Tag Archives: NIL

LSU’s ‘Bayou Barbie’ Angel Reese leads NIL deals for college basketball players – NOLA.com

  1. LSU’s ‘Bayou Barbie’ Angel Reese leads NIL deals for college basketball players NOLA.com
  2. Online suitors are sending dating requests to the wrong Angel Reese WUSF Public Media
  3. LSU’s Angel Reese leading college basketball in NIL deals Greater Baton Rouge Business Report
  4. March Madness: How Angel Reese’s ‘fresh start’ turned into an NIL windfall and a Final Four trip with LSU Yahoo Sports
  5. As New Orleans Legend Lil Wayne Shouts Her Name For The World To Hear, Angel Reese’s Mother Says Men Are Sliding Into The Wrong DMs To Reach ‘Bayou Barbie’ The Shadow League
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Syracuse Head Coach Jim Boeheim Reflects on Pitt “Bought a Team” Comments, Discusses Transfer Portal and NIL Money – Pittsburgh Sports Now

  1. Syracuse Head Coach Jim Boeheim Reflects on Pitt “Bought a Team” Comments, Discusses Transfer Portal and NIL Money Pittsburgh Sports Now
  2. Pittsburgh destroys zone, hands Syracuse third consecutive blowout loss (final score, recap) syracuse.com
  3. Pitt Men’s Basketball | Jeff Capel, Hinson & Cummings Postgame vs. Syracuse | 2.25.23 UPMC Pitt LiveWire
  4. Dominant second half gives Pitt raucous win over Syracuse, first place in ACC Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
  5. Syracuse basketball drops 3rd-straight game at Pittsburgh, as Panthers hit 16 3s syracuse.com
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NCAA goes easy on Miami in first NIL case decision — but warns boosters it’s no ‘green light’ – The Athletic

  1. NCAA goes easy on Miami in first NIL case decision — but warns boosters it’s no ‘green light’ The Athletic
  2. NCAA and Miami agree to penalties relating to recruitment of Haley and Hanna Cavinder Yahoo Sports
  3. NCAA Issues First NIL Ruling, With Cavinder Twins at the Center of It Sports Illustrated
  4. NCAA puts Miami women’s basketball on probation for year WSVN 7News | Miami News, Weather, Sports | Fort Lauderdale
  5. NCAA gives Miami 1-year probation for recruiting violation The Associated Press – en Español
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NIL questions emerge after Jim Boeheim’s comments, but Pitt’s Jeff Capel focuses on his team – TribLIVE

  1. NIL questions emerge after Jim Boeheim’s comments, but Pitt’s Jeff Capel focuses on his team TribLIVE
  2. Forde Minutes: The Dangers of When College Hoops Coaches Become Emperors Sports Illustrated
  3. Rutgers assistant coach accuses Syracuse’s Jim Boeheim of buying teams, paying players NJ.com
  4. Syracuse University held hostage to Boeheim’s worst impulses (Your Letters) syracuse.com
  5. Boeheim, Weitsman discuss NIL remarks the coach made to ESPN: ‘That’s the future of basketball’ syracuse.com
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Boeheim, Weitsman discuss NIL remarks the coach made to ESPN: ‘That’s the future of basketball’ – syracuse.com

  1. Boeheim, Weitsman discuss NIL remarks the coach made to ESPN: ‘That’s the future of basketball’ syracuse.com
  2. Forde Minutes: The Dangers of When College Hoops Coaches Become Emperors Sports Illustrated
  3. NIL questions emerge after Jim Boeheim’s comments, but Pitt’s Jeff Capel focuses on his team TribLIVE
  4. Syracuse University held hostage to Boeheim’s worst impulses (Your Letters) syracuse.com
  5. Rutgers assistant coach accuses Syracuse’s Jim Boeheim of buying teams, paying players NJ.com
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Florida-bound QB Jaden Rashada asks for scholarship release amid NIL dispute: Sources

Four-star quarterback Jaden Rashada, who signed with Florida on Dec. 21 but did not report to campus last week amid a name, image and likeness dispute, asked the NCAA for a scholarship release, sources close to the program confirmed to The Athletic. 247Sports was first to report the filing. Here’s what you need to know:

  • Sources said the recruit’s family has been at odds with the football program ever since the Gator Collective terminated an NIL contract valued at more than $13 million.
  • Rashada is the No. 56 prospect in the 2023 recruiting class and the No. 7 quarterback, per the 247Sports Composite. The graduate of Pittsburg (Calif.) High was among the highest-ranked quarterbacks the Gators have landed in the past decade.
  • He committed to Miami in June amid speculation of a $9 million NIL deal, then flipped to Florida on Nov. 10.
  • While Rashada participated in the Under-Armour All-American event last week in Orlando, his father Harlen told The Athletic the family was headed straight to Gainesville for spring enrollment.

What happened?

Sources close to the program told The Athletic that a $13 million NIL deal, struck between the Gator Collective and Rashada before he flipped to Florida in November, began falling apart last month. Rashada ultimately signed anyway and publicly sounded enthused about moving in on campus and learning the offense. Last week’s enrollment delay surrounded contention over the value of a renegotiated NIL deal.

What does this mean for Florida’s quarterback situation?

The Gators recently landed Wisconsin transfer Graham Mertz and have fourth-year sophomore Jack Miller returning. They also have Max Brown, a 2022 signee who redshirted this past season. But Rashada was the high-profile, big-arm talent who was expected to acclimate this spring and push for early playing time.

A commitment from 2024 elite quarterback DJ Lagway helps ease the sting, though Rashada’s departure creates a public relations headache for the football program. It also shines a light on the perils athletic departments face with NIL deals forced to be negotiated by a third party.

“The University of Florida football program is really one of victims in this case,” said a source familiar with the Gator Collective’s dealings.

Required reading

(Photo: James Gilbert/Getty Images)



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Florida could lose top recruit after massive NIL deal creates controversy

The University of Florida could be close to losing a top football recruit after a $13 million NIL deal has caused some controversy. 

Quarterback Jaden Rashada, an All-American from Pittsburg, Calif., is a four-star recruit who signed an NIL deal worth that massive price tag on Nov. 10 with the Gator Collective, reports The Athletic. 

“I would venture to say the Gator Collective is paying more guaranteed money than any group in the country,” Eddie Rojas, a former Gators baseball player and head of the Gator Collective, said in April. “When I write a contract, I want to make sure that we actually have the money in our account.”

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Florida Gators commit Jaden Rashada looks on during the second half of a game between the Florida Gators and the South Carolina Gamecocks at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium on Nov. 12, 2022, in Gainesville, Florida.
(James Gilbert/Getty Images)

It doesn’t appear that Rojas’ group did have that money, as they reneged on the deal with Rashada. The Athletic states that the deal had presumptive support from one of the Gator Collective’s top boosters, Hugh Hathcock, who donated almost $13 million last year. 

But on Dec. 7, Rashada received a letter from Rojas wishing to terminate their deal. While it’s unclear the exact reason why that happened, the Gators’ football program was caught by surprise as they are not allowed to know specifics of NIL deals with players. 

FLORIDA QUARTERBACK DISMISSED FROM TEAM FOLLOWING CHILD PORNOGRAPHY ARREST: REPORTS

Rashada, though, is still a part of the Gators’ recruiting class for 2023, yet there’s still a catch: He hasn’t enrolled yet. 

Early spring enrollment, which is usually what top recruits do to get in the building as quickly as possible to make the transition into college easier, ended on Jan. 13. 

Quarterback Jaden Rashada runs with the ball during the Under Armour Next All-America Game at Camping World Stadium in Orlando, Florida, on Jan. 3, 2023.
(Stephen M. Dowell/Orlando Sentinel/Tribune News Service via Getty Images.)

And while Rashada did indicate last week that he intends to go to Florida, the early-enrollment status still leaves him in limbo. 

Harlen Rashada, Jaden’s father, told 247Sports that he and his son are “working through some things right now with Florida and hoping that they get resolved soon.”

FLORIDA PULLS SCHOLARSHIP FROM TOP QB RECRUIT AFTER VIDEO OF HIM SAYING N-WORD SURFACES

“I just think there’s a high level of trust on both ends there,” Florida head coach Billy Napier said of Rashada when the recruiting class was announced. “I’m really excited about what he’s going to bring to our team. . . . Can’t compliment Jaden enough relative to who he is as a person, as a leader, his character. Jaden is a guy who came here and fell in love with the University of Florida and really connected with a lot of people here. It was sincere.”

Team Speed quarterback Jaden Rashada (5) before the Under Armour Next All-America Football Gameon Jan. 3, 2023, at Camping World Stadium in Orlando, Florida.
(Chris Leduc/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

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Rashada has reportedly been offered a lesser NIL deal than the $13 million – still in the seven-figure range – but litigation could be on the table after the Gator Collective decided to pull the deal. That could only come if he decides not to agree to a new deal. 

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Transfer talk, $5M NIL deals all ‘rumors’

Six months ago, North Carolina redshirt freshman quarterback Drake Maye wasn’t sure if he’d win the starting job at the school. Since then, he has emerged as a projected top NFL draft pick for 2024 and the unwitting face of the free market that has emerged in college football.

In an interview with ESPN on Thursday, Maye reflected on the past few weeks, which included a social media post declaring he was staying at UNC as a way to combat rumors of him entering the transfer portal. Pittsburgh coach Pat Narduzzi stoked the flames by saying this week that two schools offered Maye $5 million to transfer.

“Those rumors weren’t really reality,” he told ESPN. He added: “Pitt’s coach ended up putting that out there. I don’t know what that was about. You have to enter the transfer portal to talk to these schools and hear these offers. For me, I think college football is going to turn into a mess. They’re going to have to do something. There was nothing to me or my family directly offered from any of these other schools. Nothing was said or offered to the Mayes.”

Maye threw for 4,115 yards and 35 touchdowns this year, leading UNC (9-4) to an ACC title game appearance and Holiday Bowl bid.

In the wake of that breakout season, both UNC coach Mack Brown (“a whole lot of money”) and Narduzzi indicated publicly that Maye had big-money offers from other schools. No one has named the schools, but Brown insinuated they were the school’s that typically appear in the recruiting rankings.

Maye agreed to an NIL deal with UNC’s Heels4Life program and denies that he and his family got any offers directly from other schools.

Maye added that he heard of outside interest only “through the grapevine.” He said: “Some people were texting my high school coach about it. That’s mainly what happened, people reached out to some of my representatives and NIL media people.”

Maye’s family has roots burrowed deep into the UNC campus. Both his parents graduated from there and his brother, Luke, hit one of the most famous shots in UNC basketball history in 2017. Drake Maye rooms with another brother, Beau, who is a UNC basketball walk-on.

Maye grew up adoring UNC and said that no other school could give him “that same heartbeat feeling” that UNC does.

“It wouldn’t sit right, especially with all my family…” he said. “Switching it up after everything the Mayes went through wouldn’t represent what the university means to me or how much it means for me to go there. It’d mess up the mojo and all we’ve built there. That Carolina blue is special. There’s no other color in the world that meaningful.”

Maye’s father, Mark Maye, is a former UNC quarterback and worked for UNC football under Mack Brown during his first tenure at the school. Mark Maye said the family never discussed Drake leaving UNC, despite there being “a lot of rumors” of his son entering the NCAA transfer portal.

“North Carolina was where he wanted to be,” Mark Maye told ESPN. “He never mentioned anything, ever, about wanting to see what’s out there or anything like that.”

Maye’s NIL deal with UNC’s Heels4Life program includes monetary incentives and is also expected to have a charitable component. Maye said he has done work locally with the Ronald McDonald House and Table NC, which delivers healthy food to local children. He has interest in doing charity work in his home area of Charlotte.

Graham Boone, the Heels4Life executive director, said that Maye stressed to him that deals be available for his teammates. He said the deal with the Maye was “not a negotiation” but more of an “offer of our committed support to him.”

“We stepped up to the plate to be sure UNC was the best place for him,” Boone said. “We wanted to make sure he had no interest in going anywhere else. Like Coach Brown said, he turned down a lot of money [elsewhere]. That doesn’t mean Heels4Life didn’t step up with a very, very fair amount.”

Maye said that his affinity for UNC won out.

“Sadly, I think money is becoming a reason why kids go places,” he said. “Where I’m playing at and with and for Coach Brown, just that Carolina blue outweighs the money part of it. I don’t think any amount of money from whatever school [would sway me]. Nowadays, people are signing for NIL. It puts a lot of pressure on those kids. If I were to transfer out and go somewhere, it wouldn’t be the same.”

Maye’s return for UNC will mean one of the most hyped seasons in years, as he has a chance to become the program’s first No. 1 overall NFL draft pick. It’s expected that there will be a season-long debate in 2023 between Maye and USC’s Caleb Williams, the returning Heisman Trophy winner, for the NFL draft’s top spot in 2024.

For now, acknowledging there’s potential roster fluidity, UNC projects to return 17 of 22 starters. For Boone and Heels4Life, they see retaining Maye and delivering deals to his teammates as a way to capitalize on the momentum. He pointed out that UNC has “been on the precipice” of being a national program a number of times in history. “Drake represents a renewed interest from our fan base,” he said, “that we can take that last step.”

Maye told ESPN that Brown made him an active part of UNC’s search for a new offensive coordinator after Phil Longo left Chapel Hill for Wisconsin. UNC lured UCF offensive coordinator Chip Lindsey, and Maye said he got on Zooms or phone calls with multiple finalists for the job.

He said that Lindsey is likely to bring aspects of UCF’s run game, which should help bolster UNC’s red zone effectiveness. (UNC ranks No. 58 in the FBS in red zone touchdowns.) He’s excited that Lindsey has worked to develop NFL quarterbacks Jarrett Stidham and Nick Mullens at previous stops at Auburn and Southern Miss.

“It’s been a blast getting to know him,” Maye said. “He seems awesome.”

Maye put out an Instagram post in early December to announce he was returning, a way he said to counter “rumors and speculation” about him leaving. When summing up the past month, he chuckled.

“Really, not that much went down,” he said. “There was speculation and an Instagram post and a head coach said [I] turned down this amount of money that I’d never heard of. That’s basically the gist.”

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Lane Kiffin of Ole Miss Rebels says coach involvement in directing funds, salary cap would help solve current issues with NIL

ATLANTA — Ole Miss football coach Lane Kiffin believes that in an ideal world, there would be an NFL-style system for name, image and likeness in which a head coach or a general manager would have the ability to facilitate funds from collectives and donors, and every program would be held to a salary cap.

But because there’s no salary cap and because coaches can’t be involved in directing NIL funds, Kiffin said, “You’ve got a whole other set of problems.”

“If you got boosters out there deciding who they’re gonna pay to come play and the coach isn’t involved in it, how’s that work?” Kiffin said Monday at SEC media days. “Do they just go pick who they want? … And then when they don’t play, how’s that gonna work out?

“So again, this was not thought out at all, in my opinion. And it’s created a massive set of issues.”

Kiffin has been unafraid to talk about the impact of NIL on recruiting.

On signing day in February, Kiffin joked that Texas A&M, which signed the top class, “was going to incur a luxury tax in how much they paid for their signing class.”

“NIL is the most important thing in the kids’ decision-making process right now,” Kiffin said Monday. “It is. It’s their salary. So that’s for most people, let alone when you’re 17 and a lot of ’em not coming from money.”

Leveraging what Ole Miss’ donors have offered and the appeal of the football program overall, the Rebs have been active in the transfer portal, landing several high-profile players such as former TCU star running back Zach Evans and USC quarterback Jaxson Dart.

“On paper we may look like we should be decent because we filled a lot of holes with transfer portals,” Kiffin said. “… [But] we have to put them all together. It’s a blended family. So that is challenging.

“In fall camp, it should be about teaching X’s and O’s like it always is, but we have a lot of culture work to do that you don’t really have to do as much when it’s established because your best players normally have been in your program for a year or two. So we look forward to that challenge.”

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Alabama football coach Nick Saban says Texas A&M ‘bought every player,’ questions whether current NIL model is sustainable

Alabama coach Nick Saban singled out Texas A&M for “buying” its top-ranked signing class and threw a spotlight on the unintended effect of name, image and likeness rights on recruiting during an event with local business leaders Wednesday night in Birmingham.

“I mean, we were second in recruiting last year,” Saban told the audience. “A&M was first. A&M bought every player on their team — made a deal for name, image, likeness. We didn’t buy one player, all right? But I don’t know if we’re gonna be able to sustain that in the future because more and more people are doing it. It’s tough.”

Saban said Alabama players made $3 million “doing it the right way” last year and that only 25 players were able to leverage NIL opportunities.

He isn’t the first coach to call out the Aggies by name. In February, Ole Miss coach Lane Kiffin quipped, “Texas A&M was going to incur a luxury tax in how much they paid for their signing class.”

That prompted a stern response from Texas A&M coach Jimbo Fisher, a former Saban assistant, during his signing day news conference the following day when he said that coaches spreading rumors about deals promised to recruits were “clown acts” and “irresponsible as hell.”

The problem with NIL, Saban said Wednesday, is “coaches trying to create an advantage for themselves.”

Saban said coaches know how much money is available from their school’s collective — a group of program supporters who pool their resources to offer deals to athletes — and “how much he can promise every player.”

“That’s not what it was supposed to be,” he said. “That’s what it’s become. And that’s the problem in college athletics right now. Now every player is saying, ‘Well, what am I going to get?'”

Saban said people blame the NCAA, “But in defense of the NCAA, we are where we are because of the litigation.”

Last summer, the Supreme Court upheld a lower court ruling that said limiting education-related benefits violated antitrust laws. In the wake of that decision, the NCAA adopted rules that were far less restrictive, including allowing athletes to profit from their name, image and likeness.

NCAA rules prohibit a school or its employees only from paying athletes directly for their NIL rights.

“If the NCAA doesn’t get some protection from litigation, whether we gotta get an antitrust or whatever it is, from a federal government standpoint, this is not going to change because they cannot enforce their rules,” Saban said. “Just like [Alabama basketball coach Nate Oats] said, we have a rule right now that says you cannot use name, image, likeness to entice a player to come to your school.

“Hell, read about it in the paper. I mean, Jackson State paid a guy $1 million last year that was a really good Division I player to come to the school. It was in the paper, and they bragged about it. Nobody did anything about it. I mean, these guys at Miami that are going to play basketball there for $400,000, it’s in the newspaper. The guy tells you how he’s doing it.”

The Jackson State player Saban was referring to is Travis Hunter, a five-star prospect who flipped his commitment from Florida State and signed with the HBCU program during the early signing period in December. Jackson State coach Deion Sanders denied the rumor that Hunter had been offered more than $1 million.

Sanders responded strongly to Saban’s comments Wednesday night, tweeting: “You best believe I will address that LIE Coach SABAN told tomorrow. I was & awakened by my son @ShedeurSanders that sent me the article stating that WE PAYED @TravisHunterJr a Million to play at @GoJSUTigersFB! We as a PEOPLE don’t have to pay our PEOPLE to play with our PEOPLE.”

Saban’s comments on Miami referred to former Kansas State men’s basketball player Nijel Pack, who transferred to the Hurricanes in April. Shortly after, it was announced that he signed a two-year, $400,000 NIL deal with Florida-based health tech company LifeWallet.

Saban said he has told players that they will all get the same opportunities from Alabama’s collective but made the distinction that, “You can go earn however much you want.”

“I tell the recruits the same thing: Our job is not to buy you to come to school here,” he said. “And I don’t know how you manage your locker room. And I don’t know if this is a sustainable model.”



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