to discriminate against players who are not stars, and it discriminates against athletes who play on team sports which are not major sports, and they are discriminated against enough already with the smaller budgets they are forced to accept from their athletic departments.HoopDreams said:
https://www.espn.com/college-sports/story/_/id/31740112/rule-changes-mean-athletes-schools-more
What kind of things will college athletes be doing now to make money?
Athletes are anticipated to appear in national advertising campaigns; partner with brands to advertise through social media channels; start their own youth sports camps or teach lessons; launch their own businesses; sell memorabilia; make paid public appearances for speaking events or autograph signings; and use their NIL rights in a variety of other creative ways.
Who stands to benefit?
The top stars in college sports will have the opportunity to use their fame to sign deals worth hundreds of thousands of dollars, if not more. Others who have built a massive social media following also stand to make considerable amounts of money. But all college athletes will have opportunities for smaller amounts of money or to receive items or free meals in exchange for promoting local businesses. Experts are unsure exactly how much demand there will be for college athletes moving forward, but this previous story estimates the value of the types of opportunities that are now available for college athletes.
Take a look at the current Cal basketball team. They have no stars. How many of their rotation players could get any kind of an endorsement deal? The players on the bench behind them have zero chance of getting any money out of this, do they? Modern basketball has its focus the individual, not the team, as it once was. Basketball on the offensive side has far less teamwork now. Coaches were smart to combat the rule changes favoring the offense, by introducing the concept of "help" defense, which in turn induced more teamwork on defense than in the past. But there are fewer recognized individual stars on defense compared to offense.
I wonder what this NIL will do to players in team sports. Will players who make little or no money out of this not become envious or even jealous of the stars who do make most or all of the money? If you were on a team with a star who makes a lot of money, and you had the ball, why would you pass it to a star player, so he could enhance his reputation by scoring another basket, rather than try and score a basket yourself?
What about football? Traditionally, pro linemen don't make as much money at the skill positions, QBs, RBs and receivers. In the case of linemen in college, very few will get endorsement money, IMO. And there is the bench. Cal has a huge roster, over 100 players. Cal looks like they might be a competitive team this season, but how many of these athletes could expect an endorsement of any kind? Only a handful of stars, I'd wager. If you are a player, why would you risk injury by blocking for a QB or a running back, when he makes a lot of endorsement money, and you don't even get a mention in the press, let alone any money your pocket?
Where will this end? Will high schools, AAU ball and be next in line to lobby for the right to make money off endorsements? Amateur team sports was once a noble idea. Kids learning to play a game for fun and with teamwork with others of all abilities, sizes, personalities, races, classes, etc to try and achieve success as a team. This NIL will be one more nail in the coffin of amateur athletics. There are only two things I have come across that destroy every institution in a free society that they touch, money and Communism. Think about it.
I don't know how this will all shake out, and I'm concerned it will hurt competitive balance even further than the current situation (with free agency transfers also hurting competitive balance)
I don't think the biggest problem will be the locker room, and you don't have to be the star player to benefit. For example, you can be the hometown hero and run basketball camps, and have smaller sponsors. You can also have other talents and become an 'influencer' using sports as just one of your platforms to raise your profile.
but this rule change is over due
it's up to the ncaa to figure out how to deal with it
If your goal was irony you could not do much better. The history of athletic amateurism is the history of preventing the lower classes from competing because they could not afford to. The idea of came from the English upper class in the second half of the 19th century. It is interesting that you bring up communism as the amateur system exactly models Marx's critique of capitalism. Players get paid subsistence (tuition, room and board) while the owner class (coaches and administrators) make millions. I want that coffin nailed shut.SFCityBear said:I am having trouble grasping or accepting this. This seems to discriminate against players who are not stars, and it discriminates against athletes who play on team sports which are not major sports, and they are discriminated against enough already with the smaller budgets they are forced to accept from their athletic departments.HoopDreams said:
https://www.espn.com/college-sports/story/_/id/31740112/rule-changes-mean-athletes-schools-more
What kind of things will college athletes be doing now to make money?
Athletes are anticipated to appear in national advertising campaigns; partner with brands to advertise through social media channels; start their own youth sports camps or teach lessons; launch their own businesses; sell memorabilia; make paid public appearances for speaking events or autograph signings; and use their NIL rights in a variety of other creative ways.
Who stands to benefit?
The top stars in college sports will have the opportunity to use their fame to sign deals worth hundreds of thousands of dollars, if not more. Others who have built a massive social media following also stand to make considerable amounts of money. But all college athletes will have opportunities for smaller amounts of money or to receive items or free meals in exchange for promoting local businesses. Experts are unsure exactly how much demand there will be for college athletes moving forward, but this previous story estimates the value of the types of opportunities that are now available for college athletes.
Take a look at the current Cal basketball team. They have no stars. How many of their rotation players could get any kind of an endorsement deal? The players on the bench behind them have zero chance of getting any money out of this, do they? Modern basketball has its focus the individual, not the team, as it once was. Basketball on the offensive side has far less teamwork now. Coaches were smart to combat the rule changes favoring the offense, by introducing the concept of "help" defense, which in turn induced more teamwork on defense than in the past. But there are fewer recognized individual stars on defense compared to offense.
I wonder what this NIL will do to players in team sports. Will players who make little or no money out of this not become envious or even jealous of the stars who do make most or all of the money? If you were on a team with a star who makes a lot of money, and you had the ball, why would you pass it to a star player, so he could enhance his reputation by scoring another basket, rather than try and score a basket yourself?
What about football? Traditionally, pro linemen don't make as much money at the skill positions, QBs, RBs and receivers. In the case of linemen in college, very few will get endorsement money, IMO. And there is the bench. Cal has a huge roster, over 100 players. Cal looks like they might be a competitive team this season, but how many of these athletes could expect an endorsement of any kind? Only a handful of stars, I'd wager. If you are a player, why would you risk injury by blocking for a QB or a running back, when he makes a lot of endorsement money, and you don't even get a mention in the press, let alone any money your pocket?
Where will this end? Will high schools, AAU ball and be next in line to lobby for the right to make money off endorsements? Amateur team sports was once a noble idea. Kids learning to play a game for fun and with teamwork with others of all abilities, sizes, personalities, races, classes, etc to try and achieve success as a team. This NIL will be one more nail in the coffin of amateur athletics. There are only two things I have come across that destroy every institution in a free society that they touch, money and Communism. Think about it.
Quote:
I am having trouble grasping or accepting this. This seems to discriminate against players who are not stars, and it discriminates against athletes who play on team sports which are not major sports, and they are discriminated against enough already with the smaller budgets they are forced to accept from their athletic departments.
Correct. But it hurts no one and helps the athletes.socaltownie said:
Grrr....again - the idea that the NIL is actually a function of the marketing value of endorsements is just...well...laughable.
This is _ALL_ (well 99%) is going to be about how alumni that revel in "winning" are now able to make above the table coffee cup payments
It will help some athletes but here's a potential scenario I wonder about:sluggo said:Correct. But it hurts no one and helps the athletes.socaltownie said:
Grrr....again - the idea that the NIL is actually a function of the marketing value of endorsements is just...well...laughable.
This is _ALL_ (well 99%) is going to be about how alumni that revel in "winning" are now able to make above the table coffee cup payments
I thought of this exact scenario! A car dealer in Tuscaloosa. And I'll add an additional wrinkle:socaltownie said:
LOL. YOu think this is actually above board???!!!
"Hey Bubba. Hi. I run a car dealership in Tuscalusa. I got me here an endorsement deal. Now my customers only care about endorsements from Crimson Tide players so if you sign I can give you $50K for taking a few pictures over here on the parking lot."
I just fail to understand how not everyone understands just how AWFUL this will be for the sport and how we are essentially back to the days before the NCAA.
Business.HearstMining said:I thought of this exact scenario! A car dealer in Tuscaloosa. And I'll add an additional wrinkle:socaltownie said:
LOL. YOu think this is actually above board???!!!
"Hey Bubba. Hi. I run a car dealership in Tuscalusa. I got me here an endorsement deal. Now my customers only care about endorsements from Crimson Tide players so if you sign I can give you $50K for taking a few pictures over here on the parking lot."
I just fail to understand how not everyone understands just how AWFUL this will be for the sport and how we are essentially back to the days before the NCAA.
What if that car dealer in Tuscaloosa, who's paying that Alabama 5* running back a fat NIL fee, asks him for the straight scoop on the 'Bama QB's sprained knee just before the LSU game and uses the info to place a bet?
sluggo said:Correct. But it hurts no one and helps the athletes.socaltownie said:
Grrr....again - the idea that the NIL is actually a function of the marketing value of endorsements is just...well...laughable.
This is _ALL_ (well 99%) is going to be about how alumni that revel in "winning" are now able to make above the table coffee cup payments
With all due respect, I think the history of amateurism goes back a lot farther than the English upper class in 19th century. That was certainly part of it, but I doubt that the British aristocracy wanted to exclude the working class because they could not afford to. I would guess they did it because they wanted to exclude them because there might have been good athletes among the working class, and they wanted to keep them out of the competition. Workers mostly worked in physically demanding jobs, and they likely had better developed muscles than the wealthy class, which either worked with their minds, or did no work at all.sluggo said:If your goal was irony you could not do much better. The history of athletic amateurism is the history of preventing the lower classes from competing because they could not afford to. The idea of came from the English upper class in the second half of the 19th century. It is interesting that you bring up communism as the amateur system exactly models Marx's critique of capitalism. Players get paid subsistence (tuition, room and board) while the owner class (coaches and administrators) make millions. I want that coffin nailed shut.SFCityBear said:I am having trouble grasping or accepting this. This seems to discriminate against players who are not stars, and it discriminates against athletes who play on team sports which are not major sports, and they are discriminated against enough already with the smaller budgets they are forced to accept from their athletic departments.HoopDreams said:
https://www.espn.com/college-sports/story/_/id/31740112/rule-changes-mean-athletes-schools-more
What kind of things will college athletes be doing now to make money?
Athletes are anticipated to appear in national advertising campaigns; partner with brands to advertise through social media channels; start their own youth sports camps or teach lessons; launch their own businesses; sell memorabilia; make paid public appearances for speaking events or autograph signings; and use their NIL rights in a variety of other creative ways.
Who stands to benefit?
The top stars in college sports will have the opportunity to use their fame to sign deals worth hundreds of thousands of dollars, if not more. Others who have built a massive social media following also stand to make considerable amounts of money. But all college athletes will have opportunities for smaller amounts of money or to receive items or free meals in exchange for promoting local businesses. Experts are unsure exactly how much demand there will be for college athletes moving forward, but this previous story estimates the value of the types of opportunities that are now available for college athletes.
Take a look at the current Cal basketball team. They have no stars. How many of their rotation players could get any kind of an endorsement deal? The players on the bench behind them have zero chance of getting any money out of this, do they? Modern basketball has its focus the individual, not the team, as it once was. Basketball on the offensive side has far less teamwork now. Coaches were smart to combat the rule changes favoring the offense, by introducing the concept of "help" defense, which in turn induced more teamwork on defense than in the past. But there are fewer recognized individual stars on defense compared to offense.
I wonder what this NIL will do to players in team sports. Will players who make little or no money out of this not become envious or even jealous of the stars who do make most or all of the money? If you were on a team with a star who makes a lot of money, and you had the ball, why would you pass it to a star player, so he could enhance his reputation by scoring another basket, rather than try and score a basket yourself?
What about football? Traditionally, pro linemen don't make as much money at the skill positions, QBs, RBs and receivers. In the case of linemen in college, very few will get endorsement money, IMO. And there is the bench. Cal has a huge roster, over 100 players. Cal looks like they might be a competitive team this season, but how many of these athletes could expect an endorsement of any kind? Only a handful of stars, I'd wager. If you are a player, why would you risk injury by blocking for a QB or a running back, when he makes a lot of endorsement money, and you don't even get a mention in the press, let alone any money your pocket?
Where will this end? Will high schools, AAU ball and be next in line to lobby for the right to make money off endorsements? Amateur team sports was once a noble idea. Kids learning to play a game for fun and with teamwork with others of all abilities, sizes, personalities, races, classes, etc to try and achieve success as a team. This NIL will be one more nail in the coffin of amateur athletics. There are only two things I have come across that destroy every institution in a free society that they touch, money and Communism. Think about it.
I'm not sure the Greek Olympians were, strictly speaking, amateurs. A quick search indicated that valuable prizes were given to winners of ancient Olympic competitions. Here is one link that certainly looks like a reputable source: https://www.penn.museum/sites/olympics/olympicathletes.shtmlSFCityBear said:
With all due respect, I think the history of amateurism goes back a lot farther than the English upper class in 19th century. That was certainly part of it, but I doubt that the British aristocracy wanted to exclude the working class because they could not afford to. I would guess they did it because they wanted to exclude them because there might have been good athletes among the working class, and they wanted to keep them out of the competition. Workers mostly worked in physically demanding jobs, and they likely had better developed muscles than the wealthy class, which either worked with their minds, or did no work at all.
Athletic competition began eons ago with the ancient Greeks, the Olympics, and probably before that. When two or more competitors decided to have a competition, they did it for the sport of it, the competition to see who was best. In the early Olympics, prizes had no monetary value. There was a love of the sport for its own sake. There was also a long period of time where a philosophy of "Muscular Christianity" was in vogue, where it was held that sports were to develop good character, a muscular body, athletic training,and good Christian morals. This goes back to the writings of Paul the Apostle, and continued for almost 2000 years. Teddy Roosevelt was an ardent adherent. I think this philosophy had much to do with the development of amateurism, including when it first became the norm in college athletics.