25 April 2022

Sports word for the day: collective

Excerpts from a Chip Scoggins column in the StarTribune:
HELP WANTED: Individual, group of people or company to serve as a third-party entity known as a "collective" that facilitates sponsorship and marketing opportunities for University of Minnesota athletes under name, image and likeness (NIL) provisions allowed by the NCAA. Oh, and do it fast. This train is barreling down the track.

Anyone interested? Because it's necessary to the future of Gophers athletics. Do it or get left behind in the brave, new NIL world.

The university is not permitted to handle NIL deals for athletes. That job is increasingly being outsourced to collectives, a term that fans should get familiar with because collectives are popping up around the country by the week and securing endorsement deals and other moneymaking opportunities for college athletes.

The Gophers need one.

Collectives typically are formed by boosters and supporters of programs. They act independently of the athletic department, though compliance offices provide education in explaining NIL rules and what forms of income opportunities will be deemed permissible.

Nearly 40 schools have at least one collective, and industry experts expect that all Power Five schools will have one by the end of the year. A few schools already have multiple collectives.

Why is everything unfolding so quickly? Recruiting, as always, and the pressure to keep up with rivals.

The NCAA prohibits using NIL as enticements in recruiting (wink, wink), but surprise, that's a rule being ignored.

One Division I coach told me that recruits are asking about NIL opportunities and whether the school has a collective. It's become part of the courtship between coach and player, particularly with transfers in the portal who might either have NIL options at their current school or are shopping for the most lucrative opportunity when choosing a new school.

This is the new reality of college sports. People might not like this new reality or the direction that things are headed, but NIL is here to stay.

Athletes are making money off their success and popularity — rightfully so — and schools realize that NIL has become a fundamental part of selling their programs. Boosters everywhere are rushing to form collectives in what has been referred to as the "wild, wild West."..

One University of Texas collective will give every Longhorns offensive lineman on scholarship $50,000 annually to make charitable appearances...
What an amazing change in recent years.  

4 comments:

  1. I guess the Texas bunch figures if a athlete is good enough to help bring in money they would have gotten a scholarship. Do very good athletes from wealthy families also get scholarships?
    xoxoxoBruce

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  2. NIL and the transfer portal are going to change college athletics dramatically in the next 10 years. To the point of unrecognizable. Watch USC as a prime example.

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  3. I was convinced long ago that intercollegiate sports should be eliminated. Once again, we should learn from the rest of the world: https://sites.psu.edu/bradleyrcl/2015/04/05/europe-and-collegiate-athletics/

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