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Hey man, the danger of it is whats exciting!Yeah. I liked my pot deals in a dark back alley back in the day. Something just so pure about the illegality and constant threat of violence. These new, regulated, legal dispensaries are the devil.
Totally.
It's a shame that these kids are no longer getting paid by men with integrity like Hugh Freeze and Nevin Shapiro because these dirty NIL deals aren't providing them with prostitutes and blow on yachts.
That's what I'm sayin'. If these kids aren't getting hookers and blow on yachts then why do they even play?
But the prices suck.Yeah. I liked my pot deals in a dark back alley back in the day. Something just so pure about the illegality and constant threat of violence. These new, regulated, legal dispensaries are the devil.
This could get messy.
Boy I really feel bad for … .the New Mexico’s/ NMSt/ Umass’s of college football.. they are about to get hammered…
To be fair, this does sound like a terrible deal.Totally.
It's a shame that these kids are no longer getting paid by men with integrity like Hugh Freeze and Nevin Shapiro because these dirty NIL deals aren't providing them with prostitutes and blow on yachts.
Wait until the first kid loses eligibility, and some/all of his seven figure NIL deal, because of NCAA bylaws/enforcement. The line of lawyers waiting to take that case and sue the NCAA's balls off will stretch around the block.
NCAA knows this so enforcement of these new, proposed, NIL guidelines will be worse than before. They know their entire house of cards (anti trust exemption) is going to be in the cross hairs if they do that to someone.
So yes, they will nail some 19 year old water polo player from New Mexico State you made $75 off a YouTube add before they signed with the school but they won't go after one swinging dick in the P5.
This could get messy.
Monday’s decision in NCAA v. Alston ended a dispute that began seven years ago as a class action filed against the NCAA and the major athletic conferences by the athletes who play Division I football and basketball. The athletes contended in their complaint that the NCAA’s restrictions on eligibility and compensation violate federal antitrust laws by barring the athletes from receiving fair-market compensation for their labor. A federal district court in California agreed in part: It ruled that the NCAA could restrict benefits that are unrelated to education (such as cash salaries), but it barred the NCAA from limiting education-related benefits. After the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit upheld that decision, the NCAA and the athletic conferences went to the Supreme Court, which late last year agreed to take up the case.
.......Justice Brett Kavanaugh joined the court’s opinion in full, but he also wrote a separate concurring opinion in which he questioned the legality of the remaining restrictions on benefits for college athletes. He made clear that although those restrictions were not before the court in this case, Monday’s ruling established a framework for future challenges to the restrictions – and, he wrote, there are “serious questions” about whether those rules “can pass muster” under that framework. Kavanaugh, an avid sports fan who coaches his daughters’ basketball teams and unsuccessfully tried out for the varsity basketball team while an undergraduate at Yale, acknowledged that college athletics includes “important traditions that have become part of the fabric of America.” But, he warned, the “NCAA is not above the law.”
"The BC degree is a lot more valuable than the degree from a lot of the schools reaching out. I can make more than $600,000 with my degree and the alumni network down the road."I suspect Ewers and quite a few others saw offers like this as well
https://www.espn.com/college-footba...-zay-flowers-turned-big-money-offers-transfer