One would think*.... the Ivy institutions should have some very $ucce$$ful Alums who could elevate their athletics... if they so choose...Ivy has got some thinking to do. Thankfully they are good at that at least.
(can Ivy athletes get NIL?)
One would think*.... the Ivy institutions should have some very $ucce$$ful Alums who could elevate their athletics... if they so choose...Ivy has got some thinking to do. Thankfully they are good at that at least.
Elite academic schools (Ivies and many others) almost always have the largest Endowments and high % of alumni contribution rates. St.J unfortunately has a very low % participation rate for giving back. Lots of reasons to explain it, but it is a known fact.One would think*.... the Ivy institutions should have some very $ucce$$ful Alums who could elevate their athletics... if they so choose...
(can Ivy athletes get NIL?)
One would think*.... the Ivy institutions should have some very $ucce$$ful Alums who could elevate their athletics... if they so choose...
(can Ivy athletes get NIL?)
Can’t be a bad thing for us
Eff it- can’t be scared of injuries… go for itAs cool as it be… last thing I’d want is Capt Jack getting hurt in a Rucker game
This is something the NHL does well. They allow drafted players to return to their juniors or college team.![]()
Influx of NBA Draft-eligible players into college raises questions for league, union
The quandary points to how college basketball may now be close to being considered a pro sport, at least in the NBA's eyes.www.nytimes.com
Very interesting tidbit about how NBA could eventually interpret NCAA as a pro league and, thus, impact draft eligibility rules.
“
If an international player is drafted by an NBA team but chooses to stay with his professional team, the NBA club retains his draft rights in perpetuity — a draft-and-stash, as those players are sometimes known. But that has not been an issue for a college player, who, if drafted, would come straight to the NBA, either because he has no college eligibility left or declared early for the draft while maintaining eligibility. Here, none of those cases applied.
While the memo only accounted for a “limited” number of players, the NBA still had to figure out how to account for them. Based on the NBA’s interpretation, such a player is no different from a draft-and-stash. It did not matter whether the player played for the University of Kansas or Real Madrid; the league would handle each player as if he were on a professional team.
According to the NBA’s collective bargaining agreement, a professional team or league is defined as any that pays a player beyond living expenses, which is where college sports now finds itself. While college athletes have received payments for NIL since 2021, those have been from collectives, companies and other external sources; now, with the newly enshrined House settlement, they can also be paid directly by their schools.
“Playing intercollegiate basketball will be considered under the provisions of Article X, Section 5 of the CBA to be signing a player contract with a non-NBA professional basketball team,” the memo said.
But this was not necessarily a binding opinion, as the league’s lawyer made clear. The National Basketball Players Association, the memo said, could potentially contest this interpretation. The union could argue that if such a player were taken in the draft, his rights would only belong to the team that selected him for a year before he became a free agent.”
If he has a great season at PSU but the team that drafts him decides they don't want to rush him, I wonder whether another school would try to lure him away. Or if the NHL team actively tries to steer him to transfer to a BC or BU.Of course a top level 18 year old hockey players does not receive the NIL money basketball (and football) players of the same caliber (Gavin McKenna who is essentially next year’s NHL version of Cooper Flagg) signed with Penn State and has a $700k NIL deal, which is the highest ever for a hockey player.
While the NBA has some differences, the NHL CBA is a good template.
Or open it up to all of D1, add a weekend of meaningless games, and count your additional TV revenue.![]()
NCAA Tournament expansion debate: Hoops scribes Seth Davis, Mike DeCourcy have it out
Two veteran reporters could not disagree more on the scorching hot topic of NCAA Tournament expansion.www.nytimes.com
My vote would be against expansion.
We already do with the conference tournaments. And I find the tournaments from the one bid leagues to be some of the most fun games of the season because of what is on the line.Or open it up to all of D1, add a weekend of meaningless games, and count your additional TV revenue.
I have to imagine those are the only games that get any broad media coverage, must do wonders for the MEAC, Big South, America East etc. budgets.We already do with the conference tournaments. And I find the tournaments from the one bid leagues to be some of the most fun games of the season because of what is on the line.
Totally agree. If there is one thing that doesn't need tinkering with it is March Madness, so of course they'll tinker.![]()
NCAA Tournament expansion debate: Hoops scribes Seth Davis, Mike DeCourcy have it out
Two veteran reporters could not disagree more on the scorching hot topic of NCAA Tournament expansion.www.nytimes.com
My vote would be against expansion.