Canton BU fan
Member
Dont get Congress involved .. They would screw it up even more
The wrong courts with the wrong judges can ruin anything
Dont get Congress involved .. They would screw it up even more
In business contracts, those stipulations are called "restrictive covenants". In some cases, restrictive covenants have been ruled by courts as non-binding, because they restrict an employees' freedom to leave and earn a living elsewhere. But there have been other cases where they are upheld and considered legal, especially if the knowledge the employee has gained at a company, like confidential business secrets, could cause extreme harm to that company, and unfairly benefit a competitor. I don't know how a court would look at such restrictive college NIL contracts. But, if they happen, it will surely lead to more lawsuits.
Maybe the restrictions can be worded in a way similar to a no compete clause when some leaves a company
It will be interesting to see how this all plays out. A lot of players/agents are saying player X wants 1 mil or 2 mil but that is a long way from getting that much. Take Iowa - there are reports out there that their NIL budget for basketball was 1.5 mil. If you give one kid 1 mil you have 500 k to dole out to the other 12 players-about 40 k per player. I just don’t believe the pile of money is quite as large as some think. Now a bunch of other schools will have much bigger NIL budgets than Iowa-but not everybody.
Don’t get me wrong a few kids will get that much but I don’t think many will. I may be wrong but that is my sense.
Recruiting is so difficult. These kids change their minds at the drop of a hat
Copper Koch stays at Iowa, McCollum beats Bradley again.
I get it, but it really can't be called a recruiting loss when a mid-major like Bradley, with a few thousand NIL dollars a month to offer is matched against a Big Ten team with millions. Most likely, Koch never really intended to leave, but wanted to use the portal to get a more favorable NIL deal from the Iowa backers.
Non-Power Conference schools like Bradley will never be able to compete with the huge money those big schools can offer.
The situations at schools like Valpo and Evansville are the more common cases of smaller, private schools trying to build a successful program. That could be Bradley if not for a great coaching staff and a very good mid-major NIL program. Even the moderate sized public schools like Illinois State, Indiana State, SIU etc., should have an advantage over the private schools, but even they struggle to build a winning team and keep the better players from hitting the transfer portal for more money. And that difference will keep getting wider.
Every recent NCAA rule change favors the big guys. Now they allow 15 scholarships, which takes more talent away from the mid-majors. The NET kills the mid-majors' at-large chances and with it, millions in revenue. The NCAA decides they will not police NIL money, so watch the big football schools find endless millions more to pump into players' pockets. The transfer portal and immediate eligibility had already turned the mid-majors into farm teams, and it will keep getting worse.
I think Bradley has done a remarkable job, considering the huge obstacles that now exist in recruiting, NIL, TV deals, declining attendance, getting NCAA bids, etc.
Does anyone want to guess who the top teams will be in the MVC for 2025-26?