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NCAA drops rule banning NIL negotiating by recruits

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  • NCAA drops rule banning NIL negotiating by recruits

    The NCAA has backed further away from any policing or regulating NIL money. Today, they dropped a rule prohibiting athletes from negotiating the terms of name, image and likeness payments until after they enroll in school. - https://www.espn.com/college-sports/...als-enrollment
    So now recruits can literally auction themselves off to every school recruiting them and get the highest bid, while the schools can openly use the offer of NIL money as a recruiting tool.
    This change, along with the expansion to 15 scholarships, will allow the schools with the most money to load up on all the top recruits they can afford, as well as use the promise of NIL money to lure any transfer they covet.

    "The change is one of the terms of a legal settlement announced Monday between the NCAA and a group of state attorneys general, who sued the association last year claiming that the restriction on NIL negotiations violated federal antitrust law. The settlement, which still needs to be approved by the judge overseeing the case, marks another step forward as the college sports industry prepares to embrace a more professional business model in the months ahead.

    The NCAA's now-abandoned rule was designed to try to keep schools and booster collectives from using NIL deals as a recruiting incentive for incoming high school athletes and players in the transfer portal. Though schools and boosters were allowed to speak generally about the kind of financial opportunities that might be available on campus, they were prohibited from making a specific offer to an athlete until he or she was enrolled."


  • #2
    Writing was on the wall when they came out with NIL. It will continue to devolve until it reaches the point that many of us have predicted, just a matter of time.
    Thinking is the hardest work, that is why so few people do it. -Henry Ford

    Yeah...I've been in college for a while now and I'm pretty sure that awesomest is not a word. -Andrew E.

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    • #3
      This had to be happening already.
      houstonbrave

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      • #4
        Originally posted by houstonbrave View Post
        This had to be happening already.
        Yes, exactly. Just how stupid does the NCAA think we are to think this wasn't already the case? Everybody knows this is exactly the way it was and always has worked. Even before the NIL, let's be honest!
        Larry Bird
        I've got a theory that if you give 100 percent all of the time, somehow things will work out in the end.

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        • #5
          LOL, this has been happening for at least 40-50 years, money under the table, corrupt boosters paying recruits, etc...
          Teams were literally mailing cash to recruits in the 80's and even further back​ they were
          finding illegal ways to lure the best players -
          People forget but -- read this article on how legendary HOF'er John Wooden and his recruiting thugs broke every rule in the book to get the best players - LINK

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          • #6
            Greg Marshall was ahead of his time.

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            • #7
              Originally posted by Classof77 View Post
              Greg Marshall was ahead of his time.
              haha, the real OG indeed!
              Larry Bird
              I've got a theory that if you give 100 percent all of the time, somehow things will work out in the end.

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              • #8
                Originally posted by Classof77 View Post
                Greg Marshall was ahead of his time.
                Marshall was a cheater, no doubt.
                I was with other Bradley fans at a preseason event in 2008, and talked to incoming recruit Chris Roberts (former Bradley player). Roberts also had an offer from Gregg Marshall at Wichita State. That was Marshall's second year there, and he was trying to build them back into a winner. Chris told us he was offered $20,000 to commit to Wichita State. But he and his mother were good people and knew that was illegal. So he committed to Bradley. There are a couple other posters on this board who were there and can confirm.
                Paying for recruits was rampant then, but not all coaches did it.

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