Football 360 Show: NIL, D1 recruiting, Transfer portal, Athletic Development, Strength Training.
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02:17 The Football NIL Battlefront: Fair Pay or Power Grab?
Manage episode 482868687 series 3563540
🌧️ Weather scare at DeSmet but event stayed mostly dry — testing ran smoothly.
👥 28 colleges represented across FCS, D2, D3, NAIA, and JUCO levels.
👨🏫 45–50 college coaches attended, plus 35–40 high school coaches.
📣 Strong message: If you're not attending events with coaches watching, you're wasting time and money.
🎯 Take initiative: Don’t wait for coaches — go introduce yourself.
📋 Coaches walk around with target lists but are always discovering new talent.
🔄 Athletes are encouraged to build relationships early, especially with repeat opportunities like upcoming KC Varsity and Lindenwood combines.
🧱 Demetrius Thompson (Clayton/Brentwood):
Dominated 1v1s across the defensive line.
Ran a 4.73 laser 40-yard dash at ~6'4", 215 lbs.
Trains at Elite — confident, skilled, and primed for a big summer.
Possible future pro potential: “Trajectory to play on Sundays.”
🎓 Background: 30 years in law, specializing in NCAA compliance, Title IX, NIL, and athlete representation.
⚠️ Concerns about the House v. NCAA NIL settlement:
NCAA proposing a third-party “unbiased” body to set fair market value for deals >$600.
Massive red flags over antitrust, anti-commerce implications.
Attorneys ready to sue — fairness, legality, and athlete rights are all at stake.
💸 Schools and donors may face consequences if deals are deemed “too high.”
🏛️ Strong opinions that athletes need legal protection and collective bargaining (like pro athletes get).
🏢 Kentucky reportedly creating an LLC for its athletic department — may signal movement toward private equity involvement.
🏟️ Explosion in stadium branding, business integration, and licensing deals.
📺 Live sports, especially football, remain extremely valuable — major TV and sponsor interest.
💥 Prediction: Major conferences may soon break away entirely from NCAA control.
The NCAA is clinging to relevance through revenue control and restrictive rules.
There’s growing momentum for a new model where athletes are properly compensated.
Expect continued lawsuits, resistance from smaller schools, and possible unionization efforts.
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