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NIL, Transfers, and Stratospheric Salaries. What Is the Future of GT Football and College Football in General?
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<blockquote data-quote="slugboy" data-source="post: 941480" data-attributes="member: 282"><p>There are plenty of employment contracts that prohibit or severely limit outside income in a company’s area—“no side gigs”. Like, you can’t work for a plumbing company and also do plumbing projects on the side. </p><p></p><p></p><p>Yes, because the players were <em>uncompensated</em>. If you compensate the players, you can attach strings to that compensation. It has to be fair compensation. You can’t give a player free meals and claim that’s compensation for something worth millions of dollars, but reasonable compensation is fine. </p><p></p><p>If you’ve taken a salary, you’ve been paid money to make your employer far more money. You probably wouldn’t have to look hard to find someone on a $50k salary that’s making millions for their employer, so “reasonable compensation” can be pretty elastic. And, the employer can say “no moonlighting”, and many or most employment contracts do say “no moonlighting”.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="slugboy, post: 941480, member: 282"] There are plenty of employment contracts that prohibit or severely limit outside income in a company’s area—“no side gigs”. Like, you can’t work for a plumbing company and also do plumbing projects on the side. Yes, because the players were [I]uncompensated[/I]. If you compensate the players, you can attach strings to that compensation. It has to be fair compensation. You can’t give a player free meals and claim that’s compensation for something worth millions of dollars, but reasonable compensation is fine. If you’ve taken a salary, you’ve been paid money to make your employer far more money. You probably wouldn’t have to look hard to find someone on a $50k salary that’s making millions for their employer, so “reasonable compensation” can be pretty elastic. And, the employer can say “no moonlighting”, and many or most employment contracts do say “no moonlighting”. [/QUOTE]
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NIL, Transfers, and Stratospheric Salaries. What Is the Future of GT Football and College Football in General?
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