I am hearing there are several recruits who have decided to take other visits. BV has a policy of not taking visits once you commit to OU. Will be interesting to see if he stands true to that.
What do you think this means?BV has a policy of not taking visits once you commit to OU. Will be interesting to see if he stands true to that.
Yes, the NIL has completely fvcked up the recruiting process. My love for cfb is going by the way in my old age. I'll be guiding fishers here within 6 months.There is really nothing surprising about kids flipping now with the NIL crap. NIL is becoming nothing more than a yearly traveling circus for recruites today.
I'm probably done.A good read.
Column: NIL was supposed to fix college sports, instead it’s become a pay-for-play free-for-all
https://www.sandiegouniontribune.co...image-likeness-recruiting-collectives-payouts
I understand completely. I think in the future many fans will say the hell with this. Including myself at some point.Yes, the NIL has completely fvcked up the recruiting process. My love for cfb is going by the way in my old age. I'll be guiding fishers here within 6 months.
Great article. Thanks 67 for supplying that link. I really liked the part where it likely does cause “chemistry issues” in the locker room among players.A good read.
Column: NIL was supposed to fix college sports, instead it’s become a pay-for-play free-for-all
https://www.sandiegouniontribune.co...image-likeness-recruiting-collectives-payouts
I laughed when the Kentucky Basketball Recruit got a new Porsche then decided to skip College and enter the NBA draft. 🤣Great article. Thanks 67 for supplying that link. I really liked the part where it likely does cause “chemistry issues” in the locker room among players.
Plaino - I have laid out my opinion on NIL and you guys may be tired of hearing it, but, because of the way you have your post worded, I'll do it once again.I don't think NIL is a horrible idea. But NIL with basically no regulation is a horrible idea, worse than any previous ideas. I like the notion of NIL, because it allows the athletes that are in self supporting sports to receive some compensation in ratio with what they're providing the university. And I see absolutely no reason why athletes in college can't endorse a product.
But there has to be a limitation on earnings. Otherwise they are professionals. The definition of amateur has changed over the years. I have no clue what the limitations should be. BUT these universities surely have a way to find regulations that don't break everybody's bank. If the NBA can do it, anybody should be able to.
Picking a number that above which forfeits an athlete's amateur status is a good starting place. And college athletes ought to be amateurs. We have outlets for professional athletes. If they want to try to be pros, they should seek those outlets.
We're sort of on the same page. But l don't think anybody can insist a court does anything. Courts are ambivalent when they wanna be.Plaino - I have laid out my opinion on NIL and you guys may be tired of hearing it, but, because of the way you have your post worded, I'll do it once again.
The NCAA has shown to be incompetent for more years than most on this board have been around. Guys like me and you saw it happen when OU and Ga challenged the NCAA's TV broadcast monopoly.
To me, NIL should be very similar to that situation.
Where the NCAAA fell down on the job (AGAIN and AGAIN and AGAIN...) is, their lawyers should have insisted that the court define NIL. If they had, NIL would have ended up just like your first paragraph. If you put Rattler's name on a jersey and sell it, Rattler is entitled to a portion of the profits. First, nobody would be getting Porsches or million dollar payments, etc.
Any issues in the locker room would have been greatly minimized, as the payouts would be in 3 or 4 figure dollar amounts - not 7 or 8 figures.
Second, the revenue would be controlled by the actual sales revenue generated with a specific player's NIL.
Instead, the NCAA just said "Screw it. We'll just pretend the court said players can be paid any amount to attend whichever school they wish." They are still not smart enough (even after 50-60 years) to understand they just crapped in their own bed. The way they interpreted NIL will be the ultimate downfall of the NCAA.
They think they created the money monster that College Football has become.
Again, not smart enough to understand that they were actually on the losing end of the litigation that created this money monster.
In other words, College Football is where it is financially in spite of the NCAA, not because of the NCAA.
What if Jackson doesnt commit, can DG get the job done next year with unproven WR's We lose a lot of experience in the WR room (including losing Gundy this year).I'm of the belief Jackson can make stars of the unproven wrs. I'm hanging by a thread here. 😁
It’s pretty sad that our QB situation may be so that we need to put our hopes on the back of a true freshman next season.What if Jackson doesnt commit, can DG get the job done next year with unproven WR's We lose a lot of experience in the WR room (including losing Gundy this year).
CT, how good do you think we’ll be at QB next season under this scenario? Maybe a little better win - loss than this year probably. All things considered.Oklabama:
Not only with a freshman quarterback, but also another year of unproven depth behind him.
That said, it's critical that Gabriel return with only Evers, Beville and Booty on the roster, unless there's a solid QB in the JUCO or transfer portal ranks.
For now, let's hope Jackson honors his commitment.
Agree on the courts. Maybe it should have been the NCAA who defined NIL and continued to enforce the Pay-for-play rules.We're sort of on the same page. But l don't think anybody can insist a court does anything. Courts are ambivalent when they wanna be.
Yes they are because now the universities and collectives are the ones paying to expose the players who can’t handle the money or lack true work ethic. NFL owners must be very appreciative.Roger and the NFL owners are smiling.
Brother! 👍Yes they are because now the universities and collectives are the ones paying to expose the players who can’t handle the money or lack true work ethic. NFL owners must be very appreciative.
OU could be better if both Gabriel and Arnold are around but given all the issues this team has (and will have), that may not be saying much. There is not one position that doesn't need serious upgrading and I believe that must come from mostly high school talent rather than bargain-basement transfers.CT, how good do you think we’ll be at QB next season under this scenario? Maybe a little better win - loss than this year probably. All things considered.
I would have to take another look at the court rendering on NIL but as I recall the NCAA has no legal powers to establish any form of restrictions.Just my opinion but the NCAA should have put an academic year cap on the amount of money a player could make, say $50,000...that would have made the playing field much more level
Wow, if that is so, that is a horrendous ruling for college football.I would have to take another look at the court rendering on NIL but as I recall the NCAA has no legal powers to establish any form of restrictions.
That is exactly how the NIL suit went. Courts wouldn't allow a cap.I would have to take another look at the court rendering on NIL but as I recall the NCAA has no legal powers to establish any form of restrictions.