NIL "Shadow Economy" cough* cough* Little Brother and others

Rainmaker

All-Conference
May 13, 2015
1,450
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113
I’ve been hearing a ton of scuttlebutt about how some of these schools (aka little brother) are able to pay what they are paying for the recruits they are getting. This is an article I wrote and plan to send to major news outlets. This is something widely known but rarely discussed but I feel needs to be revealed to the public and powers that be. If Uncle Andy wants to crack down on something he should look at this IMO. This also helps explain why we are having trouble landing big time talent in recent years. Sure Pope is an odd character but $$$ talks and we have it in the legal way to have it but from my understanding we aren’t doing what is mentioned in the article below. This seemed worthy to share and discuss.

TLDR version: Schools are paying players now through NIL and guaranteeing future income for 3-5 years after as well. They will have payrolls this season of over 30 million but only have 8-14 million in NIL collective, which turns NIL into pay for play and opens a can of worms.

The "Shadow" NIL Economy​

How Deferred Payments Are Redefining Pay for Play​

The college athletics landscape, once governed by strict amateurism, has transitioned into a complex financial frontier. However, as the formal Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) market matures, a more localized and potentially more volatile "shadow economy" is reportedly taking root. Behind the scenes of public collectives and official brand deals, rumors of backroom agreements and deferred payment structures are surfacing, threatening the long term solvency of major athletic programs.

The Rise of Deferred Endorsements​

The most concerning development in the current recruitment arms race involves "future" endorsement deals. Unlike standard NIL contracts, where an athlete is paid for current promotional work, these rumored deals are structured as long-term liabilities.
  • Disguised Payouts: Industry insiders suggest that some programs are securing talent by promising direct payments disguised as endorsements that pay out for 3–5 years after the player has exhausted their eligibility.
  • Circumventing the Cap: By pushing payments into the future, schools can technically keep their current "on the books" NIL spending within manageable limits while effectively signing "promissory notes" to elite prospects.
  • Recruitment Leverage: This helps explain the sudden and inexplicable shift in recruiting momentum toward specific programs, including historical rivals often disparaged as "little brothers" by their larger counterparts.

A Looming Financial Crisis​

While these deals may secure a top five recruiting class today, they represent a significant "ticking time bomb" for university athletic departments. If a school signs 10-12 players per year to deferred contracts, they could find themselves with a payroll of 40-50 former athletes within half a decade.

One major college staffer is quoted saying:
"What happens five years from now when you are still paying for the rosters of the past five seasons? You aren't just funding your current team, you're servicing a massive debt for players who haven't stepped on the field in years."

This trajectory mirrors the "buy now, pay later" logic that has historically bankrupted professional franchises in minor leagues. For universities, the risk of "slow motion bankruptcy" is real, as the revenue generated by the current season is increasingly siphoned off to pay for the "future" promises made to previous generations of players.

Federal Scrutiny and the Threat of Sanctions​

The era of the "Wild West" in NIL may be coming to an end. On April 3, 2026, the White House issued an Executive Order titled "Urgent National Action to Save College Sports," specifically targeting what it calls "fraudulent NIL schemes."

The Order defines fraudulent activity as:
  1. Above Market Payouts: Paying athletes significantly more than the "fair market value" for their actual services.
  2. Lack of Deliverables: Contracts where the athlete performs no real promotional work.
  3. Pay for Play Inducements: Deals specifically designed to induce a player to attend or stay at a specific school.
The College Sports Commission (CSC) has already begun issuing notices to high-profile Division I schools regarding these third party arrangements. With federal agencies now evaluating "present responsibility" for institutions receiving federal funds, the stakes have shifted from NCAA "slaps on the wrist" to potential federal investigations, tax evasion charges, and even prison time for those found to be orchestrating illegal financial funnels.

The Long Term Fallout: Humility and Hardship​

For the programs currently utilizing these "backroom" tactics, the short term wins may lead to long term ruin. If the federal government or the CSC cracks down on deferred payment structures, the resulting sanctions could include:
  • Massive Financial Penalties: Fines that exceed the original NIL "investment."
  • Loss of Federal Funding: A death knell for any major research university.
  • Postseason Bans: Total exclusion from the new expanded playoff formats.
In the quest for immediate dominance, some universities may be mortgaging their entire future, trading long term stability for a fleeting moment in the spotlight. When the bill eventually comes due, the "humility" mentioned by critics may be the only thing these programs have left.
 

Rainmaker

All-Conference
May 13, 2015
1,450
4,040
113
Interesting stuff. Honestly, let teams go the deferred route.. its gonna bite them in the *** in the not to far future. Sere not talking about Shohei Otani deals where its a proven player who is driving tons of revenue.
Agreed, its unsustainable for any school. That and there is a real likelihood of true legal consequences. I'd be curious as to how many schools are involved but there are definitely some likely culprits, it's not hard to look at the rosters and reported amounts and see who is spending money they shouldn't have to spend.
 

JASUN74

All-American
May 22, 2008
3,518
5,069
73
I’ve been hearing a ton of scuttlebutt about how some of these schools (aka little brother) are able to pay what they are paying for the recruits they are getting. This is an article I wrote and plan to send to major news outlets. This is something widely known but rarely discussed but I feel needs to be revealed to the public and powers that be. If Uncle Andy wants to crack down on something he should look at this IMO. This also helps explain why we are having trouble landing big time talent in recent years. Sure Pope is an odd character but $$$ talks and we have it in the legal way to have it but from my understanding we aren’t doing what is mentioned in the article below. This seemed worthy to share and discuss.

TLDR version: Schools are paying players now through NIL and guaranteeing future income for 3-5 years after as well. They will have payrolls this season of over 30 million but only have 8-14 million in NIL collective, which turns NIL into pay for play and opens a can of worms.

The "Shadow" NIL Economy​

How Deferred Payments Are Redefining Pay for Play​

The college athletics landscape, once governed by strict amateurism, has transitioned into a complex financial frontier. However, as the formal Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) market matures, a more localized and potentially more volatile "shadow economy" is reportedly taking root. Behind the scenes of public collectives and official brand deals, rumors of backroom agreements and deferred payment structures are surfacing, threatening the long term solvency of major athletic programs.

The Rise of Deferred Endorsements​

The most concerning development in the current recruitment arms race involves "future" endorsement deals. Unlike standard NIL contracts, where an athlete is paid for current promotional work, these rumored deals are structured as long-term liabilities.
  • Disguised Payouts: Industry insiders suggest that some programs are securing talent by promising direct payments disguised as endorsements that pay out for 3–5 years after the player has exhausted their eligibility.
  • Circumventing the Cap: By pushing payments into the future, schools can technically keep their current "on the books" NIL spending within manageable limits while effectively signing "promissory notes" to elite prospects.
  • Recruitment Leverage: This helps explain the sudden and inexplicable shift in recruiting momentum toward specific programs, including historical rivals often disparaged as "little brothers" by their larger counterparts.

A Looming Financial Crisis​

While these deals may secure a top five recruiting class today, they represent a significant "ticking time bomb" for university athletic departments. If a school signs 10-12 players per year to deferred contracts, they could find themselves with a payroll of 40-50 former athletes within half a decade.

One major college staffer is quoted saying:
"What happens five years from now when you are still paying for the rosters of the past five seasons? You aren't just funding your current team, you're servicing a massive debt for players who haven't stepped on the field in years."

This trajectory mirrors the "buy now, pay later" logic that has historically bankrupted professional franchises in minor leagues. For universities, the risk of "slow motion bankruptcy" is real, as the revenue generated by the current season is increasingly siphoned off to pay for the "future" promises made to previous generations of players.

Federal Scrutiny and the Threat of Sanctions​

The era of the "Wild West" in NIL may be coming to an end. On April 3, 2026, the White House issued an Executive Order titled "Urgent National Action to Save College Sports," specifically targeting what it calls "fraudulent NIL schemes."

The Order defines fraudulent activity as:
  1. Above Market Payouts: Paying athletes significantly more than the "fair market value" for their actual services.
  2. Lack of Deliverables: Contracts where the athlete performs no real promotional work.
  3. Pay for Play Inducements: Deals specifically designed to induce a player to attend or stay at a specific school.
The College Sports Commission (CSC) has already begun issuing notices to high-profile Division I schools regarding these third party arrangements. With federal agencies now evaluating "present responsibility" for institutions receiving federal funds, the stakes have shifted from NCAA "slaps on the wrist" to potential federal investigations, tax evasion charges, and even prison time for those found to be orchestrating illegal financial funnels.

The Long Term Fallout: Humility and Hardship​

For the programs currently utilizing these "backroom" tactics, the short term wins may lead to long term ruin. If the federal government or the CSC cracks down on deferred payment structures, the resulting sanctions could include:
  • Massive Financial Penalties: Fines that exceed the original NIL "investment."
  • Loss of Federal Funding: A death knell for any major research university.
  • Postseason Bans: Total exclusion from the new expanded playoff formats.
In the quest for immediate dominance, some universities may be mortgaging their entire future, trading long term stability for a fleeting moment in the spotlight. When the bill eventually comes due, the "humility" mentioned by critics may be the only thing these programs have left.
Fantastic work here Rainmaker. I knew a ton of fishy things were happening but I think you hit on some big issues that needs to be addressed. Interesting stuff, thanks.
 

JASUN74

All-American
May 22, 2008
3,518
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73
Agreed, it’s unsustainable for any school. That and there is a real likelihood of true legal consequences. I'd be curious as to how many schools are involved but there are definitely some likely culprits, it's not hard to look at the rosters and reported amounts and see who is spending money they shouldn't have to spend.
I’d love to the hammer come down sooner rather than later. Here’s hoping 🤞 Greed running rampant.
 

LadyCaytIL

Heisman
Oct 28, 2012
32,925
34,407
113
Well the only option is to do it ourselves or cry like beotches as we become indiana . NO ONE has done anything about cheating unless the university self punishes or self reports like when UConn wanted rid of Ollie so they threw him under the bus for a reason to fire for cause. KU wasnt punished really, they won a title after, and before that UNC wasnt punished, they won a title. Arizona wasnt punished, they became a better program after.

Only the crushed and defeated whine about breaking rules. The strong and successful learn from it and do what it takes
 

LadyCaytIL

Heisman
Oct 28, 2012
32,925
34,407
113
I’d love to the hammer come down sooner rather than later. Here’s hoping 🤞 Greed running rampant.
you know the hammer wont fall. The NCAA has no power to come down on anything unless the programs self punish. If we dont do what others are doing, no amount of whining about what others do will change how low we'll sink by not doing what it takes
 

Old Blue Fart

All-Conference
Mar 23, 2014
1,671
4,307
76
Interesting article. Good one also.
After reading this, I thought back to a employee I was in the middle of hiring and was asked about payday and his questions caught me off guard.
This guy wanted to know if I did daily payday or did any type of advance pay.

Sorry, but you get paid after you have performed your job. What has happened is in todays workforce, they expect their pay to be manageable to their own personal situation.

Paying players as the OP described is what pro teams do to stay under the salary cap. It used to be called 'kicking the can down the road".

It is like a shell game only with money.
Paying players with a credit card will have the same effects it does on any person who uses credit cards to live on. You are just delaying the inevitable; one day you will be required to pay your bill.

Good article OP.
 

Rainmaker

All-Conference
May 13, 2015
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you know the hammer wont fall. The NCAA has no power to come down on anything unless the programs self punish. If we dont do what others are doing, no amount of whining about what others do will change how low we'll sink by not doing what it takes
It won't be an NCAA hammer coming down, it will be a Federal Government hammer.
 

LadyCaytIL

Heisman
Oct 28, 2012
32,925
34,407
113
It won't be an NCAA hammer coming down, it will be a Federal Government hammer.
Not with Maga in charge. Give them 1 million and they'll party with you and defend you .

pretty sure those would be federal crimes and Liberal Andy Beshear wouldnt be able to do squat. (I like liberals more than Republicans these days but might as well use the corrupt government and take advantage of it , get something out of it instead of just pain for everyone)

The leaders and elite boosters of schools arent stupid, they know there is no chance they will be punished legally for this or they wouldnt be doing it.
 

20MRoster

All-Conference
Nov 16, 2018
1,081
2,072
108
Nice report, pretty much what I thought. It's an unsustainable model and bankruptcy is the end game here.

The Dodgers deferred contracts are a mitigated risk because the $$ they spend on Ohtani and others now to dominate the sport are going to increase the brand value exponentially in new markets.

University athletic departments going into debt is a recipe for disaster. There is no ROI on NIL.
 

JASUN74

All-American
May 22, 2008
3,518
5,069
73
you know the hammer wont fall. The NCAA has no power to come down on anything unless the programs self punish. If we dont do what others are doing, no amount of whining about what others do will change how low we'll sink by not doing what it takes
I’m certain the NCAA wont and can’t do anything. It will have to be the College Sports Commission or the federal government to do something. Will they? Maybe. I don’t know what it will be but we definitely need something to happen. We all know the college sports we all knew and loved is over, we must have some rules for everyone though. Saying that, you’re probably right and nothing will change.
 

FilsonCat

All-Conference
Apr 5, 2007
3,428
4,114
113
This is a good start. Let me suggest something else as well. There are programs that have utilized "in-kind" inducements, including luxury housing for athletes and their families, pocket cash, crypto tokens, vehicle leases, jewelry, and other fringe benefits to secure commitments. These types of benefits never stopped for the worst offenders. NIL is a fig leaf for wholesale corruption.
 

gocats16889

Redshirt
Mar 29, 2025
4
1
3
Interesting, if this is true do you imagine that there will be teams who do end up winning it all, and then immediately following their natty with a “down year” in order to save money?
 

meteordealer

All-Conference
Nov 20, 2004
11,622
2,409
113
The entire situation is crazy. NIL was intended to let players get a cut of the revenue from merchandise being sold that had their name, or face on it, such as jerseys. Somehow it turned into players being sold to the highest bidder. There needs to be guidelines in place to correct this.
 

FLBBNFAN

All-Conference
Mar 25, 2025
791
1,517
93
I’ve been hearing a ton of scuttlebutt about how some of these schools (aka little brother) are able to pay what they are paying for the recruits they are getting. This is an article I wrote and plan to send to major news outlets. This is something widely known but rarely discussed but I feel needs to be revealed to the public and powers that be. If Uncle Andy wants to crack down on something he should look at this IMO. This also helps explain why we are having trouble landing big time talent in recent years. Sure Pope is an odd character but $$$ talks and we have it in the legal way to have it but from my understanding we aren’t doing what is mentioned in the article below. This seemed worthy to share and discuss.

TLDR version: Schools are paying players now through NIL and guaranteeing future income for 3-5 years after as well. They will have payrolls this season of over 30 million but only have 8-14 million in NIL collective, which turns NIL into pay for play and opens a can of worms.

The "Shadow" NIL Economy​

How Deferred Payments Are Redefining Pay for Play​

The college athletics landscape, once governed by strict amateurism, has transitioned into a complex financial frontier. However, as the formal Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) market matures, a more localized and potentially more volatile "shadow economy" is reportedly taking root. Behind the scenes of public collectives and official brand deals, rumors of backroom agreements and deferred payment structures are surfacing, threatening the long term solvency of major athletic programs.

The Rise of Deferred Endorsements​

The most concerning development in the current recruitment arms race involves "future" endorsement deals. Unlike standard NIL contracts, where an athlete is paid for current promotional work, these rumored deals are structured as long-term liabilities.
  • Disguised Payouts: Industry insiders suggest that some programs are securing talent by promising direct payments disguised as endorsements that pay out for 3–5 years after the player has exhausted their eligibility.
  • Circumventing the Cap: By pushing payments into the future, schools can technically keep their current "on the books" NIL spending within manageable limits while effectively signing "promissory notes" to elite prospects.
  • Recruitment Leverage: This helps explain the sudden and inexplicable shift in recruiting momentum toward specific programs, including historical rivals often disparaged as "little brothers" by their larger counterparts.

A Looming Financial Crisis​

While these deals may secure a top five recruiting class today, they represent a significant "ticking time bomb" for university athletic departments. If a school signs 10-12 players per year to deferred contracts, they could find themselves with a payroll of 40-50 former athletes within half a decade.

One major college staffer is quoted saying:
"What happens five years from now when you are still paying for the rosters of the past five seasons? You aren't just funding your current team, you're servicing a massive debt for players who haven't stepped on the field in years."

This trajectory mirrors the "buy now, pay later" logic that has historically bankrupted professional franchises in minor leagues. For universities, the risk of "slow motion bankruptcy" is real, as the revenue generated by the current season is increasingly siphoned off to pay for the "future" promises made to previous generations of players.

Federal Scrutiny and the Threat of Sanctions​

The era of the "Wild West" in NIL may be coming to an end. On April 3, 2026, the White House issued an Executive Order titled "Urgent National Action to Save College Sports," specifically targeting what it calls "fraudulent NIL schemes."

The Order defines fraudulent activity as:
  1. Above Market Payouts: Paying athletes significantly more than the "fair market value" for their actual services.
  2. Lack of Deliverables: Contracts where the athlete performs no real promotional work.
  3. Pay for Play Inducements: Deals specifically designed to induce a player to attend or stay at a specific school.
The College Sports Commission (CSC) has already begun issuing notices to high-profile Division I schools regarding these third party arrangements. With federal agencies now evaluating "present responsibility" for institutions receiving federal funds, the stakes have shifted from NCAA "slaps on the wrist" to potential federal investigations, tax evasion charges, and even prison time for those found to be orchestrating illegal financial funnels.

The Long Term Fallout: Humility and Hardship​

For the programs currently utilizing these "backroom" tactics, the short term wins may lead to long term ruin. If the federal government or the CSC cracks down on deferred payment structures, the resulting sanctions could include:
  • Massive Financial Penalties: Fines that exceed the original NIL "investment."
  • Loss of Federal Funding: A death knell for any major research university.
  • Postseason Bans: Total exclusion from the new expanded playoff formats.
In the quest for immediate dominance, some universities may be mortgaging their entire future, trading long term stability for a fleeting moment in the spotlight. When the bill eventually comes due, the "humility" mentioned by critics may be the only thing these programs have left.
Thank you for sharing this. Makes sense now on how some of these schools seem to have unlimited funds for NIL.
 

FLBBNFAN

All-Conference
Mar 25, 2025
791
1,517
93
The entire situation is crazy. NIL was intended to let players get a cut of the revenue from merchandise being sold that had their name, or face on it, such as jerseys. Somehow it turned into players being sold to the highest bidder. There needs to be guidelines in place to correct this.
Yes we are long overdue for congress to act to get things under control. The universities need some protection as well so a guy cant collect tons of money and just sit out with injuries. Need performance based clauses in the agreements.

Sadly congress doesn't get anything done anymore . Both parties are to blame for this as well as our national debt. Hard to believe in 2000 we were debt free and actually had a surplus 🤦
 
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gocats16889

Redshirt
Mar 29, 2025
4
1
3
It will be down years.
Seems like they have already started, the dollar figure from last year to now has increased tenfold and the idea of a “market value” has no true meaning as salary arbitration does not exist, without that there is no legal definition of the market and thus values will be composed by “feelings” rather than facts.
 
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Rainmaker

All-Conference
May 13, 2015
1,450
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The entire situation is crazy. NIL was intended to let players get a cut of the revenue from merchandise being sold that had their name, or face on it, such as jerseys. Somehow it turned into players being sold to the highest bidder. There needs to be guidelines in place to correct this.
Eventually the house of cards will crumble and could legitimately bankrupt some of these schools. I think regulation will come into play sooner than later.
 

CRZ4UK

Heisman
Jun 6, 2008
5,004
10,006
103
This is just another way JMI can hurt us. Mitch has it written into the contract JMI cant break any current rules to secure a recruit. If they do, they are in breach of contract and can lose the deal. So, we cant even skim the rules because JMI doesn’t want to void that 10 year contract. others a breaking every rule to the point of bankruptcy. .
 

CNJ1966

Senior
Dec 12, 2019
399
677
81
This is exactly like running up a huge credit card bill, then making only the minimum payment each month and thinking you are ok. Unsustainable
 

*Fox2Monk*

Heisman
Jun 10, 2009
45,793
83,248
113
I’ve been hearing a ton of scuttlebutt about how some of these schools (aka little brother) are able to pay what they are paying for the recruits they are getting. This is an article I wrote and plan to send to major news outlets. This is something widely known but rarely discussed but I feel needs to be revealed to the public and powers that be. If Uncle Andy wants to crack down on something he should look at this IMO. This also helps explain why we are having trouble landing big time talent in recent years. Sure Pope is an odd character but $$$ talks and we have it in the legal way to have it but from my understanding we aren’t doing what is mentioned in the article below. This seemed worthy to share and discuss.

TLDR version: Schools are paying players now through NIL and guaranteeing future income for 3-5 years after as well. They will have payrolls this season of over 30 million but only have 8-14 million in NIL collective, which turns NIL into pay for play and opens a can of worms.

The "Shadow" NIL Economy​

How Deferred Payments Are Redefining Pay for Play​

The college athletics landscape, once governed by strict amateurism, has transitioned into a complex financial frontier. However, as the formal Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) market matures, a more localized and potentially more volatile "shadow economy" is reportedly taking root. Behind the scenes of public collectives and official brand deals, rumors of backroom agreements and deferred payment structures are surfacing, threatening the long term solvency of major athletic programs.

The Rise of Deferred Endorsements​

The most concerning development in the current recruitment arms race involves "future" endorsement deals. Unlike standard NIL contracts, where an athlete is paid for current promotional work, these rumored deals are structured as long-term liabilities.
  • Disguised Payouts: Industry insiders suggest that some programs are securing talent by promising direct payments disguised as endorsements that pay out for 3–5 years after the player has exhausted their eligibility.
  • Circumventing the Cap: By pushing payments into the future, schools can technically keep their current "on the books" NIL spending within manageable limits while effectively signing "promissory notes" to elite prospects.
  • Recruitment Leverage: This helps explain the sudden and inexplicable shift in recruiting momentum toward specific programs, including historical rivals often disparaged as "little brothers" by their larger counterparts.

A Looming Financial Crisis​

While these deals may secure a top five recruiting class today, they represent a significant "ticking time bomb" for university athletic departments. If a school signs 10-12 players per year to deferred contracts, they could find themselves with a payroll of 40-50 former athletes within half a decade.

One major college staffer is quoted saying:
"What happens five years from now when you are still paying for the rosters of the past five seasons? You aren't just funding your current team, you're servicing a massive debt for players who haven't stepped on the field in years."

This trajectory mirrors the "buy now, pay later" logic that has historically bankrupted professional franchises in minor leagues. For universities, the risk of "slow motion bankruptcy" is real, as the revenue generated by the current season is increasingly siphoned off to pay for the "future" promises made to previous generations of players.

Federal Scrutiny and the Threat of Sanctions​

The era of the "Wild West" in NIL may be coming to an end. On April 3, 2026, the White House issued an Executive Order titled "Urgent National Action to Save College Sports," specifically targeting what it calls "fraudulent NIL schemes."

The Order defines fraudulent activity as:
  1. Above Market Payouts: Paying athletes significantly more than the "fair market value" for their actual services.
  2. Lack of Deliverables: Contracts where the athlete performs no real promotional work.
  3. Pay for Play Inducements: Deals specifically designed to induce a player to attend or stay at a specific school.
The College Sports Commission (CSC) has already begun issuing notices to high-profile Division I schools regarding these third party arrangements. With federal agencies now evaluating "present responsibility" for institutions receiving federal funds, the stakes have shifted from NCAA "slaps on the wrist" to potential federal investigations, tax evasion charges, and even prison time for those found to be orchestrating illegal financial funnels.

The Long Term Fallout: Humility and Hardship​

For the programs currently utilizing these "backroom" tactics, the short term wins may lead to long term ruin. If the federal government or the CSC cracks down on deferred payment structures, the resulting sanctions could include:
  • Massive Financial Penalties: Fines that exceed the original NIL "investment."
  • Loss of Federal Funding: A death knell for any major research university.
  • Postseason Bans: Total exclusion from the new expanded playoff formats.
In the quest for immediate dominance, some universities may be mortgaging their entire future, trading long term stability for a fleeting moment in the spotlight. When the bill eventually comes due, the "humility" mentioned by critics may be the only thing these programs have left.
If tire a lot of these schools will accrue so much debt that they won’t be able to pay it. The players will start suing and the mess will really start.
 
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*Fox2Monk*

Heisman
Jun 10, 2009
45,793
83,248
113
Interesting stuff. Honestly, let teams go the deferred route.. its gonna bite them in the *** in the not to far future. Sere not talking about Shohei Otani deals where its a proven player who is driving tons of revenue.
Plus with MLB deferred contracts they have to take the value of the deferred payments in today’s money and put it into a guaranteed trust that gains interest and pays it out when it comes due. I’d bet none of these schools have any such funding set up that will guarantee payment 3-5 years into the future. You would have to have a billionaire backing who would donate 100M off top to even think about doing this if it were to actually be paid.
 
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*Fox2Monk*

Heisman
Jun 10, 2009
45,793
83,248
113
Sounds like the stock market. New highs every day while oil stays well above $90. Serious inflation red flag.
The issue with that is we have made our bed 50 years ago with collapse. The modern presidents and Congress have just accelerated the U.S. decline exponentially faster than. They are banking on military power being able to overcome financial ruin.
 
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*Fox2Monk*

Heisman
Jun 10, 2009
45,793
83,248
113
Not with Maga in charge. Give them 1 million and they'll party with you and defend you .

pretty sure those would be federal crimes and Liberal Andy Beshear wouldnt be able to do squat. (I like liberals more than Republicans these days but might as well use the corrupt government and take advantage of it , get something out of it instead of just pain for everyone)

The leaders and elite boosters of schools arent stupid, they know there is no chance they will be punished legally for this or they wouldnt be doing it.
If you like liberals better than Republicans these days then idk what to tell you. I question your brain power. That’s all I can say about that. Both of them are absolute **** shows now, but one side lives in reality at least.
 

*Fox2Monk*

Heisman
Jun 10, 2009
45,793
83,248
113
Yes we are long overdue for congress to act to get things under control. The universities need some protection as well so a guy cant collect tons of money and just sit out with injuries. Need performance based clauses in the agreements.

Sadly congress doesn't get anything done anymore . Both parties are to blame for this as well as our national debt. Hard to believe in 2000 we were debt free and actually had a surplus 🤦
We used to have some semblance of law and order and love for country. Then we let foreign interest control everything. This is the result. We are getting destroyed from the inside.
 

LadyCaytIL

Heisman
Oct 28, 2012
32,925
34,407
113
If you like liberals better than Republicans these days then idk what to tell you. I question your brain power. That’s all I can say about that. Both of them are absolute **** shows now, but one side lives in reality at least.
you cant possibly think Trump lives in reality. I voted for him in 2016 and i want to vomit for believing such a con man
 
Apr 18, 2026
350
493
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I’ve been hearing a ton of scuttlebutt about how some of these schools (aka little brother) are able to pay what they are paying for the recruits they are getting. This is an article I wrote and plan to send to major news outlets. This is something widely known but rarely discussed but I feel needs to be revealed to the public and powers that be. If Uncle Andy wants to crack down on something he should look at this IMO. This also helps explain why we are having trouble landing big time talent in recent years. Sure Pope is an odd character but $$$ talks and we have it in the legal way to have it but from my understanding we aren’t doing what is mentioned in the article below. This seemed worthy to share and discuss.

TLDR version: Schools are paying players now through NIL and guaranteeing future income for 3-5 years after as well. They will have payrolls this season of over 30 million but only have 8-14 million in NIL collective, which turns NIL into pay for play and opens a can of worms.

The "Shadow" NIL Economy​

How Deferred Payments Are Redefining Pay for Play​

The college athletics landscape, once governed by strict amateurism, has transitioned into a complex financial frontier. However, as the formal Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) market matures, a more localized and potentially more volatile "shadow economy" is reportedly taking root. Behind the scenes of public collectives and official brand deals, rumors of backroom agreements and deferred payment structures are surfacing, threatening the long term solvency of major athletic programs.

The Rise of Deferred Endorsements​

The most concerning development in the current recruitment arms race involves "future" endorsement deals. Unlike standard NIL contracts, where an athlete is paid for current promotional work, these rumored deals are structured as long-term liabilities.
  • Disguised Payouts: Industry insiders suggest that some programs are securing talent by promising direct payments disguised as endorsements that pay out for 3–5 years after the player has exhausted their eligibility.
  • Circumventing the Cap: By pushing payments into the future, schools can technically keep their current "on the books" NIL spending within manageable limits while effectively signing "promissory notes" to elite prospects.
  • Recruitment Leverage: This helps explain the sudden and inexplicable shift in recruiting momentum toward specific programs, including historical rivals often disparaged as "little brothers" by their larger counterparts.

A Looming Financial Crisis​

While these deals may secure a top five recruiting class today, they represent a significant "ticking time bomb" for university athletic departments. If a school signs 10-12 players per year to deferred contracts, they could find themselves with a payroll of 40-50 former athletes within half a decade.

One major college staffer is quoted saying:
"What happens five years from now when you are still paying for the rosters of the past five seasons? You aren't just funding your current team, you're servicing a massive debt for players who haven't stepped on the field in years."

This trajectory mirrors the "buy now, pay later" logic that has historically bankrupted professional franchises in minor leagues. For universities, the risk of "slow motion bankruptcy" is real, as the revenue generated by the current season is increasingly siphoned off to pay for the "future" promises made to previous generations of players.

Federal Scrutiny and the Threat of Sanctions​

The era of the "Wild West" in NIL may be coming to an end. On April 3, 2026, the White House issued an Executive Order titled "Urgent National Action to Save College Sports," specifically targeting what it calls "fraudulent NIL schemes."

The Order defines fraudulent activity as:
  1. Above Market Payouts: Paying athletes significantly more than the "fair market value" for their actual services.
  2. Lack of Deliverables: Contracts where the athlete performs no real promotional work.
  3. Pay for Play Inducements: Deals specifically designed to induce a player to attend or stay at a specific school.
The College Sports Commission (CSC) has already begun issuing notices to high-profile Division I schools regarding these third party arrangements. With federal agencies now evaluating "present responsibility" for institutions receiving federal funds, the stakes have shifted from NCAA "slaps on the wrist" to potential federal investigations, tax evasion charges, and even prison time for those found to be orchestrating illegal financial funnels.

The Long Term Fallout: Humility and Hardship​

For the programs currently utilizing these "backroom" tactics, the short term wins may lead to long term ruin. If the federal government or the CSC cracks down on deferred payment structures, the resulting sanctions could include:
  • Massive Financial Penalties: Fines that exceed the original NIL "investment."
  • Loss of Federal Funding: A death knell for any major research university.
  • Postseason Bans: Total exclusion from the new expanded playoff formats.
In the quest for immediate dominance, some universities may be mortgaging their entire future, trading long term stability for a fleeting moment in the spotlight. When the bill eventually comes due, the "humility" mentioned by critics may be the only thing these programs have left.
Excellent find here
 

AllBall

All-American
May 5, 2015
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Great insight. Excellent work. Appreciate the effort and I hope this can shine some light on an area of NIL that is going unnoticed.