02:17 The Football NIL Battlefront: Fair Pay or Power Grab?
Manage episode 482868687 series 3563540
π§οΈ Weather scare at DeSmet but event stayed mostly dry β testing ran smoothly.
π₯ 28 colleges represented across FCS, D2, D3, NAIA, and JUCO levels.
π¨βπ« 45β50 college coaches attended, plus 35β40 high school coaches.
π£ Strong message: If you're not attending events with coaches watching, you're wasting time and money.
π― Take initiative: Donβt wait for coaches β go introduce yourself.
π Coaches walk around with target lists but are always discovering new talent.
π Athletes are encouraged to build relationships early, especially with repeat opportunities like upcoming KC Varsity and Lindenwood combines.
π§± Demetrius Thompson (Clayton/Brentwood):
Dominated 1v1s across the defensive line.
Ran a 4.73 laser 40-yard dash at ~6'4", 215 lbs.
Trains at Elite β confident, skilled, and primed for a big summer.
Possible future pro potential: βTrajectory to play on Sundays.β
π Background: 30 years in law, specializing in NCAA compliance, Title IX, NIL, and athlete representation.
β οΈ Concerns about the House v. NCAA NIL settlement:
NCAA proposing a third-party βunbiasedβ body to set fair market value for deals >$600.
Massive red flags over antitrust, anti-commerce implications.
Attorneys ready to sue β fairness, legality, and athlete rights are all at stake.
πΈ Schools and donors may face consequences if deals are deemed βtoo high.β
ποΈ Strong opinions that athletes need legal protection and collective bargaining (like pro athletes get).
π’ Kentucky reportedly creating an LLC for its athletic department β may signal movement toward private equity involvement.
ποΈ Explosion in stadium branding, business integration, and licensing deals.
πΊ Live sports, especially football, remain extremely valuable β major TV and sponsor interest.
π₯ Prediction: Major conferences may soon break away entirely from NCAA control.
The NCAA is clinging to relevance through revenue control and restrictive rules.
Thereβs growing momentum for a new model where athletes are properly compensated.
Expect continued lawsuits, resistance from smaller schools, and possible unionization efforts.
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