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**** Adding an NIL fee to ticket prices. Hmm ...

A riveting story from On3's Andy Staples that should have the eye of both you the consumer as well as administrations such as Clemson.

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Tennessee is preparing for a world in which schools pay athletes directly by charging fans a “talent fee” to pass along to the players.

Though the House v. NCAA settlement that would usher in the era of revenue sharing has yet to be approved by a federal judge, Tennessee athletic director Danny White told On3 that his school will implement a plan to add a 10 percent surcharge to all season and single-game ticket sales. If the settlement is approved, schools would be allowed to pay about $22 million a year to athletes beginning in the 2025-26 school year.

White estimates that with the new roster caps included in the settlement — which would raise the number of available athletic scholarships — the actual cost is closer to $30 million a year. Tennessee hopes to recoup about $10 million of that through the surcharge, which will come in addition to a football ticket price increase averaging 4.5 percent across all seats. Knowing any hike in ticket prices would produce consternation, White and his team decided the best way to handle this one was to explain which part of the new money will be earmarked for the players.

“It’s a talent fee, and it’s going directly to the talent,” White said. “It’s going to our student athletes as part of this new world order in college sports. So I know our fans will embrace it.”

White said the best comparison is restaurants charging large groups an automatic fixed gratuity atop the price of the meal. Tennessee might be the first school to add such a fee, but expect plenty of copycats. As college sports’ economic model evolves, schools will need to find a way to fund player compensation without forcing donors to choose between players and the capital projects and administrative costs they’ve traditionally helped fund.

For decades, the schools colluded through the NCAA rulebook to limit the players’ earning power. In the past four years, state legislatures and the federal court system have teamed to end that collusion. But that change has come fast, and athletic departments are struggling to adjust to a potentially massive new line item that could require a significant chunk of their annual budgets. Tennessee’s athletic department made $202.1 million in 2023. So $22 million represents 10.8 percent of the budget. West Virginia, for example, reported $105.2 million in athletic department revenue for the same period. So $22 million would represent 20.9 percent of the budget.

It’s still an open question as to whether the House settlement will be approved. Earlier this month, Judge Claudia Wilkes declined to grant preliminary approval because the settlement calls for the NCAA to restrict and police how much boosters can pay athletes in excess of the revenue-sharing cap. Plaintiffs and the NCAA and conferences have gone back to the table to clarify the language around the booster rules, but if they don’t word it in a way that doesn’t invite more antitrust lawsuits, Wilken might decline to approve and the schools may opt to go to trial in a case that they were already willing to settle for $2.4 billion.

White said Tennessee couldn’t wait on the settlement approval to make plans to raise more money for athletes. Fans will want to renew their tickets for next season, and the Volunteers have a 15,000-person waiting list for football season tickets. “You’re trying to solve a problem when you don’t know a lot of the details. We’re doing different scenarios all the time, but we can’t just put a 10 percent fee in the laps of our fans with a month before the season starts,” White said. “We have to be prepared. There are financial realities. In any scenario, it’s going to become more expensive to compete at the level we want to compete at.”

Even if the settlement isn’t approved, some administrators want to move to a revenue-sharing model because the current model — collectives taking donations to distribute to players — is inefficient and is burning out donors who are being asked to give money to the athletic department and to the collective. The question is how long the current model can last. The high-dollar donors who are funding both sides of the equation may ultimately choose one side or the other or get fed up with the process entirely. The most logical solution is to bring player compensation under the umbrella of the athletic department so those costs are mixed in with capital projects and other costs rather than pitted against one another in a competition for donor dollars that aren’t unlimited.

So White and Tennessee plan to prepare for that possibility starting now. It will be interesting to see how many other schools follow suit. White is confident Vols fans will keep buying tickets, and he suspects they might want to buy them even more knowing some of the money is going to the players.

“They do a phenomenal job of filling our venues, buying hats and T-shirts and in all the different ways that they invest in our program,” White said. “This is another way that they can help us be more competitive.”
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Dabo has a choice.

Continue on the path he’s on and settle in as a Wake Forest/NC State level football program, or dive headfirst into the NIL/portal world that college football is now. There is no in between. If he chooses the former, I wish he would just go ahead and retire and go out a legend. I don’t disagree with how he feels. I freaking hate what college football has become, but I hate watching Clemson football willingly take a backseat even worse.

AI - Chat GPT - Grok - Claude - Et al

These things are simply amazing. If you aren’t using them in your day to day life yet, you are falling behind. Also, teach your school age children how to effectively use AI. It will fast forward their learning by leaps and bounds.

AI is like having a PHD degree dropped in your lap for free.

I already use it in my work to design trades and do other tasks that I used to perform manually.

Aight. One more TV steam question

Yes, I realize there are several threads lately on this, but I have a specific question. Google was little help. I’m now on YTTV but have yet to actually cut the cord with DTV but I’m getting close.

Our weekend spot on Hartwell has two, perfectly good, but perfectly dumb TVs. What stick/dongle etc should I get? Looking for user friendly but effective streaming using spectrum WiFi and YTTV.

Thanks in advance.

Question on selling tickets on Stub Hub

My daughter will be 16 next month. Last year my wife ended up getting Taylor Swift tickets for Miami. We bought 4 and i planned on selling at least 1 but figured i may have to sell 2, which is fine because I wont be upset if I dont go and just let my wife and daughter go.

My question is when I post them on Stub Hub they recommend you transfer them to SH so they can be immediately downloaded upon purchase. When doing this through ticketmaster you have to put a name in there...what name do I put? Also what happens if I were to cancel at Stub Hub...do the tickets revert back to my ticketmaster account?

Any insight on this process would be appreciated

Brian Kemp - New NIL-related Executive Order

Georgia governor signs executive order allowing colleges to pay players for their NIL​

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp signed an executive order Tuesday that will allow colleges in the state, including the University of Georgia, to pay players directly for the use of their name, image and likeness.

The executive order bars the NCAA or conferences from punishing schools for such payments. Kemp signed the order which is says will allow state schools to be “on a level playing field,” and should not forgo compensation that would come with being able to pay athletes while a proposed NCAA settlement agreement is in limbo.

This is similar to a law passed in Virginia and signed by Gov. Glenn Youngkin in the spring.

The executive order says that until the settlement is approved and in place, “legislative and executive actions across the country create a patchwork of inconsistent rules regulating intercollegiate athletics.”

Georgia athletic director Josh Brooks and Georgia Tech athletic director J Batt issued a joint statement released by Georgia Tech after the signing of the order.

"We extend our sincere gratitude to Governor Brian Kemp for his leadership today,: the statement said. "In the absence of nationwide name, image and likeness regulation, this executive order helps our institutions with the necessary tools to fully support our student-athletes in their pursuit of NIL opportunities, remain competitive with our peers and secure the long-term success of our athletics programs.”


Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp signed an executive order Tuesday that will allow colleges in the state, including the University of Georgia, to pay players directly for the use of their name, image and likeness.

The executive order bars the NCAA or conferences from punishing schools for such payments. Kemp signed the order which is says will allow state schools to be “on a level playing field,” and should not forgo compensation that would come with being able to pay athletes while a proposed NCAA settlement agreement is in limbo.

This is similar to a law passed in Virginia and signed by Gov. Glenn Youngkin in the spring.

The executive order says that until the settlement is approved and in place, “legislative and executive actions across the country create a patchwork of inconsistent rules regulating intercollegiate athletics.”

Georgia athletic director Josh Brooks and Georgia Tech athletic director J Batt issued a joint statement released by Georgia Tech after the signing of the order.

"We extend our sincere gratitude to Governor Brian Kemp for his leadership today,: the statement said. "In the absence of nationwide name, image and likeness regulation, this executive order helps our institutions with the necessary tools to fully support our student-athletes in their pursuit of NIL opportunities, remain competitive with our peers and secure the long-term success of our athletics programs.”

The NCAA, the Power Five conferences and lawyers for the plaintiffs in three antitrust cases concerning the compensation of college athletes have asked a federal judge in California to provide preliminary approval of a proposed settlement that would include a nearly $2.8 billion damages pool and allow Division I schools would be able to start paying athletes directly for use of their name, image and likeness (NIL), subject to a per-school cap that would increase over time.


However, during a preliminary-approval hearing on Sept. 5, U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken indicated that she would not approve the current version of the proposed deal. While the arrangement would allow schools to start paying athletes, it also would attempt to bring NIL payments under some enforceable rules, and Wilken said during the hearing she has issues with the proposed regulations, calling them "quite strict" and questioning whether they would end up in athletes losing access to payments they have been receiving from collectives.

Wilken and lawyers for the sides agreed that the parties would get back to her by Sept. 26 with what she termed a "prognosis" for the proposed deal.

This article originally appeared on Athens Banner-Herald: Georgia governor signs executive order allowing colleges to pay players for their NIL

I wonder if Governor Foghorn Leghorn even knows it's football season.
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