https://www.espn.com/college-footba...eo-nil-enforcement-reminds-schools-your-rules
Just really sad, and telling that duhO$U is loudest, most vocal and public critic of the newly formed regulator that is supposed to serve the rules as written and treat all 138 FBS programs equally under those rules. Just disgraceful, and telling, that duhO$U suggests the following:
Just shocking that a representative of a Major College University would state the weak, and bankrupt-values, rationalization that the "fraudulent marketplace" was created so schools could "pay to play" while claiming they aren't paying for play, it's "NIL payments" (hence the Washington AD's comment that the "fraudulent market" was created for them so they could hide their pay-for-play in a fraudulent marketplace hidden as NIL payments.).
This statement from the head of the NIL Enforcement Agency is quite telling:
Just really sad, and telling that duhO$U is loudest, most vocal and public critic of the newly formed regulator that is supposed to serve the rules as written and treat all 138 FBS programs equally under those rules. Just disgraceful, and telling, that duhO$U suggests the following:
Ohio State AD Ross Bjork openly wondered to cbssports.com about the Big Ten potentially breaking away from the pack and writing its own rules. Washington AD Pat Chun told the website "we created this fraudulent market to be able to compensate our athletes."
Just shocking that a representative of a Major College University would state the weak, and bankrupt-values, rationalization that the "fraudulent marketplace" was created so schools could "pay to play" while claiming they aren't paying for play, it's "NIL payments" (hence the Washington AD's comment that the "fraudulent market" was created for them so they could hide their pay-for-play in a fraudulent marketplace hidden as NIL payments.).
This statement from the head of the NIL Enforcement Agency is quite telling:
Seeley said he hears criticism about a slow timeline to clear deals, which can leave schools in limbo, unsure if certain players are eligible. But the CEO calls that a "false narrative."
"Deals are being held up because they don't comply with the rules," Seeley said. "And many times when we ask for information about the deals, we get no response, a partial response that doesn't answer our question, or, increasingly, false responses, which causes delays."