Mitch is preparing for NIL Marathon.

bthaunert

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Apr 4, 2007
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I take what Mitch is saying in a totally different way. Mitch isn't inferring any interference. The school is trying to wrap their heads around what they need to do to help the players and help protect them. He doesn't need to be a cheerleader. It's irrelevant if he hates the idea. NIL doesn't involve him but making sure the players are "done right" and understand how to deal with their money and image is important. I'm not a huge Mitch fan but the constant harping on this reminds me of a recent politician. Yes, I get it, Mitch bad, but I do think that opinion is misplaced at this point with NIL.
I'm actually the opposite. I'm a Mitch fan. He has his weaknesses, but overall, I think he's a solid AD. I've worked for a couple bad AD's over the years. Mitch definitely doesn't fit that mold. I don't think he's interfering at all. I agree that it's irrelevant if he hates it because it's happening anyways. My point is that I do think if you're the leader of an organization that has over 500 student athletes, and they have been given an unbelievable opportunity to make money that they are ecstatic about, at least be excited for them when talking about it. he might as well have been at a funeral with the way he approached that press conference. Why even have the press conference in the first place if you're not doing it to talk about the positives?
 
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BigBlueFanGA

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I'm actually the opposite. I'm a Mitch fan. He has his weaknesses, but overall, I think he's a solid AD. I've worked for a couple bad AD's over the years. Mitch definitely doesn't fit that mold. I don't think he's interfering at all. I agree that it's irrelevant if he hates it because it's happening anyways. My point is that I do think if you're the leader of an organization that has over 500 student athletes, and they have been given an unbelievable opportunity to make money that they are ecstatic about, at least be excited for them when talking about it. he might as well have been at a funeral with the way he approached that press conference. Why even have the press conference in the first place if you're not doing it to talk about the positives?
Yeah, maybe, but do the players even care what Mitch says or thinks, one way or the other? He's ultra conservative almost always. Leopards and spots.
 

bthaunert

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Yeah, maybe, but do the players even care what Mitch says or thinks, one way or the other? He's ultra conservative almost always. Leopards and spots.
They probably care more what their coaches think than what Mitch thinks. For me, it's about leadership and setting the tone. I oversee a department on a college campus that has a few hundred students involved. If they are excited about something, I make sure I am outwardly excited too. Doesn't mean I'm not thinking about the nuts and bolts and what could be the issues that arise behind the scenes, but publicly, I'm on board and excited with the students.
 
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kybassfan

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Compliance will be basically nonexistent now. Immediate eligibility via clearinghouse etc will be the only concern. Once that's clear, that's the end of the road for compliance.

They can all be repurposed to handle conflicts with endorsements but the rest is no longer an issue.



And most of them already have endorsement deals with the school, so they're eliminated. Players will have to be basically crowdfunded locally and hope national exposure gets them some regional/national deals
Compliance not exist? I don’t think you understand how a bureaucracy works. What they are going to need is an army of lawyers.
 

bucsrule8872

Heisman
May 30, 2005
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I’m neutral on Mitch.

My point is he needs to stay behind the scenes and let the coaches do their thing.

His prime directive should be making sure our coaches follow the guidelines and stay on the up and up.

Hire the right guys, give them what they need to be successful, make sure they follow the rules, and stay out of their business.

That’s how a good AD operates, IMHO.
 
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Compliance not exist? I don’t think you understand how a bureaucracy works. What they are going to need is an army of lawyers.

Compliance and an army of lawyers are two totally different things. Ncaa compliance as we knew it is effectively over, except the initial qualification via clearinghouse.

I agree there will need to be an army of lawyers hired by everyone. A good portion of which is required due to the poorly devised eo but here we are.
 

rockout1

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Why do you keep saying people don't like it and babbling about capitalism in the same breath. Do you have any clue about what you're saying? Whether or not I like it or Mitch likes it is irrelevant. We effectively have a state law that does have restrictions. We can revisit this in a couple weeks and it will be exactly the same as today.
There is not a state law yet. My point is that student athletes are going to be able to sign their own deals even if it’s not with exclusive rights companies of the university. This is what Mitch is worried about, it devalues their exclusive rights deals. Hope this helps you somewhat comprehend.
 

Cal-4-Three

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Barney is a massive drag on Uk athletics. He’s like high taxes on the economy. Maybe the economy is doing ok but you get rid of the high taxes and the growth will explode when you remove the shackles. Tbh if a player is allowed to make money on their NIL if that is the law then Barney can’t do a damned thing about it. It’s not his name or his image it’s not his football program or his basketball program. This is the whole point of this transition to get rid of the mentality that these players are property who belong to Barney and others. What a joke the guy should have been fired mid basketball season. Actually he should have been fired after the joker debacle.

What a stupid take. The entire athletic department is in better shape today than it was when he got here. We are competitive in almost every single sport. That didn't used to be the case.
 

Wildcats1st

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Sep 16, 2017
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What a stupid take. The entire athletic department is in better shape today than it was when he got here. We are competitive in almost every single sport. That didn't used to be the case.
Joker one of the worst fb coaches we ever had
BCG the worst bb coach we ve had
3 ncaa tournament misses with Barney as AD

this is a basketball forum and volleyball rifle whatever doesn’t make the Atheletic department. Barney more than any other guy I’ve seen is failure and mulligan failure and mulligan. The guy is a joke I’m sorry but time to move on from this guy.
 
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BigBlueFanGA

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There is not a state law yet. My point is that student athletes are going to be able to sign their own deals even if it’s not with exclusive rights companies of the university. This is what Mitch is worried about, it devalues their exclusive rights deals. Hope this helps you somewhat comprehend.
Unless the EO is struck down by a court, which is extremely unlikely, you do in fact have a state law. As it states in the EO, they cannot sign competing deals. That sentence ends with a period.
 

Gromcat_rivals

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Jun 28, 2021
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Some people kid themselves. Kentucky is an SEC flagship, which means basketball and football are the most important aspects of being UK’s athletic director. Mitch is a C- on his best day, an F on his worst. He’s nothing special, and has made a few of the worst hires in UK history. You simply cannot deny that or you’re willfully ignorant.

Joker and BCG should have been the end of Mitch at UK. He’s built for Western, not an SEC flagship.
 

BigBlueFanGA

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Some people kid themselves. Kentucky is an SEC flagship, which means basketball and football are the most important aspects of being UK’s athletic director. Mitch is a C- on his best day, an F on his worst. He’s nothing special, and has made a few of the worst hires in UK history. You simply cannot deny that or you’re willfully ignorant.

Joker and BCG should have been the end of Mitch at UK. He’s built for Western, not an SEC flagship.
Then you apparently don't think too much of many SEC AD's. You do realize Mitch doesn't do this all on his own, right? Which renamed former poster are you so we know how to respond better?
 

kybassfan

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Compliance and an army of lawyers are two totally different things. Ncaa compliance as we knew it is effectively over, except the initial qualification via clearinghouse.

I agree there will need to be an army of lawyers hired by everyone. A good portion of which is required due to the poorly devised eo but here we are.
Really? They different?

You’ll need both. I suspect compliance will grow. Cheating will now occur on an unprecedented scale.
 

Gromcat_rivals

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Then you apparently don't think too much of many SEC AD's. You do realize Mitch doesn't do this all on his own, right? Which renamed former poster are you so we know how to respond better?
I think Mitch is an average AD on his best day, and there’s plenty of proof for that. Mitch did hire BCG all on his own, and even recommended the search committee. He was completely against the Calipari hire, and then gave us Joker. I’m being nice calling him average on his good days.

Had a name years ago, forgot the password so started over. I remember you, hope the lawyer thing picked up.
 

bthaunert

Heisman
Apr 4, 2007
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Then you apparently don't think too much of many SEC AD's. You do realize Mitch doesn't do this all on his own, right? Which renamed former poster are you so we know how to respond better?
It always cracks me up when people think that other AD’s make perfect hires. Just look around the SEC. Every AD that has been at a school for a significant period has made bad hires. Most of them on multiple occasions. Even the god of SEC AD’s, Jeremy Foley hired Ron Zook, Will Muschamp and Jim McElwain.

Mr. Alabama himself, Hal Moore, hired Dennis Francine, Mike Price and Mike Shula before landing on Nick Saban.

Every AD makes bad hires. Every one of them. The biggest question is, do they make the change quickly. Mitch followed up his 2 bad hires with Mark Stoops and Cal. I think he did alright.
 
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Really? They different?

You’ll need both. I suspect compliance will grow. Cheating will now occur on an unprecedented scale.

Yes really.

Ncaa already implied there won't be any improper benefits enforcement. That cuts out all concerns other than initial eligibility.

So while yes cheating will occur, there won't be anyone that cares
 

Gromcat_rivals

Heisman
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It always cracks me up when people think that other AD’s make perfect hires. Just look around the SEC. Every AD that has been at a school for a significant period has made bad hires. Most of them on multiple occasions. Even the god of SEC AD’s, Jeremy Foley hired Ron Zook, Will Muschamp and Jim McElwain.

Mr. Alabama himself, Hal Moore, hired Dennis Francine, Mike Price and Mike Shula before landing on Nick Saban.

Every AD makes bad hires. Every one of them. The biggest question is, do they make the change quickly. Mitch followed up his 2 bad hires with Mark Stoops and Cal. I think he did alright.

You’re an establishment guy. You’ve always made excuses for inept leadership. No offense, you’re definitely a good man from what I can tell, but you do appear to have that boot licker thing going. I’m sure it just goes with your experiences

Pointing to other bad AD’s to account for our mediocre AD doesn’t change that Barnhart has been average on a good day at best.

By the way, if you’re going to use the Cal hire to bolster Barnhart, you’ve lost the argument without even realizing it.
 
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bthaunert

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You’re an establishment guy. You’ve always made excuses for inept leadership. No offense, you’re definitely a good man from what I can tell, but you do appear to have that boot licker thing going. I’m sure it just goes with your experiences

Pointing to other bad AD’s to account for our mediocre AD doesn’t change that Barnhart has been average on a good day at best.

By the way, Calipari apparently does not care for Barnhart and from some accounts requested to work through Peevy. Barnhart and Cal have had issues because Barnhart tried to stop the hire twice, succeeding once. He does not get credit for cal, the Brass made that happen.

But if you prefer believe whatever story that puts Barnhart in a positive light.
Other bad AD’s? Jeremy Foley is considered one of the best AD’s of all time. You’ll see him on top 5 lists everywhere. He made 3 terrible hires in football before getting Urban.

Barnhart did not try and stop the Cal hire twice. Stop with that nonsense. That has been debunked so many times. Lee Todd is on record saying he wouldn’t even let Mitch consider Cal the first time and that Mitch had to convince him to meet with Cal the 2nd time around. I have no idea why people continue to say this when it’s simply not true.

Mitch definitely has weak areas…contracts, PR and fan relations being the most glaring. But overall, he’s a good AD. Great? No. Terrible? Hardly. He has our athletic department in a place most schools dream about. Self funded, not one scandal in 20 years, facility improvements all around, helps fund programs and facilities at the university (huge kudos to that), and has our football and basketball programs at a level of success together we haven’t seen since the 50’s.

There maybe a handful of AD’s that have been at schools for a long period of time that have made only good hires. They are just not out there. I’m not comparing him to bad AD’s. I’m comparing him to reality. Not some superficial world where AD’s only make good hires.
 
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UKnCincy_rivals

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Other bad AD’s? Jeremy Foley is considered one of the best AD’s of all time. You’ll see him on top 5 lists everywhere. He made 3 terrible hires in football before getting Urban.

Barnhart did not try and stop the Cal hire twice. Stop with that nonsense. That has been debunked so many times. Lee Todd is on record saying he wouldn’t even let Mitch consider Cal the first time and that Mitch had to convince him to meet with Cal the 2nd time around. I have no idea why people continue to say this when it’s simply not true.

Mitch definitely has weak areas…contracts, PR and fan relations being the most glaring. But overall, he’s a good AD. Great? No. Terrible? Hardly. He has our athletic department in a place most schools dream about. Self funded, not one scandal in 20 years, facility improvements all around, helps fund programs and facilities at the university (huge kudos to that), and has our football and basketball programs at a level of success together we haven’t seen since the 50’s.

There maybe a handful of AD’s that have been at schools for a long period of time that have made only good hires. They are just not out there. I’m not comparing him to bad AD’s. I’m comparing him to reality. Not some superficial world where AD’s only make good hires.

I disagree with one point you made. While he might not be perfect, he has been a great AD.

The athletics department is as strong and as clean as it has ever been, and he’s accomplished exactly what the university hired him to do. There’s a reason he keeps getting extensions and raises.

Beyond what UK’s administration thinks of him, he’s also the most influential AD within the SEC and one of the most influential and well respected ADs in the entire nation. Just as there’s a reason he gets extensions, there’s also a reason he keeps getting selected to key leadership roles within the SEC and nationally.

And other schools are constantly poaching his second in command to fill their AD vacancies. He’s known nationally as someone who develops talent when it comes to running athletics departments. Even counting any missteps, his track record stacks up favorably against pretty much any other AD in the nation.

His peers within college athletics have a tremendous amount of respect for him and it takes more than simply being a “good” AD to accomplish that. Doesn’t mean you have to agree with everything he does, but he’s done great work at UK.
 
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bthaunert

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Apr 4, 2007
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I disagree with one point you made. While he might not be perfect, he has been a great AD.

The athletics department is as strong and as clean as it has ever been, and he’s accomplished exactly what the university hired him to do. There’s a reason he keeps getting extensions and raises.

Beyond what UK’s administration thinks of him, he’s also the most influential AD within the SEC and one of the most influential and well respected ADs in the entire nation. Just as there’s a reason he gets extensions, there’s also a reason he keeps getting selected to key leadership roles within the SEC and nationally.

And other schools are constantly poaching his second in command to fill their AD vacancies. He’s known nationally as someone who develops talent when it comes to running athletics departments. Even counting any missteps, his track record stacks up favorably against pretty much any other AD in the nation.

His peers within college athletics have a tremendous amount of respect for him and it takes more than simply being a “good” AD to accomplish that. Doesn’t mean you have to agree with everything he does, but he’s done great work at UK.
I don’t think he’s great because he has a few really big weaknesses….the ones a list. But, yes, overall, a good (maybe very good) AD.
 

rockout1

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Unless the EO is struck down by a court, which is extremely unlikely, you do in fact have a state law. As it states in the EO, they cannot sign competing deals. That sentence ends with a period.
Get off my lawn! That’s you my man. Time to move forward.
 

UKnCincy_rivals

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I don’t think he’s great because he has a few really big weaknesses….the ones a list. But, yes, overall, a good (maybe very good) AD.

You’re certainly entitled to your opinion, so we may just have to agree to disagree so to speak (though our opinions aren’t really too radically different).

I’d just say that if you’re ever in a position to speak with a number of folks from other schools (e.g., ADs, Presidents, coaches) and ask them what they think of Barnhart, I think you’ll be surprised at how many might call you crazy for saying he’s merely “good.” He’s that well respected.

As I said, you’re entitled to your opinion so I’ll leave it at that and stop arguing with you.
 

bthaunert

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You’re certainly entitled to your opinion, so we may just have to agree to disagree so to speak (though our opinions aren’t really too radically different).

I’d just say that if you’re ever in a position to speak with a number of folks from other schools (e.g., ADs, Presidents, coaches) and ask them what they think of Barnhart, I think you’ll be surprised at how many might call you crazy for saying he’s merely “good.” He’s that well respected.

As I said, you’re entitled to your opinion so I’ll leave it at that and stop arguing with you.
Not sure I would consider this an argument….pretty tame discussion by Rafters standards.
 
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rockout1

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I think you & BigBlueFanGA do Civil War re-enactments…pretty sure which side you represent. Time to end the monopoly that is College Sports & allow the student athletes get their fair share.
 

BigBlueFanGA

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Jun 14, 2005
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I think Mitch is an average AD on his best day, and there’s plenty of proof for that. Mitch did hire BCG all on his own, and even recommended the search committee. He was completely against the Calipari hire, and then gave us Joker. I’m being nice calling him average on his good days.

Had a name years ago, forgot the password so started over. I remember you, hope the lawyer thing picked up.
Lawyer thing?
 

kybassfan

Heisman
Jul 1, 2005
20,032
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Seriously? Lol just log off
I'm not the one suggesting that the NCAA will drop improper benefits infractions or the one suggesting that the infractions committee will no long play a role. There are a myriad of academic requirements, direct interactions between the university and the player, etc, etc. Katina is just one example of those. The notion that the infractions committee will become passe is just ridiculous.
I think you & BigBlueFanGA do Civil War re-enactments…pretty sure which side you represent. Time to end the monopoly that is College Sports & allow the student athletes get their fair share.
BBFGA and I would most likely shoot each other in that scenario. Only reason to bastardize college athletics into some perverse semipro league is politics. Just wait till organized crime gets their mitts in to this, and they will.
 

UKnCincy_rivals

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You don’t know that players can’t have contracts different from the school. For example Paul Miller is the official car dealer of the university but that doesn’t mean that Don Franklin won’t be able to supply & advertise a car for TyTy Washington. What Mitch & the university are concerned about is that their exclusive deals with specific businesses won’t be as lucrative anymore because business can spen their money on the kids for endorsements. The student athletes should and will be able to go with other businesses outside of the university’s exclusive club.

@BigBlueFanGA didn’t say players couldn’t have contracts “different from the schools” as you put it. He said athletes couldn’t sign contracts that conflict with a school’s existing contracts, and he is correct on that point.

The University and Barnhart are not concerned about their deals becoming less lucrative. They’re concerned about running into situations where either the student or UK is forced to breach a contract, as well as the risk of a legal confrontation associated with such a situation.

Let’s use a shoe deal as an example. Let’s say a basketball player runs off and signs a shoe deal with Adidas without paying attention to the terms of the deal. If one of the terms of that deal states that the student will wear Adidas shoes during competitions, then we’ve got a problem.

The reason for that problem is because paragraph 10(c) of Kentucky’s contract with Nike states that UK will ensure that no student athlete wears any shoe from a Nike competitor during a game unless a documented medical condition forces the student to wear a competitor’s shoe or unless Nike somehow failed to deliver product on time.

So if UK let’s the athlete wear the Adidas shoe during a game in Rupp, UK has now breached its Nike contract. If UK forces the athlete to instead wear a Nike shoe, then the athlete has now breached his Adidas contract. You ultimately have to withhold the kid from competition until you can negotiate a resolution and may also face the prospect of a legal battle with the student. That’s the type of scenario that concerns them and why they’re trying to set up processes to enable some basic coordination before deals are finalized.

Fortunately there’s a limited set of instances where this type of thing might occur. But at least right out of the gate, there will need to be a bit of coordination between the athletes and their schools before deals get signed to simply confirm the terms of new deals don’t create these kinds of conflicts.

Longer term, you may some of these types of standard terms disappear from deals that schools sign with a shoe company and the risk of conflicts is greatly diminished.
 
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Apr 13, 2002
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I'm not the one suggesting that the NCAA will drop improper benefits infractions or the one suggesting that the infractions committee will no long play a role. There are a myriad of academic requirements, direct interactions between the university and the player, etc, etc. Katina is just one example of those. The notion that the infractions committee will become passe is just ridiculous.

It isn't that they should. It's that they are. I'm not sure why some of this is so difficult to understand.

Their statement was essentially there will be no rules as it relates to money. The deductible is that impermissible benefits will be too difficult/impossible to investigate from here on, so they won't be doing it.

Let's go over an example.

Permissible - paying strippers to dance for players/recruits.

Impermissible - paying strippers to dance for a recruit with the expressed intent this was done to entice a player to play at a certain school.

Based on the info, it will be too hard to differentiate one from the other, so there just not be enforcement at all. They're probably right. So Katrina Powell would still be a violation just without enforcement

Come July 1 we'll know for sure.
 
Apr 13, 2002
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University and Barnhart are not concerned about their deals becoming less lucrative

They should be because that's a very real possibility. Depending on how the market of nil plays out, exclusivity may not be standard. If not, companies will pay less; as they should.

Unclear yet how this will all break but some high level recruits might refuse to come to a school if said school has exclusivity language; reducing their nil potential.

Plus it isn't really the shoe deal that's the major source of conflict. The other local ones will have more impact. Eg iirc they used to have a deal with critchfield meats. That means a player couldn't do an endorsement for any meat competitor. Same thing with Kroger/Meijer.

Those local/regional deals are where most players will make their money. If uk insists on maintaining exclusivity, the player has reduced earning potential.

Of course the market would've dictated the developments until the governor gave these schools massive boon via the eo
 

UKnCincy_rivals

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They should be because that's a very real possibility. Depending on how the market of nil plays out, exclusivity may not be standard. If not, companies will pay less; as they should.

Unclear yet how this will all break but some high level recruits might refuse to come to a school if said school has exclusivity language; reducing their nil potential.

Plus it isn't really the shoe deal that's the major source of conflict. The other local ones will have more impact. Eg iirc they used to have a deal with critchfield meats. That means a player couldn't do an endorsement for any meat competitor. Same thing with Kroger/Meijer.

Those local/regional deals are where most players will make their money. If uk insists on maintaining exclusivity, the player has reduced earning potential.

Of course the market would've dictated the developments until the governor gave these schools massive boon via the eo

Perhaps you should actually read a few of these “exclusivity” deals before asserting an opinion. Your understanding of things is not at all accurate.
 

BigBlueFanGA

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yea, I remember you love dogs more than children and chase ambulances.

Not sure if you’re old enough to be my grandad but I think so.
Love dogs, yep. Kids? I'm not an attorney. I'm 56 so probably not quite as old as you think.
 

kybassfan

Heisman
Jul 1, 2005
20,032
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It isn't that they should. It's that they are. I'm not sure why some of this is so difficult to understand.

Their statement was essentially there will be no rules as it relates to money. The deductible is that impermissible benefits will be too difficult/impossible to investigate from here on, so they won't be doing it.

Let's go over an example.

Permissible - paying strippers to dance for players/recruits.

Impermissible - paying strippers to dance for a recruit with the expressed intent this was done to entice a player to play at a certain school.

Based on the info, it will be too hard to differentiate one from the other, so there just not be enforcement at all. They're probably right. So Katrina Powell would still be a violation just without enforcement

Come July 1 we'll know for sure.
You can’t be that naive. Let a few things like U6’s sex for boys or other form of ethically questionable practices pop up and you’ll find out what the infractions committee can do. If they don’t protect the brand, nobody gets any money.
 
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Perhaps you should actually read a few of these “exclusivity” deals before asserting an opinion. Your understanding of things is not at all accurate.

When a company signs a deal with UK as the "official meat/car/jewelry/swimming pool/etc" that isn't a negotiated and executed deal that contains an exclusivity provision?

So UK could sign the same deal with several competitors in their field?