MtnWasp
Helluva Engineer
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Subsequent to the Ed O'Bannon case, the NCAA has no legal basis to limit player income based on NIL. NIL funds are not coming from any NCAA entity and is merely a contract between the player and an outside party so that the NCAA nor it's members can deny a player that income and expect it to hold-up in court.This quuoted post ought to be in a football thread, but I believe the ACC has to establish some hard rules that address the pay for play situations. Wong is clearly saying he is not happy with his contract and wants to renotiate or he isn't playing for Miami. How is this different from an NFL WR not showing up for camp until he gets an extension?
The market is the wild west now but it will settle out at some point. the question is what damage will be done before that takes place.
The first thing that has to happen is for NCAA members break into two separate entities, the small budget programs that will continue the traditional student-athlete model and then the semi-pro programs, mostly the SEC & BIG programs who are really the only players where NIL has a sustainable future.
After that, the semi-pro program league will organize their market the same way as any other professional sport: the players will unionize and order will be established through collective bargaining.