IlliniKat91
- Chicago, IL
This'll be fun to follow. Not that it'll make any school think twice unless the punishment is stiff enough, but we'll see.
This'll be fun to follow. Not that it'll make any school think twice unless the punishment is stiff enough, but we'll see.
there has always been outlaws in CFB and there always will beThis'll be fun to follow. Not that it'll make any school think twice unless the punishment is stiff enough, but we'll see.
Is this a key point? Are they all effective employees now, and is that or some other pertinent condition now applicable retroactively, when it wasn't before?That the B1G publicly supports the filing, and that W waited until after House settlement approved to file is noteworthy to me. Especially the former. Without that, I’d have said that W is just really butthurt (courthouse legal term).
saw that tennessee supposedly already passed a similar law. any truth to that?Of course it would happen first in Michigan.
I don’t know how this can be called cheating, though. Different from the norm? Sure. But the norms of the past have been shattered.there has always been outlaws in CFB and there always will be
cheaters gonna cheat
It’s neither of the things you mentionedI don’t know how this can be called cheating, though. Different from the norm? Sure. But the norms of the past have been shattered.
I also don’t know how Wisconsin has a legitimate claim in this lawsuit. IANAL, but any contract involving payment is with the NIL collective or the individual sponsor, lest the badgers be admitting to “pay for play.” If they’re suing only on the scholarship aspect, then they would likely be denying the athlete his fair trade marketability. This should be interesting.
You are right. This is going to be interesting on how this will play outIt’s neither of the things you mentioned
According to what I've read the contract in question is one in which Lucas signed over non-exclusive rights to use his NIL in promotions to Wisconsin, and as part of the contract he is prohibited from making commitments to play sports at any other school.I don’t know how this can be called cheating, though. Different from the norm? Sure. But the norms of the past have been shattered.
I also don’t know how Wisconsin has a legitimate claim in this lawsuit. IANAL, but any contract involving payment is with the NIL collective or the individual sponsor, lest the badgers be admitting to “pay for play.” If they’re suing only on the scholarship aspect, then they would likely be denying the athlete his fair trade marketability. This should be interesting.
I just don’t see how Miami can be sued here. Even getting around the whole “not employees” issue, if I worked at Twin City Radiator and had an iron clad contract, and CU Radiator called me and asked if I had any interest in working with them instead (I’m really really good when it comes to radiators), there’s no breach of contract on CU Radiator’s part. There could be on my part. Now, if CU Radiator REALLY wants me (again, I’m the best radiator guy out there!), they would have to buy out my contract to satisfy the legal requirements on MY end. If I go work there and my contract isn’t bought out, Twin City Radiator has legal action against me, but not CU Radiator.According to what I've read the contract in question is one in which Lucas signed over non-exclusive rights to use his NIL in promotions to Wisconsin, and as part of the contract he is prohibited from making commitments to play sports at any other school.
I think there are a number of questions here. First, I wonder if a court or the NCAA will find this arrangement too cute by half. It's obvious what the real intent is here. To lock down a player to a two-year commitment to play football for Wisconsin (you can tell because the whole beef here is that he decided to play football somewhere else). The thing is, you're not supposed to be able to do that.
Second, you can't tortiously interfere with a contract you don't know exists. So did Miami know about this 2-year deal? Might be tough to prove. It would be easier to sue Lucas for breach, but for obvious reasons they're avoiding that. But its kind of awkward to sue a third party for inducing someone to breach a contract, but not sue the party that actually has privity to the contract.
Third, proving damages is going to be tough. OK, so Wisconsin lost out on Lucas. What is the monetary effect of that? How much revenue was Lucas going to bring in vs whoever replaced him? How much did it cost Wisconsin to find a replacement? The answers may be difficult to determine and may not actually come out to a lot of money (and by the way that is the reveue for a suit like this, the court is not going to order sanctions of Miami's football program or order Lucas to return to the Badgers).
So the whole thing with tortious interference of contact is that CU radiator has to have 1) known about the contract, 2) intentionally and unjustifiably interfered with the contract, and 3) caused you to breach the contract.I just don’t see how Miami can be sued here. Even getting around the whole “not employees” issue, if I worked at Twin City Radiator and had an iron clad contract, and CU Radiator called me and asked if I had any interest in working with them instead (I’m really really good when it comes to radiators), there’s no breach of contract on CU Radiator’s part. There could be on my part. Now, if CU Radiator REALLY wants me (again, I’m the best radiator guy out there!), they would have to buy out my contract to satisfy the legal requirements on MY end. If I go work there and my contract isn’t bought out, Twin City Radiator has legal action against me, but not CU Radiator.
State laws would still apply. Every state still has a 21+ policy. This wouldn't change that.betting should be illegal for anyone under age 21
I suppose it depends how far you want to take it. Is playing fantasy football, with an entry fee and end of season payouts gambling? Technically, yes. I am fine with them betting on pro sports, if that is how they want to lose their money. Obviously, staying away from all college sports is important.Is it really that hard not to? I get that gambling has expanded immensely in my lifetime, and also that there are individuals with legitimate addiction issues.
But I were blessed to make tens or hundreds of thousands as a player, or hundreds of thousands to millions as a staff member, that ought to be enough. I don't think it is unreasonable to eliminate any signs of impropriety by keeping all gambling off-limits to those folks.
Seems to be to be just another NCAA acknowledgement of something they can no longer control, rather than real change.
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The problem here is that they can get in deep betting on professional sports. To get out, they can, ahem, influence a game on which their creditor/gambler has bet heavily. "Kid, make sure you lose to Nebraska and your NFL betting debts are history".I suppose it depends how far you want to take it. Is playing fantasy football, with an entry fee and end of season payouts gambling? Technically, yes. I am fine with them betting on pro sports, if that is how they want to lose their money. Obviously, staying away from all college sports is important.
Yeah, that was always the problem with illegal gambling, but now with the proliferation of legal gambling by actual corporate entities, I'm not so sure the same concern exists. Do we really think Draft Kings is going to press college athletes to point shave?The problem here is that they can get in deep betting on professional sports. To get out, they can, ahem, influence a game on which their creditor/gambler has bet heavily. "Kid, make sure you lose to Nebraska and your NFL betting debts are history".
With the preponderance of sports books, both in person and online, I wasn't considering the local bookie scenario. That certainly could mess things up, though student athletes can get into financial trouble A LOT of ways. It is not limited to sports betting.The problem here is that they can get in deep betting on professional sports. To get out, they can, ahem, influence a game on which their creditor/gambler has bet heavily. "Kid, make sure you lose to Nebraska and your NFL betting debts are history".
Endowment figures are nice and all but if that's the total of each school's endowments compiled for each conference, it's kind of a meaningless figure. Much of that money is restricted in terms of how it is used. For example, some of it can only be used to help with tuition for kids who need assistance, or some of it is for a new building named after a rich donor, etc.seems pretty accurate:
Been following this pretty closely. While it may be a bump for former Mountain West teams, it sounds like it will be on the lower side of things, maybe $8-10 mil with all contracts. I think the Texas State add will be announced by EOW. I don't expect anything else to happen this cycle with additions either. The times leading up to 2030, when many media rights contracts expire, is going to be absolutely nuts.