Roy Exum: Vols Buying Players?
Tuesday, March 29, 2022 - by Roy ExumThis won’t make a bit of sense to you until you understand the NCAA has granted college athletes the authority to endorse commercial products. That’s right, a college athlete can use his or her “name, image and likeness” (NIL) to promote running shoes, hamburger chains, or other entities seeking a sponsor.
Would you believe, in your wildest dreams, the University of Tennessee could lure one of the top high school prospects in the country to “Big Orange Country” on a “name, image, likeness” ruse to play on Saturdays for the Vols?
Here is a story, written by Ronald Evans that claims UT is buying the nation’s top school-boy talent for millions of dollars
This story appeared in the “Bama Hammer,” a very biased publication for Alabama fans but his claim that Tennessee is legally buying players is apparently true.
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TENNESSEE VOLS NOW NO. 1 – IN BUYING PLAYERS
By Ronald Evans in the “Bama Hammer”
Alabama Football has a huge advantage. It can ‘not’ be something. Other programs can measure themselves in comparison to the Crimson Tide and should because Alabama is the standard. Alabama Football does not need to measure itself against any other program.
With the Crimson Tide’s long history of being No. 1, there is one contest Alabama should ignore. That contest is what team is No. 1 in buying players. Based on multiple recent reports of an $8M deal from the Vols’ affiliated collective, Tennessee is now No. 1 in buying players.
Whether or not there is something wrong with what Tennessee has done is immaterial. In the no-rules environment of NIL, the Vols have broken no rules and violated no laws. No blame should be aimed at the players and families who take advantage of such largess. They are entitled to make a sound business decision for their benefit. The nation’s economic system is based on doing just that.
About a week ago, Stewart Mandel writing for The Athletic reported the collective that negotiates NIL deals for Vols’ athletes had signed an agreement with a 5-Star athlete that could pay him more than $8 million by the end of his junior year of college…
He’ll be paid $350,000 almost immediately, followed by monthly payouts escalating to more than $2 million per year once he begins his college career, in exchange for making public appearances and taking part in social media promotions and other NIL activities.
The athlete was not named, though it has been widely speculated the 5-Star is California, QB, Nico Iamaleava. Iamaleava had recently visited Knoxville and came away gushing about the school, the program, and even the city of Knoxville.
Last Tuesday, Iamalaeva made his commitment to the Vols official.
Some media sources are shying away from calling this exactly what it appears to be. The reporting and evidence accessible to The Athletic indicate exactly what it is. The Vols have bought themselves one of the top quarterbacks in the 2023 class. If that is true, the beneficiary is Nico Iamaleava, having signed the equivalent of his first professional contract before leaving high school.
How should Alabama Football and Nick Saban respond?
The short answer is not at all. Building a team around players whose priority is the most immediate financial return is not a good plan. Many years ago, Paul ‘Bear’ Bryant, who had been willing to buy players at Maryland and Kentucky, decided while at Texas A&M that doing it was a mistake. Bryant learned such players were often what he hated most - quitters.
Nick Saban and Alabama should continue to advise players on taking advantage of NIL deals. The players deserve what they can earn. But the Crimson Tide should not buy recruits, even though it is now legal. Leave that to other programs to do, even if they won’t admit they are doing it.
https://www.chattanoogan.com/2022/3/29/446113/Roy-Exum-Vols-Buying-Players.aspx