Maryland basketball’s former NIL director disagrees with claims by a former player’s parents that he wasn’t paid what he was owed by the school’s NIL management company, Blueprint Sports. Turtle NIL founder Harry Geller, who negotiated Ja’Kobi Gillespie’s contract on Maryland’s behalf, said Gillespie isn’t owed the roughly $100,000 his father claims he’s owed.
The Gillespies are pursuing legal action to recoup the money.
“Here are the facts as I remember them. I was actively involved in the whole process. Foreseeing that the NIL money would reach a peak this offseason due to the House Settlement, I put a clause in every player’s contract that said, to paraphrase, ‘If you enter the transfer portal and transfer, all payments will cease.’ This was done mainly because the players were compensated to do charitable works, and a lot of the events took place in the offseason. So it was a year-round commitment,” Geller told InsideMDSports.
“It was always explained to the Gillispie family that if they transferred, the payments would stop, as it’s a year-round commitment.”
“When BluePrint (BPS) took over, all contracts were transferred to them and rewritten. The clause about transferring was not in Jakobi’s contract, but was in all the other 12 contracts. It has not been explained to me why one was omitted. Regardless, there is strong language in the BPS contract referring to the consequences of transferring that Ja’Kobi agreed to.”
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Earlier Monday, Gillespie’s father was quoted in a Baltimore Sun article saying Maryland still owed his son for two months’ worth of payments, framing it s proof Maryland was NIL-poor like former coach Kevin Willard said.
“When Willard left, they pretty much quit paying all the players … We’re fighting that right now. There were players that did get their money and players that didn’t and are still fighting for it. It kinda makes it look like Willard was right. Maybe they don’t have the money,” Byron Gillespie said.
Gillespie’s one season at Maryland was a valuable springboard for his career. He was one of Maryland’s best players, earning second-team all-Big Ten honors after averaging 14.7 points and 4.8 assists per game on 45.3 percent shooting overall and 40.7 percent from three. Along with raising his profile nationally and earning about $500,000, he played it into a return trip to his native Tennessee to play for the Volunteers for what’s been said to be in the $2 million range.
“Why he is even pursuing this is beyond me. He was given a great opportunity to shine by Kevin, made the most of it with his talent and hard work, and leveraged that into what has been reported as a four-to-five-times payday from the previous year,” Geller said.
“Ja’Kobi signed the Turtle NIL contract with this clause in it … We executed scores of contracts during the Turtle NIL era with no complaints from anyone.”
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