socaltownie said:
Depressing article in the UT today
https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/sports/aztecs/story/2022-04-22/zeigler-college-sports-nil-name-image-likeness-recruiting-collectives-payouts
Cal can't compete in that world. Maybe the talent fox is getting really is the best out there.
that is a good article. the only surprise is that people are surprised. I called it 100% free agency all the time ... I heard an interview on ESPN radio where a pac12 coach was asked about the upcoming signing day. He said, with the transfer portal, every day is signing day.
some good points, many of which is the first time I've seen in an article...
"... they were already getting an estimated $200,000 or more per year in scholarships, medical care, food, lodging, tutoring, fitness training, equipment, clothing, charter flights, five-star hotels, cost of attendance stipends, coaching and preparation for the professional level. And, oh yeah, admittance to a university beyond the academic reach of most athletes." (I am not saying this is fair compensation, but at least they include other things besides the usual 'only get a scholarship', and it doesn't they still don't include probably the biggest value they receive from playing college sports ... growing their brand)
"There are also the transfers who have essentially become free agents with the NCAA no longer mandating they sit out a year. One coach tells the story of two SEC basketball programs bidding for a high-profile transfer, and one tapping out when it got to $650,000.""The only regulation is the universities themselves can't make the deals. No problem. Just as politicians created Super PACs (political action committees) to skirt campaign finance laws, with no limits on donation size, boosters have formed nonprofit "collectives" to funnel money to athletes without answering to Title IX."
"Schools with billionaire boosters can stomach spending millions for unproven recruits in the name of an SEC title. The have-nots might get $75,000 here or $100,000 there in the short term, but what happens when you keep dipping the bucket into that well?"
"The bigger concern among athletic directors is what happens to their own budgets when all the millions they traditionally receive from donors are diverted to NIL cooperatives? Women's sports advocates, curiously, haven't made the connection: Their sports will suffer funding cuts and, possibly, probably, elimination."