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Texas Tech’s Rise as the Big 12’s New Flagbearer in the NIL Era

Share Tweet Share Share Email College athletics isn’t just changing—it’s being overhauled. With NIL now fully embedded in the ecosystem and the House v. NCAA settlement looming, the old guard of amateurism is long gone. We’re entering a new era—one where revenue sharing, player compensation, and collective bargaining aren’t fringe hypotheticals; they’re the foundation. For […]

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College athletics isn’t just changing—it’s being overhauled. With NIL now fully embedded in the ecosystem and the House v. NCAA settlement looming, the old guard of amateurism is long gone. We’re entering a new era—one where revenue sharing, player compensation, and collective bargaining aren’t fringe hypotheticals; they’re the foundation.

For most programs, this kind of disruption feels like a tidal wave. But for a select few, it’s an opportunity.

Nowhere is that more apparent than in the Big 12. The league, freshly abandoned by Texas and Oklahoma, finds itself searching for a flagship. The SEC has a red carpet of blue bloods: Alabama, Georgia, LSU, and now the Longhorns and Sooners. The Big Ten boasts brands like Ohio State, Michigan, and Penn State—programs with institutional clout and generational staying power. But the Big 12? It’s a collection of gritty, often-overlooked contenders fighting to matter on a national scale.

 

That’s where Texas Tech enters the chat. The Red Raiders aren’t just reacting to the NIL era—they’re thriving in it. And as the landscape of college sports resets, the folks in Lubbock might be the league’s best shot at a new-era standard bearer. A knight in shining armor—but not in the traditional sense—built on timing, ambition, and a checkbook that remains open.

Leadership Over Dollars: Why Intent Drives Texas Tech’s NIL Strategy

What separates Texas Tech isn’t just the money—it’s the intention behind it. NIL isn’t a side hustle in Lubbock—it’s the model.

That foundation starts with The Matador Club, a well-organized, well-funded NIL collective that has operated with clarity from day one. But the muscle behind it is Cody Campbell, the former Tech lineman turned energy mogul who’s become one of the most influential figures in college athletics. His recent invitation to co-chair President Trump’s proposed “Commission on College Sports” wasn’t a surprise for those paying attention—even if the commission never came to fruition. The ask alone spoke volumes. Campbell doesn’t just write checks—he writes the playbook.

It’s why Tech led the nation in NIL-driven spending during the 2025 football transfer portal cycle, outpacing even SEC programs desperate to patch holes. Joey McGuire’s staff didn’t just land names—they landed starters. Difference-makers. Players who picked Lubbock over bigger markets and flashier brands did so because the vision was clear and the compensation was real.

Portal Power: How Texas Tech Built the Top Transfer Class in 2025

While the Red Raiders have long flirted with relevance, what they’ve built under Joey McGuire in the NIL era is something entirely different: sustainable power through the portal. No program in the country—not in the SEC, not in the Big Ten—landed a better 2025 transfer class. Not one.

Texas Tech outspent virtually everyone.

But this wasn’t a desperate arms race. It was targeted, methodical roster construction. McGuire and his staff didn’t just hunt for names—they evaluated need, character, and scheme fit. Then they closed the deals. Not with empty promises, but with structure and financial backing that actually delivers. That approach has brought top-tier talent to Lubbock across every position group, from blue-chip edge rushers to Power Five-tested offensive linemen and skill talent.

 

The result? A roster deeper and more complete than any Texas Tech has fielded in the modern era. There’s real buzz now—not just inside the facility, but across the league. Because when you combine elite evaluation with NIL muscle, you don’t just reload. You leapfrog.

NiJaree Canady and the NIL Blueprint for Softball Dominance

Softball might be the clearest lens through which to see just how transformative NIL can be when wielded with vision.

When NiJaree Canady entered the transfer portal, she was already the most dominant pitcher in the country—a generational talent with All-American honors, a Pac-12 title, and a reputation for rewriting stat sheets. What she didn’t have yet was a seven-figure NIL deal or a platform willing to build around her.

Texas Tech gave her both.

The Red Raiders didn’t just land Canady—they built a championship program around her. And the results? Historic.

In her first season in Lubbock, Tech tore through the Big 12, winning its first-ever regular-season title and backing it up with the program’s first conference tournament crown. They swept their regional, dominated their super regional, and this week, they’re headed to their first Women’s College World Series Championship Series after knocking off four-time defending national champion Oklahoma—a feat that, until now, bordered on unthinkable.

Canady didn’t just anchor the team; she raised its ceiling. Her presence elevated the expectations, the recruiting, and the national profile of the entire program. She’s the most valuable NIL investment in women’s college sports—not just because of what she costs, but because of what she delivers.

And the best part? She chose Texas Tech over the sport’s traditional powerhouses. Over legacy. Over location. Because in this new era, belief backed by investment wins. And nobody’s doing that better than the Red Raiders.

 

Basketball Buy-In: How McCasland Turned Tech Into a Big 12 Threat

Success in one sport doesn’t always translate across an athletic department. But in Lubbock, the standard Canady set in the circle has rippled far beyond the softball field.

Just ask Grant McCasland.

Texas Tech men’s basketball is now one of the most well-positioned programs in the country—not because of blue-blood cachet or NBA draft pipelines, but because of the same NIL-first strategy that brought Canady to town. McCasland’s second season was a masterclass in portal construction and program cohesion. He brought in impact transfers—including Big 12 Player of the Year JT Toppin—kept key pieces in the fold, and coached the Red Raiders to their first Elite Eight appearance since 2019.

The blueprint wasn’t complicated: recruit players who fit the culture, pay them what they’re worth, and build something they want to stick around for. In a league where programs like Kansas, Baylor, and Houston are constantly reshuffling their decks, Tech has managed to build—and retain—depth.

That kind of continuity is rare now. But at Texas Tech, it’s becoming the brand.

The Architect: Cody Campbell’s Vision Is Reshaping College Sports

Of course, none of this happens without leadership—and Texas Tech’s advantage there might be its most underrated weapon.

Cody Campbell isn’t just a donor. He’s the architect.

A former Red Raider offensive lineman turned West Texas energy magnate, Campbell has been the driving force behind Texas Tech’s NIL rise since Day 1. He co-founded The Matador Club, established sustainable NIL pipelines across multiple sports, and reimagined what athletic fundraising looks like in Lubbock.

Now, he’s doing it on the national stage.

Last month, Campbell was invited to co-chair a proposed commission on the future of college sports—a move that, despite the commission not launching, underscored his growing influence. That’s not a footnote. That’s a headline. And it speaks volumes about where Texas Tech now sits in the national conversation.

Campbell will help shape federal NIL legislation, compliance frameworks, and revenue-sharing models for the next generation of athletes. And you can bet his vision—athlete-first, donor-driven, and unapologetically aggressive—will reflect the same blueprint he’s already put to work in Lubbock.

Simply put: while other programs are bracing for change, Texas Tech is writing the change.

This is what the future of college athletics looks like—and Texas Tech isn’t just keeping up, it’s setting the pace.

In a Big 12 without its traditional anchors, someone has to lead. The league doesn’t have a built-in blue blood—no Ohio State or Alabama to lean on. What it has is a vacuum. And in this new age of NIL, the schools best positioned to fill that vacuum aren’t the ones with the prettiest history books. They’re the ones with alignment, infrastructure, and ambition.

That’s Texas Tech.

From softball dominance to basketball retention to football roster reconstruction, the Red Raiders have shown they’re willing to invest at a level few can match. And with Cody Campbell shaping the very policies that will define the next decade of college sports, Tech isn’t just ahead of the curve—they are the curve.





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Texas Tech hoping big money and top transfers lead to unprecedented payback in football

FRISCO, Texas — Texas Tech coach Joey McGuire had already completed his portion of Big 12 football media days when Colorado’s Deion Sanders was asked if he has been paying attention to what the Red Raiders did in the transfer portal. The gist of that question was really about all the money for Texas Tech […]

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FRISCO, Texas — Texas Tech coach Joey McGuire had already completed his portion of Big 12 football media days when Colorado’s Deion Sanders was asked if he has been paying attention to what the Red Raiders did in the transfer portal.

The gist of that question was really about all the money for Texas Tech athletes, which is widely reported to be around $55 million for the upcoming school year. A significant chunk of that is expected to go toward the transformation of a football program that has never won a Big 12 title or even had a 10-win season since 2008, six years before three-time Super Bowl champion quarterback Patrick Mahomes played his first game for the Red Raiders.

“Yeah, Joey got some money. Joey, where you at, baby? Spending that money, I love it,” Sanders said emphatically about the fellow Big 12 coach he calls a friend, and who coached two of his three sons in high school. “I love you, man. I appreciate you. Can you send a few of those dollars to us so we can get some of those players too?”

The reported dollar figures are staggering, even in these early days of schools being able to pay athletes directly. That total supposedly includes the maximum $20.5 million of revenue each school can share with players under the NCAA’s landmark House settlement that took effect this month, meaning the rest would come through name, image and likeness deals.

Red Raiders spending big

Last fall, Texas Tech said it was budgeting $14.7 million for the fiscal year — about $9 million more than the previous year — in support for the athletic program, which had a budget of nearly $129 million. The headlines started to come soon after.

Tech’s softball team had never won a Big 12 regular-season or tournament championship before standout pitcher NiJaree Canady arrived last year in Lubbock with a NIL deal that made her the first $1 million softball player.

With Canady, who had been to the previous two Women’s College World Series with Stanford, the Red Raiders won both of those league titles and got all the way to the final game of this year’s WCWS before losing to rival Texas.

Texas Tech head coach Joey McGuire speaks during Big 12...

Texas Tech head coach Joey McGuire speaks during Big 12 NCAA college football media days in Frisco, Texas, Tuesday, July 8, 2025. Credit: AP

Canady has already signed a similar NIL deal for next season. Tech also added three top transfers: Florida second baseman Mia Williams; two-time 20-game winner Kaitlyn Terry from UCLA; and Missouri Valley Conference player of the year Jackie Lis, an infielder from Southern Illinois.

Along with all the money spent on players, Texas Tech this spring unveiled a $240 million football complex at Jones AT&T Stadium, where Cody Campbell Field is named after the former offensive lineman who made a $25 million donation to the project.

Campbell’s financial impact on the program goes well beyond that. He is chairman of the school’s Board of Regents, a billionaire who with his oil and gas partner John Sellers co-founded The Matador Club, the school’s NIL collective that is now under the umbrella of the athletic department’s Red Raider Club. Sellers and Campbell earlier this year sold some subsidies of an oil and natural gas company for about $4 billion.

Last week, Campbell announced the launch of a nonprofit called Saving College Sports to help solve a “crisis” as the industry “faces an existential turning point as legal, governance and economic challenges threaten” hundreds of thousands of athletes, fandom and the economies of campus communities.

Texas Tech linebacker Jacob Rodriguez (10) during an NCAA football...

Texas Tech linebacker Jacob Rodriguez (10) during an NCAA football game against Arizona, on Oct. 5, 2024, in Tucson, Ariz. Credit: AP

On the gridiron

The Texas Tech men’s basketball program has four Sweet 16 appearances since 2018, including a run to the national title game in 2019. But the big moneymaker for all programs is football and the Red Raiders will find out this fall if a big financial commitment to those players will get them into the 12-team College Football Playoff.

Texas Tech brought in 22 football transfers in what many consider a top national portal class. Most are highly touted players, with about half expected to be starters and most of the others impact players on a team already with several key returners after going 8-5 last year in McGuire’s third season.

“Yeah, it’s been a fun offseason,” McGuire said before Sanders took the podium. “We were really aggressive whenever it came to the portal and meeting some of our needs for the football team. … I think this conference is really strong. There’s a lot of teams that have some big opportunities this year to really make a statement, and we’re planning on being one of them.”

With the amount of money involved, some front-loaded NIL deals before the House settlement with new guidelines went into effect, it will certainly be a huge and expensive disappointment if they are not.

“I understand how important this year is,” McGuire said. “We’ve got to have a lot of things go right, but everybody does. You’ve got to keep your quarterback healthy. You’ve got to play at a high level. I know there’s a lot of expectations. My job that I’m going to really try to do is keep the pressure on me and the coaches.”

Tech returns senior quarterback Behren Morton, who threw for 2,976 yards and 25 touchdowns last season, and senior linebacker Jacob Rodriguez, the league’s top tackler with 126 last year. Rodriguez is the preseason Big 12 defensive player of the year, and on the league’s preseason team with a pair of four-star transfers: edge rusher David Bailey (Stanford) and defensive lineman Lee Hunter (UCF).

“It’s unbelievable, those guys came in and bought in to what we were talking about,” Rodriguez said. “I love those guys to death already and I think they’re going to make my job a lot easier, especially with the guys we have up front.”

It will also be up to McGuire to deal with paid players, some making significantly more than others on the roster.

“I think that goes into your culture,” the former Texas high school coach said. “It’s real. It’s real money. Guys are making different amounts of money in the locker room.

“One thing that you better understand if you dream to play in the NFL, your contract’s not going to be the same as the guy next to you, and if that’s what you focus on, then you’re going to spend a lot of time wasting a lot of energy,” McGuire said. “If guys want to increase that, focus on what you can control. That’s your game and how hard you’re practicing and how hard you’re playing.”

___

AP Sports Writer Schuyler Dixon contributed.



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David Pollack sees LSU as a College Football Playoff team ‘if everything went perfect’

David Pollack likes LSU as a College Football Playoff team if everything breaks right and that’s a big ask in 2025. There’s a lot of talent on the Tigers, but there are some questions going into the fall. Garrett Nussmeier certainly helps going into the season. The LSU quarterback is a Heisman Trophy contender, but […]

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David Pollack likes LSU as a College Football Playoff team if everything breaks right and that’s a big ask in 2025. There’s a lot of talent on the Tigers, but there are some questions going into the fall.

Garrett Nussmeier certainly helps going into the season. The LSU quarterback is a Heisman Trophy contender, but as Pollack pointed out, he’s gotta deal with a new offensive line.

Four of the five guys from last year are gone. So basically if everything’s perfect, which is rare, LSU could be a playoff team. 

“And so to start this off, that’s great (because you have Nussmeier),” Pollack said on See Ball Get Ball. “Four guys of the five up front are gone, and they got drafted. They went to the NFL. And here’s the disturbing part, like when I start to look at this roster, I see a lot of great. I see a lot of great, I see a lot of good things. I see a lot to be excited about. I see a team, if everything went perfect, they could go to the playoffs … if the new additions are who the new additions are, like, they’re a team that could somehow get it together. But the offensive line a year ago had four guys drafted … and they didn’t have balance on offense, and that’s where that has to grow for me. 

“Like I saw Caden Durham, who’s an animal. Like this dude is a freshman. He proved he’s one of the best backs in the country. He had more receiving yards than any other freshman in the country, he was good at that. He was almost three and a half yards after contact every single time he touched the football. Like, this dude can play the game. They’ve got to have more balance. If Nussmeier has balance on this offense, good luck. Like they’re going to score points at will against everybody, and then the defense obviously comes along and makes plays.”

David Pollack says LSU needs everything to break right

LSU has some talent as Pollack alluded to the offensive talent. Barion Brown and Nic Anderson transferred in at the WR spot as well as sophomore running back Caden Durham going into Year 2 with the program.

The defense for LSU has some transfers, including in the secondary. Harold Perkins is also back at linebacker for his junior season.

“They got the running back, the offensive line, does that come to fruition,” Pollack said. “The schedule you mentioned, though, at Clemson, at Ole Miss, at Bama, at OU, that’s a lot of ‘ats/’ And I think early in the season, while this all things coming together, like, are they out of it before they blinked? Like, are they out of it before they gel?

“Because I see this team down the stretch being a team that like crap, you don’t want to fool with. You don’t mess with (them) once they’ve gelled, once they’ve got experience. But coming out of the gates, how good is LSU and to me that’s why they’re not going to make the playoff to me.”



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Arkansas’ John Calipari Breaks Silence Year 1 Chaos That Ended with Sweet 16 Breakthrough

Arkansas Razorbacks coach John Calipari had an eventful first year as the head shot-caller for the program in the 2024-25 season. The Razorbacks had an abysmal start to the recently concluded campaign, wherein they started 0-5 in conference play, before eventually making it to the 2025 NCAA tournament and reaching the Sweet 16. In a […]

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Arkansas Razorbacks coach John Calipari had an eventful first year as the head shot-caller for the program in the 2024-25 season. The Razorbacks had an abysmal start to the recently concluded campaign, wherein they started 0-5 in conference play, before eventually making it to the 2025 NCAA tournament and reaching the Sweet 16.

In a recent media availability on Wednesday, July 9, by Inside Arkansas on YouTube after an Arkansas open practice, Calipari was asked about his thoughts on his first year with the Razorbacks and how it affected his and the team’s overall morale from the beginning to how they finished.

“Last year, you know how it started, we had no team, had no staff. I said, ‘Can I see the schedule?.’ There was no schedule. I’m like, ‘What?,’ and now you bring guys together that did not know each other and I had a couple from before but the reality of it is it was a brand new team. Then we get hurt, so I didn’t get to do the scrimmaging, and I knew we’d be behind,” Calipari said. (13:30)

He then went on to expound on the gravity of the result they had by the end of the year.

“But, at the end of the year, that was the most rewarding year I can remember in a long time because they stayed true and they stayed strong and we just kept tweaking and changing to try to make us good. Right now, you know, you can tell I’m more comfortable, like, I had to walk in here, I didn’t know anybody. I didn’t know the campus. Do you guys understand? I never was on this campus,” Calipari explained. (14:11)

“We went from the graduate down the back way and I’m thinking, ‘This is awful,’ to that building and most times, it was dark. We came in late and maybe in the afternoon, we’d come down and chill but we went the back way…So, I didn’t even know what the campus was, I didn’t know anybody, all that stuff. So, I’m just more comfortable,” he added.

In his first year with the Razorbacks, Calipari led the program to an overall record of 22-14 (8-10, SEC) and went all the way to the Sweet 16 of this year’s March Madness, bowing out of the tournament to the Texas Tech Red Raiders, 85-83.

John Calipari Is More Aligned With The Arkansas Razorbacks Now Given That It’s About His Players

Later on his availability to the media after an open practice with the Arkansas Razorbacks, coach John Calipari shared why exactly he is more comfortable and at peach with being at the helm of the program’s coaching staff, citing their priorities as the reason why.

“Let me tell you, I am so happy and comfortable and at peace with what we’re doing and how we’re doing it because we’re about the kids. It ain’t about this, that, it’s about those kids. Now, if we do our job, they’re going to lead us to where we’re trying to go, and I say it again, it’s real, what we’re doing,” Calipari shared. (15:12)

Calipari and the Razorbacks will now look to uncork a better outing in the 2025-25 season later this year, which officially begins around the first week of November.

College Sports Network has you covered with the latest news, analysis, insights, and trending stories in college footballmen’s college basketballwomen’s college basketball, and college baseball!



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TCU student group Legacy Frogs combines business and sports to create NIL deals

Texas Christian University triathlete Maddie Perkins has qualified for the NCAA national championships several times, and the seasoned college athlete uses her name, image and likeness to secure brand, or NIL deals.  For Perkins, a master’s student in biology, it’s been hard to balance it all: academics, athletics and building her social media presence. But […]

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TCU student group Legacy Frogs combines business and sports to create NIL deals

Texas Christian University triathlete Maddie Perkins has qualified for the NCAA national championships several times, and the seasoned college athlete uses her name, image and likeness to secure brand, or NIL deals. 

For Perkins, a master’s student in biology, it’s been hard to balance it all: academics, athletics and building her social media presence. But a new TCU student group called Legacy Frogs is freeing her up to do what she does best.

“I train a lot, and so I can get videos of me training, but editing them takes a really long time,” Perkins said. “It takes a lot of the weight off of my shoulders, of having to film everything, edit it and then schedule it and post it.”

Legacy Frogs, created by three business students in 2024, is part of the university’s game plan for what TCU athletic director Mike Buddie called the “unwritten script” of college athletics. A recent $2.8 billion NCAA settlement paves the way for schools to pay athletes directly and requires outside deals to reflect fair market value — often assessed through social media metrics, Legacy Frogs’ specialty. 

“It’s based on follower count, what school are you at? How many likes? Are you one of the best players on the team?” said Will Sturner, a business management senior and the president of Legacy Frogs. “There are so many factors that go into it, but social media outreach is definitely going to be over 50% of that equation.”

In the world of NIL deals, social media marketing accounts for a huge chunk of the money. With the influencer economy, the more social media presence you have, the better the deals.

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Sturner started brainstorming about creating the group in September last year. He reached out to the university’s Institute for Entrepreneurship and Innovation, and Legacy Frogs soon became a part of that machine. It’s a venture studio run by students for student-athletes. Players can stop by for help with their social media content or securing brand deals. 

In some ways, the student group is swimming in a pool of big money with NIL collectives, but they’ve established their strokes. They’re not getting a cut — in fact they’re not making any money — but they’re gaining business and marketing skills as they help out student-athletes.

“We found our niche, and our niche is not those big market brand deals,” said Philip Rosenfeld Jr., the group’s executive vice president and a senior majoring in finance. “Everyone wants that $10,000 or $20,000 brand deal. But the local market with $100, $200 and $300 brand deals is so rich, and there’s so much to be had there.”

TCU basketball player Micah Robinson, right, triathlete Maddie Perkins and Philip Rosenfeld Jr., Legacy Frogs executive vice president, pose together on July 1, 2025, in the Amon G. Carter Stadium in Fort Worth. (Mary Abby Goss | Fort Worth Report)

The group connects players to businesses that match their personality and lifestyle. Through the group, Perkins was able to secure deals with nutrition and wellness brand Just Ingredients and energy drink Gorgie. 

Riley Richards, Legacy Frog’s vice president of brand development, asks athletes about the brands they like, their hobbies and interests.

“Most of what I do for sourcing brand deals comes from the athletes own personality and interests,” said Richards, a senior double majoring in entrepreneurship and management. “In the NIL space, the best way to gain traction and have a successful partnership is through authenticity.”

In the past few months, the group has focused on national businesses. In the coming months, Legacy Frogs will reach out to brands with Fort Worth locations such as Toppers, Smoothie King, Fuzzy’s Taco Shop and locally owned boutiques and stores.

One of the group’s first recruits was TCU basketball player Micah Robinson. 

“If I could get Micah, I knew I would be able to have some proof of concept, as well as have a face for us,” said Sturner, who is also the head manager for the men’s basketball team.

Robinson, who was a freshman at the time, said the group has really helped transform his social media presence. 

“I’ll post pictures from my games and that’s it,” said Robinson, who is a sophomore majoring in communications. “But they’ve really helped me get my personality out there because I feel like I’ve just never really expressed myself on social media.”

Through Legacy Frogs, he’s been able to secure deals with Incrediwear, an athletic recovery clothing brand, and Kane, a recovery footwear brand.

Sturner called the group’s first months the pilot phase. The team has grown from three to 10 students.

“We have some proof of concept,” Sturner said. “We’re ready to take on new athletes and are ready to see this grow.”

Legacy Frogs, he said, is ready for the new era of revenue sharing.

Shomial Ahmad is a higher education reporter for the Fort Worth Report, in partnership with Open Campus. Contact her at shomial.ahmad@fortworthreport.org.

The Report’s higher education coverage is supported in part by major higher education institutions in Tarrant County, including Tarleton State University, Tarrant County College, Texas A&M-Fort Worth, Texas Christian University, Texas Wesleyan University, the University of Texas at Arlington and UNT Health Science Center.

At the Fort Worth Report, news decisions are made independently of our board members and financial supporters. Read more about our editorial independence policy here.

Fort Worth Report is certified by the Journalism Trust Initiative for adhering to standards for ethical journalism.

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Adam Hill: Brand new NIL, salary cap rules in college sports may already be outdated | Football

LAS VEGAS — There is a four-word sentence that would have been difficult to ever imagine typing even just a few days ago. Mike Gundy is right. OK, I said it. We got that out of the way. Let’s not kid ourselves. The Oklahoma State football coach didn’t exactly arrive at a correct opinion through […]

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LAS VEGAS — There is a four-word sentence that would have been difficult to ever imagine typing even just a few days ago.

Mike Gundy is right.

OK, I said it. We got that out of the way.

Let’s not kid ourselves. The Oklahoma State football coach didn’t exactly arrive at a correct opinion through altruism. But hey, that whole saying about a broken clock has been proved right yet again.

Gundy this week directly articulated what many in the college sports landscape are only willing to say behind the scenes. All of these new rules and regulations created by the House v. NCAA settlement and the implementation of revenue sharing for college athletes just isn’t working.

Already.

And we’re only like 10 days into the rollout.

“You’ve gotta restructure your systems and admit players are employees,” Gundy told the “Andy & Ari On3” podcast at Big 12 media day. “Then you can build collective bargaining. We’ve all talked about it. But you have to admit they’re employees. You can do it all. You can have a (salary cap) and you need an entry level for a high school player coming in because it’s not sustainable.”

Those voices that have been against players getting paid at all certainly aren’t going to like the idea of unionization and even more power, but it might be the only way forward.

Gundy’s evolution on the issue is a result of a realization his program, which tried to hold the line against pay-for-play recruiting in the transfer portal, can’t compete in the new era.

While his motives may not be pure, Gundy has at least arrived in the place where most everyone else will be in time.

Because remember how the settlement was supposed to fix so much of the broken pay structure in college sports? How it was going to bring transparency to a process that severely lacked it and at least put teams on an even playing field in terms of moving the payments above board while still allowing the athletes to profit off their individual value above and beyond the revenue sharing money while providing some oversight to the transactions?

It truly was an admirable endeavor. It just wasn’t going to work.

Ideally, this model was going to be a solid bridge to the inevitable and potentially a good foundation from which to build the future model for college sports.

But that concept certainly wasn’t helped by the settlement getting approved just days before it was set to be implemented. That created chaos.

While programs were cleared to immediately start compensating athletes up to the salary cap, the firm Deloitte was tasked by the power conference-backed College Sports Commission with deciding whether individual players’ NIL deals above and beyond that were legitimate and of fair market value.

It would take far more time and words to explain the difficulties of determining such a standard. So, it seems what has happened in practice is the College Sports Commission has decided to simply reject all deals done with athletes through collectives as a general practice as a starting point.

Collectives can serve as a conduit to connect athletes with legitimate businesses, it clarified in a letter, but can’t essentially hold their own fundraising events to collect money to pay players. It’s a fine line.

But it also means players were made promises that may not actually come to fruition.

Some of the more forward-thinking groups front-loaded deals and got the payments made before this process started a couple weeks ago, but others are left wondering what happens next.

Attorneys for the players have lashed out, demanding a retraction of the ruling on collective payments and calling it a restriction of the players’ earning potential that runs counter to the settlement.

On the flip side, allowing collectives to simply accumulate and distribute vast resources as a way to circumvent the new salary cap rules kind of defeats the whole competitive balance thing.

It’s incredibly complicated.

“We don’t know the rules,” Arizona State coach Kenny Dillingham admitted. “The settlement passed, but who knows what Deloitte is going to clear? Until there is clarity, you’re living in limbo.”

Exactly.

Gundy is right. So is Dillingham. Sadly, this temporary fix has to be extremely short-lived.

Chances are even some sort of CBA isn’t going to provide all the answers, but it’s the logical next step.


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Big Ten and Big 12 in public dispute over future of College Football Playoff

At the Big 12 media days, commissioner Brett Yormark was very upfront about what the College Football Playoff expansion should look like. He continues to beat the drum of five automatic qualifiers with eleven at-large bids chosen by the College Football Playoff committee. He fired back at Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti, who is pushing […]

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At the Big 12 media days, commissioner Brett Yormark was very upfront about what the College Football Playoff expansion should look like. He continues to beat the drum of five automatic qualifiers with eleven at-large bids chosen by the College Football Playoff committee. He fired back at Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti, who is pushing for more automatic qualifiers, with four each going to the Big Ten and the SEC, and only two each for the Big 12 and ACC, and a small amount of at-large.

Tony Petitti and Brett Yormark aren’t hiding their disagreement over the CFP’s expansion

Petitti joined CBS Sports’ Joel Klatt a few weeks ago to talk about the College Football Playoff expansion and how a decision needs to be made by December 1. He believes the Big Ten and the SEC are due more bids than other conferences, and he doubts that increasing the committee’s at-large choices will make a difference.

““If you go to 16, and you have 11 at-large, you just added even more decision-making…We’ll stipulate the committee does the best job they can. This is not to say the (committee) doesn’t do a good job…They make incredibly difficult decisions based on data…When you start comparing teams that don’t have a head to head and you have very little data to look at between leagues, that becomes really difficult.””

Tony Petitti, Big Ten Commissioner

Brett Yormark thinks that’s a terrible idea and was very clear to voice his disdain over it during the Big 12 media days. He called it a professional model like the NFL and thinks college football should act like college football. There’s a reason it’s different in his mind, and that conferences should be working for the good of all of football, not just their own conference. Which ironically is what Yormark is being accused of by advocating for the 5+11 model.

““We have the responsibility to do what’s right for college football … not what’s right for one or two or more conferences. I think 5-11 is fair. Earn it on the field, assuming we want to expand. I love the current format, but if we’re going to expand, let’s do it in a way that’s fair and equitable and gives everyone a chance.””

Brett Yormark, Big 12 Commissioner

The Big Ten and the SEC have yet to have their media days, and so there will be more expansion thoughts publicly broadcast as the dispute has come out in the open. It’s hard to know how it will all shake out, but the December 1 deadline is looming.





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