I assume it's legal, or this Jack Sawyer kid is a pretty big idiotWould giving him a truck for a signature or commercial not be legal NIL?
Probably is. My dad knew the dealer that loaned cars to the Atlanta Braves years ago.Wonder if it’s a lease. Seems to me the dealership would save more money and accomplish the same thing with a lease
Not anymore. All they have to say is that they gave him the truck as an advertising campaign and its perfectly legal now. Paying players is just legal now as long as you aren't literally handing them cash to commit (although who would need to do that when you can just hand them cash to "advertise" on twitter)I am sure he just means thanks for the great deal on the truck they sold him😂
I think that's not a bad way to go.Wonder if it’s a lease. Seems to me the dealership would save more money and accomplish the same thing with a lease
Not anymore. All they have to say is that they gave him the truck as an advertising campaign and its perfectly legal now. Paying players is just legal now as long as you aren't literally handing them cash to commit (although who would need to do that when you can just hand them cash to "advertise" on twitter)
Jim Hudson is in the Gamecock club.Come on Love Chevrolet. Step up!
If we dont get in on NIL in a big way, we havent even seen the kind of wilderness we're gonna see. Forget about losing top recruits to other programs, we are liable to start losing our best underclassmen to the programs that know how to pay them the big bucks.If we don't get into this game called NIL and play it very smartly, we are going to continue to wonder in the wilderness.
Ok, Moses 😆If we don't get into this game called NIL and play it very smartly, we are going to continue to wonder in the wilderness.
If they have enough Twitter followers to make their endorsement, otherwise it's pay for play, but I think it'll take a while for the NCAA to learn which way is up and start policing it.Would giving him a truck for a signature or commercial not be legal NIL?
If they have enough Twitter followers to make their endorsement, otherwise it's pay for play, but I think it'll take a while for the NCAA to learn which way is up and start policing it.
You can actually evaluate what someone's public profile is worth based upon name recognition and social media following. The language of NIL clarifies that you can't profit from football beyond scholarship and cost of attendance stipends. What you are selling in NIL is your clout, if no one cares who you are, you have none to sell. Some of these deals clearly cross that and in language that's not legal. We'll either see enforcement or we'll see all regulation stop.The ncaa went to court for limiting what a layer can make off NIL which was $0. Now you are asking them to do the exact same thing. That will never happen. What value