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Aj Storr and going value of top players
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Aj Storr and going value of top players
Transfer from wisconsin. One of the higher in demand transfers (similar to great probably).
He asked Kansas for $1m in nil. They countered with $750k and he told them no.
I highly doubt great osobor comes back and it’s going to be incredibly difficult to keep the top guys more than 1 year in the future.
He asked Kansas for $1m in nil. They countered with $750k and he told them no.
I highly doubt great osobor comes back and it’s going to be incredibly difficult to keep the top guys more than 1 year in the future.
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
Absurd numbers
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
I wish the NCAA or Congress would implement some kind of NIL salary cap. Even the playing field a bit.
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
That's crazy. I know we're thinking about NIL as a form of compensation on top of the full-ride scholarships these athletes get. However, I'm close to the professional space where sports personalities are paid for media appearances and product endorsements, and an NFL rookie in a metro area might charge $75,000-$150,000 for a partnership agreement with an organization where he would promote their product(s) in a handful of appearances throughout the year. To think that an NCAA basketball player is worth $750,000 a year is unrealistic from an advertising perspective, and even less so in a small market like Cache Valley. Great could probably move 10-20 cars at a large car dealership with his likeness in a season, which might be worth $30,000 to $60,000 for them, and any wise business person will need to pay the talent a bit less than that to make the exchange worth it. It's tough out there.
As much as I want Aggies to succeed in all sports and everything else indefinitely, I argue that the return on NIL investment from a marketing perspective is not there. However, if you think about the investment returns in terms of a winning team (which I think is probably the right perspective), then there's likely a much more direct tie to highly paid athletes and performance. The biggest NIL funds will lead to better athletic performance over time.
As much as I want Aggies to succeed in all sports and everything else indefinitely, I argue that the return on NIL investment from a marketing perspective is not there. However, if you think about the investment returns in terms of a winning team (which I think is probably the right perspective), then there's likely a much more direct tie to highly paid athletes and performance. The biggest NIL funds will lead to better athletic performance over time.
Last edited by travelingagg on April 3rd, 2024, 2:20 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
In professional sports, we have unions, minimum salaries, and salary caps (in most sports, looking at you, MLB, that's why your popularity is dwindling; we all know a team can buy a championship). In college sports is a damn free for all!
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
FYI seen this reported multiple places now.
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
Lol. This dude is from England and is 1/2 the player Great is. Here's his top schools and the leaked "price" or him he'll accept at minimum is $700k. Shoot maybe Great will get $1M.
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
No salary cap type thing would be legal
A contact, for multiple years of labor, is how most sports operate.
Sign a contract with a university for X years and get X compensation
A contact, for multiple years of labor, is how most sports operate.
Sign a contract with a university for X years and get X compensation
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
Is this money just handed to the kids with nothing in return other than playing ball? That seems like the wrong lesson to teach. If I was going to contribute to an NIL, I would ask for some help landscaping around the yard, cleaning windows and gutters, cleaning bathrooms/ kitchen, washing cars, running errands, and the like. This isn't just a gift because you play ball - that is what the scholarship is for. If you want money from me there has to be something of value in return to complete the transaction.
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
I would love if there could be some form of establishing NIL “Fair Market Value” as up to X% of the value of your cumulative scholarship earned at that school (or the average scholarship reward value for the national division level you play at per year). That would put a modest cap and also reward longevity.
1st year- 100% of scholarship value
2nd year- 200% etc.
3rd year- 300% etc.
Many schools would still not be able to max out all their players earnings, and it would more or less remove NIL as an outrageous mercenary-like recruiting tool, but still allow athletes to earn money.
This is obviously a pipe dream.
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
This is beyond out of control.
Our beloved Sam Merrill (an NBA champion mind you) is making 2M per year to play professionally! And he brings in a good ROI etc.
College athletes thinking they ought to get half that for essentially no ROI are ridiculous. Unfortunately in the arms race there are boosters and bag men that will pay this.
I do think the NIL bubble will implode in future years. Just hoping for now our AGGIES can stay competitive and enjoy the magic that we have in Logan. The gra$$ isn’t always greener.
Our beloved Sam Merrill (an NBA champion mind you) is making 2M per year to play professionally! And he brings in a good ROI etc.
College athletes thinking they ought to get half that for essentially no ROI are ridiculous. Unfortunately in the arms race there are boosters and bag men that will pay this.
I do think the NIL bubble will implode in future years. Just hoping for now our AGGIES can stay competitive and enjoy the magic that we have in Logan. The gra$$ isn’t always greener.
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
Bronny James made $5.9M this year and he's not very good.Section_L_Aggie wrote: ↑April 3rd, 2024, 2:58 pmThis is beyond out of control.
Our beloved Sam Merrill (an NBA champion mind you) is making 2M per year to play professionally! And he brings in a good ROI etc.
College athletes thinking they ought to get half that for essentially no ROI are ridiculous. Unfortunately in the arms race there are boosters and bag men that will pay this.
I do think the NIL bubble will implode in future years. Just hoping for now our AGGIES can stay competitive and enjoy the magic that we have in Logan. The gra$$ isn’t always greener.
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
The NBA has a salary cap and rookie contracts. NCAA currently does not. For fringe NBA players or players with marketable names (like Bronny) they can arguably make more staying in college then declaring. Crazy.ProvoAggie wrote: ↑April 3rd, 2024, 3:04 pmBronny James made $5.9M this year and he's not very good.Section_L_Aggie wrote: ↑April 3rd, 2024, 2:58 pmThis is beyond out of control.
Our beloved Sam Merrill (an NBA champion mind you) is making 2M per year to play professionally! And he brings in a good ROI etc.
College athletes thinking they ought to get half that for essentially no ROI are ridiculous. Unfortunately in the arms race there are boosters and bag men that will pay this.
I do think the NIL bubble will implode in future years. Just hoping for now our AGGIES can stay competitive and enjoy the magic that we have in Logan. The gra$$ isn’t always greener.
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
I've already been told by a friend in the business side of the sport that Great could command as much as one million.
Last edited by aggies22 on April 4th, 2024, 4:09 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
Not a knock on your comment, I believe you, but anyone that pays Great 1 mill to come play a year will be sorely disappointed. He is great but not that GREAT. A Zach Edey type maybe I see that much money being worth it.
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
Unfortunately that's what we're seeing in college though. Schools are way overpaying players. There are guys making way more in college than they would if they went pro.
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
I think you’re criminally discounting how great great is
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
Great!Bullnamed_gus wrote: ↑April 3rd, 2024, 3:31 pmI think you’re criminally discounting how great great is
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
I honestly don't think this NIL arms race is sustainable for most donors across the country. I know the bigger programs have donors with deep pockets but I think after a little bit of time and getting burned on a few players not playing to their worth will cause the NIL market to stabilize. At least I hope that's what happens.
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
NIL isn’t about teaching anyone a lesson. It’s pay to play. You should disabuse yourself of the notion that a kid who has an NIL contract will soon be coming to your home to wash your windows. What a contributor to a collective receives is to hopefully bask in the secondary light when his or her team does well as a consequence of hiring a player for 1 year.Yossarian wrote: ↑April 3rd, 2024, 2:36 pmIs this money just handed to the kids with nothing in return other than playing ball? That seems like the wrong lesson to teach. If I was going to contribute to an NIL, I would ask for some help landscaping around the yard, cleaning windows and gutters, cleaning bathrooms/ kitchen, washing cars, running errands, and the like. This isn't just a gift because you play ball - that is what the scholarship is for. If you want money from me there has to be something of value in return to complete the transaction.
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
I would argue that buying a championship works less i baseball than people might think. Yankees haven't for decades. Dodgers keep coughing it up in the playoffs. Though yes, you almost always need to spend at a base high level to get wins, unless you are Tampa.
That said, NCAA can't regulate NIL, they have no legal standing that I know of anymore, and I suspect Congress would pass that buck. The schools are going to have to concoct a system, or donors eventually run out of money to fund millions and millions every year into athletes that won't stick around or (likely) win it all.
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
A solid recession would wreck NIL, right?
Pro sports? Nah, they have a union and collective bargaining.
I bet there will always be Texas A&M and such blowing money, but if the U has some meddling years, do they all get trucks?
But very few collegiate athletic depts are net earners, buoyed by donors and student fees
Pro sports? Nah, they have a union and collective bargaining.
I bet there will always be Texas A&M and such blowing money, but if the U has some meddling years, do they all get trucks?
But very few collegiate athletic depts are net earners, buoyed by donors and student fees
Last edited by trevordude on April 3rd, 2024, 7:23 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
This whole thing stupid Johnny footballs fault anyway isn’t that when all this started selling jerseys and (I can't express myself without swearing) ?
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
They can get rid of the fu*king open transfer policy. That'd be a start.SeattleAg wrote: ↑April 3rd, 2024, 5:13 pmI would argue that buying a championship works less i baseball than people might think. Yankees haven't for decades. Dodgers keep coughing it up in the playoffs. Though yes, you almost always need to spend at a base high level to get wins, unless you are Tampa.
That said, NCAA can't regulate NIL, they have no legal standing that I know of anymore, and I suspect Congress would pass that buck. The schools are going to have to concoct a system, or donors eventually run out of money to fund millions and millions every year into athletes that won't stick around or (likely) win it all.
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
Part of me gets the idea that it would be nice to make .5-1mil for playing college sports when your prospect for playing any sort of professional ball is not in the cards. But for guys like Great that could go to the NBA or overseas and make millions on a career, why not stay at an amazing university and build a legacy? Be remembered for years to come? Oh well.
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
You got kids demanding and getting 6 figure plus money to play a game that has already afforded them a free education and numerous other perks with adults throwing away disposable income on the "rent-a--kid" program. Who's zoomin' who?
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
A salary cap would not be legal… The only thing I can see from my extremely limited viewpoint is to put them under contract with penalties for breach of contract. Of course, the problem would be that the schools would have penalties as well.
It’s a really discouraging landscape right now. You win, your team gets gutted by someone with more money. You don’t win, you lose by not being competitive….
It’s a really discouraging landscape right now. You win, your team gets gutted by someone with more money. You don’t win, you lose by not being competitive….
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
I think it was Ohio state putting $13m in for football. Is basketball $5m for the bigger schools. $10-$20m is a lot of funding each year without a solid roi
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
Per Trilly, most P5s have between 1.5 and 2 million for basketball NIL. Obviously some have more.
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
Not if you are paying one guy $1m. Granted that is probably only a handfulineptimusprime wrote: ↑April 3rd, 2024, 8:42 pmPer Trilly, most P5s have between 1.5 and 2 million for basketball NIL. Obviously some have more.
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
I'm sorry. I'm all for being a legacy player. Being a club sport player, I get it. But if you are good enough to be a legacy player, you could probably make a couple million in your time as an athlete. If I had to chose between people in logan utah remembering me, or making a couple million in some random city with a good team. I am choosing the money. I want aggies to stay, but half a million a year will buy any athlete at our level.MrBiggle wrote: ↑April 3rd, 2024, 7:31 pmPart of me gets the idea that it would be nice to make .5-1mil for playing college sports when your prospect for playing any sort of professional ball is not in the cards. But for guys like Great that could go to the NBA or overseas and make millions on a career, why not stay at an amazing university and build a legacy? Be remembered for years to come? Oh well.
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
We are missing the point when we talk about ROI. All of these boosters funding either collectives or sponsoring outside the collectives are not getting an ROI in the tangible monetary sense. Its an emotional ROI and its rooted their school, their team, the dopamine rush they get out of it. In one sense it could be equated to controlled substances or gambling where demand is highly elastic. When rival booster bases start outbidding them they just up the ante. We keep expecting it to fall back to earth but as long as there is a solid base of emotionally charged boosters who live through their alma maters success in FB and Mens BB it is just going to get more insane.ineptimusprime wrote: ↑April 3rd, 2024, 8:42 pmPer Trilly, most P5s have between 1.5 and 2 million for basketball NIL. Obviously some have more.
Any attempt to rein this in will require unionization of the players, congressional action, and a market need for the players union to cooperate with the schools for revenue sharing like the NFL, MLB, NBA, NHL. As long as these boosters are willing to up the ante the players have no incentive to cooperate even if the schools and Congress got their acts together.
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
I believe even the boosters are tiring of the payouts. They are seeing what they are getting for the money they are dropping and most of them arent dumb. They know its not sustainable at these levels forever. Right now its an arms race and they want to keep their school in front but I think even they will push for limits. The issue is that no conference wants to be the first to impose the limit. The NCAA has no power and congress doesnt have enough people that care about it yet.hickaggie wrote: ↑April 3rd, 2024, 9:28 pmWe are missing the point when we talk about ROI. All of these boosters funding either collectives or sponsoring outside the collectives are not getting an ROI in the tangible monetary sense. Its an emotional ROI and its rooted their school, their team, the dopamine rush they get out of it. In one sense it could be equated to controlled substances or gambling where demand is highly elastic. When rival booster bases start outbidding them they just up the ante. We keep expecting it to fall back to earth but as long as there is a solid base of emotionally charged boosters who live through their alma maters success in FB and Mens BB it is just going to get more insane.ineptimusprime wrote: ↑April 3rd, 2024, 8:42 pmPer Trilly, most P5s have between 1.5 and 2 million for basketball NIL. Obviously some have more.
Any attempt to rein this in will require unionization of the players, congressional action, and a market need for the players union to cooperate with the schools for revenue sharing like the NFL, MLB, NBA, NHL. As long as these boosters are willing to up the ante the players have no incentive to cooperate even if the schools and Congress got their acts together.
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
I think, and I could being misunderstanding, that the open transfer policy was a court victory for players, and the NCAA is currently powerless.OrangeCountyAggie wrote: ↑April 3rd, 2024, 7:20 pmThey can get rid of the fu*king open transfer policy. That'd be a start.SeattleAg wrote: ↑April 3rd, 2024, 5:13 pmI would argue that buying a championship works less i baseball than people might think. Yankees haven't for decades. Dodgers keep coughing it up in the playoffs. Though yes, you almost always need to spend at a base high level to get wins, unless you are Tampa.
That said, NCAA can't regulate NIL, they have no legal standing that I know of anymore, and I suspect Congress would pass that buck. The schools are going to have to concoct a system, or donors eventually run out of money to fund millions and millions every year into athletes that won't stick around or (likely) win it all.
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Re: Aj Storr and going value of top players
In the short term it was. In the long term it will lead to players being put under contract and bound by the contract terms. In the long run it will backfire.