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Nico Iamaleava's Holdout Is a Product of Tennessee's Own Making

On February 13, 2024, Tennessee attorney general Jonathan Skrmetti issued a chest-thumping statement outside a courthouse in Greeneville, Tenn. Skrmetti was legally challenging the NCAA on behalf of the Tennessee Volunteers, and specifically on behalf of quarterback Nico Iamaleava. “It’s a wonderful day to fight on behalf of our student-athletes in Tennessee; they are the […]

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Nico Iamaleava's Holdout Is a Product of Tennessee's Own Making

On February 13, 2024, Tennessee attorney general Jonathan Skrmetti issued a chest-thumping statement outside a courthouse in Greeneville, Tenn. Skrmetti was legally challenging the NCAA on behalf of the Tennessee Volunteers, and specifically on behalf of quarterback Nico Iamaleava.

“It’s a wonderful day to fight on behalf of our student-athletes in Tennessee; they are the backbone of college sports,” Skrmetti said. “Due to the NCAA’s arbitrary and illegal rules, student-athletes are being harmed and prevented from making important decisions concerning their name, image, and likeness rights—which may have a big impact on their academic and financial futures. Meanwhile, everybody else involved in college sports is getting rich at those student-athletes’ expense. That is not legal, not right and it needs to change.”

The noble cause, which so galvanized Tennessee fans that they had to be discouraged from flocking to the courthouse to apply pressure against the terrible NCAA, was to prevent allegations of wrongdoing and subsequent sanctions for the cash-based recruitment of Iamaleava (among other athletes). The school and the entire state caped up on behalf of their star quarterback from California, who agreed to a reported $8 million deal over the life of his college career to play for the Vols.

Fourteen months later, the empowerment of Iamaleava to flex his money-making muscles might be coming back to bite Big Orange. In a reap-what-you-sow moment of the highest order, Tennessee might now be fighting against Iamaleava, not on behalf of him. 

According to multiple media reports, Iamaleava has embarked upon what could be called a work stoppage. We’ll see how far it goes.

The starting QB did not attend Tennessee’s spring practice Friday, which was an unexpected development for the coaching staff. Iamaleava reportedly wants a new NIL deal, and this could be construed as evidence that he’s serious about using his leverage in negotiating with Spyre Sports, the primary Tennessee collective.

Has Mr. Skrmetti weighed in on The Holdout yet? Quite a few fans have. The #FreeNico spirit of 2024 seems to be in short supply now.

Saturday is the Vols’ spring game. If Iamaleava declines to participate in that as well, the situation escalates. The NCAA transfer portal spring window opens next Wednesday, and the market has changed since Iamaleava signed that whopper deal.

The Duke Blue Devils, of all programs, landed Tulane Green Wave transfer quarterback Darian Mensah for what has been reported as a $4 million deal. Georgia Bulldogs transfer Carson Beck went to the Miami Hurricanes for a reported $4 million-plus. (It is worth noting that the NIL world is opaque and full of folklore, so you can believe whatever you want to believe.)

Iamaleava might be looking at the landscape and suddenly thinking he’s underpaid. And there might well be another school willing to give him a raise to leave Knoxville. And given the flimsiness of the current NIL deals in terms of tying an athlete to a school, there isn’t much stopping him from bailing. (NCAA rules prohibiting unlimited transfers are another thing the Tennessee attorney general, and many of his colleagues from other states, fought to strike down.) 

So Tennessee’s virtuous act of athlete empowerment is now a double-edged sword being wielded by a quarterback who, frankly, has only been pretty good so far. In his first season as a starter, Iamaleava was tied for seventh in the 16-team SEC and tied for 32nd nationally in pass efficiency last year with a rating of 145.34. He was 11th in the SEC and 63rd nationally in total offense. He had fewer than 200 yards total offense in five games, including all the Vols’ losses during a 10–3 season.

Are those the numbers of a $2 million college player who deserves a raise? That depends on what the market is willing to bear, and right now, the market is silly.

We are in the Drunken Sailor Spending Spree Era, with schools rushing to get big deals done before the House vs. NCAA case settlement is ratified and goes into effect later this year. That new world order could have a chilling effect on both the money being spent and the complete lack of regulatory oversight, so the going rates are quite high at present.

But a rare (and very public) holdout by a college athlete is going to be met with considerable backlash. It’s a bad look for everyone: Iamaleava; a collective that has been touted as the cutting edge in the NIL world; a coaching staff trying to unify the locker room; and a boisterous fan base that embraced situational outrage on behalf of this very QB all of a year ago.

There are only three ways this ends well:

Many college fans still haven’t come to grips with the idea of athletes being paid. Many more dislike the constant transferring in search of a buck. And the number of fans who will serenely accept an actual holdout is smaller still.

This is why enforceable binding contracts would be in the best interest of the schools and college sports in general. But with that concept probably comes employment status, and if there is one thing college leaders are deathly afraid of, it’s that.

So, in the gray area created with the assistance of people like the attorney general of Tennessee, the quarterback the courts empowered just might become the quarterback who holds a program hostage.

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Quinn Ewers Bet on NFL Over NIL—and Left Millions on the Table

Quinn Ewers Bet on NFL Over NIL—and Left Millions on the Table Privacy Manager Link 5

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Arizona Western College has 14 soccer players sign letters of intent

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA, KECY) – Arizona Western College had a big signing day as 14 players from the men’s soccer team signed letters of intent to continue playing at the collegiate level. Half of those are playing at the Division I level, while the rest are either playing Division II or the NAIA. Below is […]

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Arizona Western College has 14 soccer players sign letters of intent

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA, KECY) – Arizona Western College had a big signing day as 14 players from the men’s soccer team signed letters of intent to continue playing at the collegiate level.

Half of those are playing at the Division I level, while the rest are either playing Division II or the NAIA.

Below is a list of the players:

  • Hiromasa Iwai – Radford University
  • Nael Redjam – Radford University
  • Diogo Silvestre – Mid-America Christian University
  • Fernando Carvalho – Emmanuel University
  • Jacob Quintana – St. Mary of the Woods College
  • Tupo Kyumba – Grand Canyon University
  • Haruto Horii – Withrop University
  • Luis Munoz Valencia – Arizona Christian University
  • Saneyuki Yamagat – Eastern Illinois University
  • Yves Sisse – Daemen University
  • Ebenezer Laryea – Oral Roberts University

One of those players is Yuma local and Cibola graduate Jacob Quintana, who is moving on to the NAIA level at St. Mary of the Woods College.

He shares what it meant to be apart of this squad for the previous two years.

“You know it meant a lot to me being the only guy from Yuma to play here as well and one of the only two players to play here as well,” Quintana said.

AWC head coach Kenny Dale explains how his goal is more than just winning championships.

“It doesn’t really matter in terms of a life experience moving on to a university and getting a bachelor’s degree and maybe an advanced degree is really more important than that,” said Dale.

Others players expressed their gratitude to the local college.

“The community, the people, you will always be in my heart, becuase it was always the start to a beautiful journey and my next college you got the good one the real one, I’m coming,” said Yves Sisse, who will be studying Criminal Justice at Daemen University.

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Federal judge tosses NIL lawsuit against NCAA brought by ex-college basketball players

A federal judge dismissed an antitrust lawsuit Monday that had been brought against the NCAA by several former college basketball players, including Kansas standout Mario Chalmers, after ruling its claims fell outside the four-year statute of limitations. The lawsuit, which included 16 total players who played before June 16, 2016, claimed that the NCAA had […]

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A federal judge dismissed an antitrust lawsuit Monday that had been brought against the NCAA by several former college basketball players, including Kansas standout Mario Chalmers, after ruling its claims fell outside the four-year statute of limitations.

The lawsuit, which included 16 total players who played before June 16, 2016, claimed that the NCAA had enriched itself by utilizing their names, images and likenesses to promote its men’s basketball tournament. That date in 2016 is the earliest date for players to be included in the House v. NCAA antitrust settlement awaiting final approval from a federal judge.

U.S. District Judge Paul Engelmayer pointed toward a four-year statute of limitations for federal antitrust violations, despite the lawsuit contending that the law continues to be breached by the NCAA’s use of the players’ NIL in March Madness promotions.

Chalmers famously hit a tying 3-pointer with 2.1 seconds left for Kansas in the 2008 title game against Memphis, a highlight that remains a staple of NCAA Tournament packages. The Jayhawks went on to win the championship in overtime.

“The NCAA’s use today of a NIL acquired decades ago as the fruit of an antitrust violation does not constitute a new overt act restarting the limitations clock,” Engelmayer wrote in the 34-page decision. “Instead, as the NCAA argues, the contemporary use of a NIL reflects performance of an aged agreement: a contract between the student-athlete and the NCAA under which it acquired footage and images of the plaintiff.”

[Related: NCAA passes rules to prepare schools to pay players directly]

Engelmayer also noted that the plaintiffs were part of the class in O’Bannon v. NCAA, the 2015 case that helped to usher in the age of NIL payments so the lawsuit was not demonstrably different from other settled cases involving the athletes.

There are a number of other active suits filed against the NCAA on similar antitrust and NIL grounds. Former Villanova Wildcat Kris Jenkins, whose buzzer-beating 3-pointer won the 2016 men’s national championship against North Carolina, filed one earlier in April on his own rather than joining one of the existing suits. As he told ESPN, “I feel like it’s different from those [lawsuits], and the NCAA has shown that it is different from a lot of other things that have happened in the past just because of the magnitude of the situation, the shot, the financial gains for the NCAA and the unlawful rules that they had in place that prohibited all of us from being able to benefit.”

The key to Jenkins’ case – that buzzer-beater that Villanova and the NCAA profited from – occurred two months before the June 16, 2016 cutoff that had the suit of Chalmers et al dismissed. However, Jenkins also played during the 2016-2017 season for Villanova as a senior: whether another judge will echo Engelmayer and say this was all part of an “aged agreement,” or that it’s indeed a different case, remains to be seen.

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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Patriot soccer player Evans signs college scholarship

Henry County High School soccer standout Gavin Evans has signed scholarship papers with Kentucky Christian University. A goaltender, Evans has been on the Patriot soccer team for four years, making the All-District team as a junior and the All-District Tournament team as a sophomore. He ranked in the top 50 in saves in the state. […]

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Patriot soccer player Evans signs college scholarship

Henry County High School soccer standout Gavin Evans has signed scholarship papers with Kentucky Christian University. A goaltender, Evans has been on the Patriot soccer team for four years, making the All-District team as a junior and the All-District Tournament team as a sophomore. He ranked in the top 50 in saves in the state. “Soccer has not only improved my skills but also strengthened my character, showing me the power of teamwork, loyalty and perseverance,” Evans said. He plans to major in business at KCU, which is located in Grayson, Ky., northeast of Lexington. Pictured are (from left) KCU assistant coach Caleb DuBois (standing), his grandmother Pat Lewis, his mother Amber Harris, Evans, his father Brian Harris and KCU head coach Jeremy Miller.

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NIL Crowdfunding Platform Fanstake Delivers College Athletes Cash

Fanstake recently raised $6.25 million in seed funding to continue building a platform that lets college sports fans crowdfund potential NIL payouts as a way to entice athletes to attend their school. College sports’ future financial structure remains uncertain as legal proceedings and legislative discussion continue amid the teardown of existing NCAA oversight. But regardless […]

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Fanstake recently raised $6.25 million in seed funding to continue building a platform that lets college sports fans crowdfund potential NIL payouts as a way to entice athletes to attend their school.

College sports’ future financial structure remains uncertain as legal proceedings and legislative discussion continue amid the teardown of existing NCAA oversight. But regardless of upcoming changes, Fanstake CEO Greg Glass foresees schools needing to find new revenue sources to pay their players and fund their athletic programs, one way or another.

“The biggest thing for us was, how do you expand that donor base? Because today it’s just the high net worth, affluent alumni that are contributing,” Glass said. “Can you tap into the fanatical fan base beyond that?”

Courtside Ventures led the latest funding round, with participation from Will Ventures, Susa Ventures, Scrum Ventures, Myriad Ventures, Alumni Ventures and others. Fanstake previously raised a $3 million pre-seed round.

Fanstake has created pages for hundreds of athletes already, including all Division I football and men’s and women’s basketball players, where fans can pool financial offers contingent on a given player choosing to attend—or stay at—a certain school. For example, Louisville backers offered a combined $88,000 to Fanstake ambassador Nate Ament as the basketball recruit chose his destination. Ament ultimately signed with Tennessee; Volunteer Fanstakers had contributed $13,405, which Ament will receive in exchange for promoting Fanstake online.

Fanstake returns unsuccessfully staked money as account credits for future opportunities. Glass says about 18,000 users to date have combined to offer nearly $500,000 combined.

In the next phase of development, Fanstake is adding gamification elements, such as rewards that accrue as users offer players more money. 

“We are focused on athletes getting fair market value as much as they possibly can get,” Glass said. “Getting the fans the ability to participate in a way where it’s engaging and fun for them ends up helping the schools.”

For Courtside Ventures, the investment is its first directly NIL-related play.

“We’ve been spending a good part of four years now looking at the NIL space and no exaggeration have probably looked at just about 100 different opportunities,” Courtside Ventures principal Cort Post said. “It was not until this one where we just, we kind of jumped on the opportunity of finally something that we felt could be venture scale.” 

Post added that Courtside took comfort in Fanstake executives’ experience. Glass, along with Fanstake co-founders Alex Boisvert and Donnie Flood, previously led adtech company Bizo, which was acquired by LinkedIn in 2014 for $175 million.

“I don’t have a perfect answer for exactly what Fanstake will look like in the future compared to kind of their beachhead today, but we get comfortable with that,” Post said. “If you pair the right founder with the right market and enough disruption, they’re gonna figure something out that works.”



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The Next NIL Powerhouse – Shaq Is Becoming The GM Of Sacramento State Basketball, Will ‘Assist’ Mike Bibby With Recruiting And NIL Deals

Look at Sacramento State, man. They are trying their absolute hardest to get into a major conference, they are throwing money into athletics and making hires like Mike Bibby for basketball:  They then go and get Shaq to be the GM. That’s just smart business. There’s not a man on this planet who will do […]

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Look at Sacramento State, man. They are trying their absolute hardest to get into a major conference, they are throwing money into athletics and making hires like Mike Bibby for basketball: 

They then go and get Shaq to be the GM. That’s just smart business. There’s not a man on this planet who will do an ad deal faster than Shaq. Doesn’t matter what, he’s on every commercial just raking in money. Now you get him assisting with brand deals, NIL deals, recruiting, that’s how you become a powerhouse in the mid-major world. I say that loosely, because, well, Sacramento State simply doesn’t win. 

What they should do is simple though. Load up on former NBA players kids. You already got Shaq’s son there. They should reach out to every single player they played with, see if they want some sort of role and make Sacramento State NBA university. Why not? You’re Sacramento State. It’s not like you’re competing for titles, go outside the box with it. Hell, just run back the 90s Kings and see what their kids are up to. That team fucking ruled.

Rocky Widner. Getty Images.

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Yeah, I know Peja’s kid just committed to Illinois. Hard to beat that out when Illinois is becoming a Balkan empire and you got Brad Underwood doing this: 

It does feel weird seeing a Lakers star help a former Kings star. I know it was back in the day, but those teams shouldn’t be helping each other. I don’t care that Shaq and Bibby played for a combined 12 teams, I think of them as a King and Laker. All I know is they got me thinking about Sacramento State, so it’s already a win for them. Just send Shaq out on recruiting trips like it’s Blue Chips all over again. The man was made to be in this role for college basketball and just remember: 



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