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Sign Up Now!NCAA has been completely nuetured by the courts and they don’t have the money to continue to fight the lawsuits so what are they supposed to do? They don’t have nearly the amount of money as a lot of people think they do. They make $0 from football. Somewhere around 85-90% of their annual revenue is from selling tv rights for March madness and most of that money goes back to member schools.Yeah I don't think it really matters at all, but it's just more evidence that the NCAA will do almost anything to avoid working on their actual problems
I guess I'd like to see more public pressure to cut down on tampering. As far as I can tell they haven't really said anything despite coaches begging for things to get done in that spaceNCAA has been completely nuetured by the courts and they don’t have the money to continue to fight the lawsuits so what are they supposed to do? They don’t have nearly the amount of money as a lot of people think they do. They make $0 from football. Somewhere around 85-90% of their annual revenue is from selling tv rights for March madness and most of that money goes back to member schools.
Agree. This is pretty much a nothing burger.The article makes it clear they aren't eliminating the principles underlying the NLI but will instead incorporate them in a standard athletic aid offer. The change is less than the headline implies.
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Probably the 1984 lawsuit filed by Oklahoma & Georgia, which broke the "stranglehold" that the NCAA placed on member institutions with respect to their broadcast TV rights. If you haven't heard of it before, you can find the details by searching "NCAA vs. Oklahoma Board of Trustees".What is the history of why the NCAA get rights to sell the TV rights for basketball, but not everything? It seems like it would be an all or nothing type thing.
Agree. This is pretty much a nothing burger.
Under the new, non-NLI, system:
• There will still be two football signing periods, this year on Dec. 4 and Feb. 5. So no change here.
• Players will still sign a document that binds them to a school (and vice versa.) Instead of this document being called a "National Letter of Intent," it is now a "financial aid agreement and revenue share contract."
• A player can only sign paperwork with one school.
• Once a player signs with a school, they cannot be recruited by another school and communicatiosn with other schools must cease.
From what I can tell, it appears nothing has really changed except the document the players are signing to commit themselves to a school. All the framwork and rules we are familiar witih regarding signing an NLI appear to still be in place.