NIL’s

To add, I haven't gone to a Knicks regular season game in a while, but friends trying to go with say 3 kids have told me that even for random regular season games the prices are insane. And our regular season games mean so much more than the NBA.
 
What will not be interesting is when people complain about ticket prices going up or games not being played on campus or that their seats are worse because they have not joined Red White or contributed to the program.

Whether folks like it or not, it has never been clearer that putting a winning team on the floor costs A LOT of money and that is not coming out of English Literature or law school professor salaries.
Yes, I agree. But it doesn't matter how much they jack up the season ticket prices or entice people to increase their donations to Red/White club, there will still be a huge, gaping revenue hole if the roster costs $14-18 million annually.
 
Yes, I agree. But it doesn't matter how much they jack up the season ticket prices or entice people to increase their donations to Red/White club, there will still be a huge, gaping revenue hole if the roster costs $14-18 million annually.


Expect to see a rise in ticket prices!
 
To add, I haven't gone to a Knicks regular season game in a while, but friends trying to go with say 3 kids have told me that even for random regular season games the prices are insane. And our regular season games mean so much more than the NBA.

Yeah it's a minimum of $1K for a 3-4 person family to go to ANY Knicks game. For awful seats. Rangers, concerts, etc. also have insane prices. Most families have been completely priced out of those events, and IMO it will hurt them long-term if kids aren't going to games. Nostalgia is such a huge part of sports fandom.

Fortunately my two favorite sports are college basketball and MLB, and those are very reasonably priced still.
 
It gets more insane daily


This says his Junior College years don’t count against the four years of eligibility (redshirt doesn’t count towards the four years) which another case had already ruled the same. What this ruling does apparently that the other one didn’t do, is it prevents the NCAA from enforcing the four in five years rule.

So for the many of you who kept asking repeatedly why players who were out of eligibility were entering the portal (me and a couple of others kept explaining why put you kept asking anyway), here’s why (as we stated this was a possibility).
 
This says his Junior College years don’t count against the four years of eligibility (redshirt doesn’t count towards the four years) which another case had already ruled the same. What this ruling does apparently that the other one didn’t do, is it prevents the NCAA from enforcing the four in five years rule.

So for the many of you who kept asking repeatedly why players who were out of eligibility were entering the portal (me and a couple of others kept explaining why put you kept asking anyway), here’s why (as we stated this was a possibility).
So is that a possibly now with this ruling, the kids who entered the portal who were out of eligibility now being eligible?
 
So is that a possibly now with this ruling, the kids who entered the portal who were out of eligibility now being eligible?
Yes it is a possibility as the Judge has requested higher courts to settle the matter once and for all but he did enjoined them from using it in this case.

This is one change I do not want to see come to fruition.
 
Arkansas just passed a law that payments made to college athletes directly from universities will be exempt from state income tax. That should go over really well with ordinary citizens who actually have to pay income tax on their earnings!

Under the law – which amended the Arkansas Student-Athlete Publicity Rights Act – funds related to NIL or revenue-sharing directly from a university will be exempt from state income tax. Additionally, the bill states financial information related to payments to athletes will be confidential and not subject to the Freedom of Information Act.


 
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