Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

NIL money estimated at $917M

- ERICA HUNZINGER AP SPORTS WRITER

After the first year of college sports’ name, image and likeness era, football and men’s basketball still claim the throne for the number of deals and average compensati­on, and social media remains the most popular way to get that NIL money.

The total amount spent was about $917 million, NIL platform Opendorse estimated.

An average football deal comes out to nearly $3,400 on two platforms. And while softball and women’s basketball generally landed in the top five overall, when you subtract football, women’s sports are getting more deals than men’s sports, Opendorse said. Female gymnasts make big bucks, too: about $7,000 on average per deal, according to NIL platform INFLCR.

A full accounting of the first year of NIL, from July 1, 2021, to June 30 is hard to come by, for numerous reasons. The majority of schools don’t make public the number of deals and amounts their athletes have received (though a couple have divulged some informatio­n in what could be considered recruiting or marketing strategy).

There also is no central framework for how and when deals should be reported.

“You have all of these different stakeholde­rs involved in this ecosystem and a lack of consistenc­y, not just in platform where informatio­n is being reported, but in requiremen­ts relative to what informatio­n is necessary,” said Andrew Donovan, the executive vice president of collegiate partnershi­ps at Altius Sports.

So it’s up to major NIL tech platforms — some of which facilitate deals and disclosure­s, and others disclosure­s only — to fill in the gaps. Sort of.

“I know that what’s being reported is not a full picture,” said Donovan, whose organizati­on works with 30 schools on education and strategic guidance and talks with donors, boosters, corporate partners and others. “… Athletes are regularly acknowledg­ing to us that they’re not disclosing. Schools are regularly communicat­ing the struggles that they’re having getting athletes to disclose … It’s very clear that this is not a full, complete picture of what’s going on in the NIL space.”

What lies ahead for Year 2, beyond maybe new laws or group licensing? Opendorse thinks it’s the potential of NIL spending topping more than $1 billion.

An estimated $607.4 million could go to Power Five schools, with an average annual compensati­on $16,074 per athlete, Opendorse said. Already, about three-fourths of the known or forming collective­s, which are third-party NIL kingmakers made up of school donors and boosters, are connected to Power Five schools.

ATHLETES MAKE HOW MUCH?

It’s a broad range. INFLCR’s overall average NIL transactio­n value is $1,815 through June 30. Athliance, another disclosure platform, has an average value of $1,524.58. Though the true picture may lie in INFLCR’s median NIL transactio­n value of $53.

The Opendorse platform said average annual compensati­on for an athlete in NCAA Divisions I-III combined is $3,438 (through May 31). By division, DI athletes saw an average of $3,711, $204 in DII and $309 in DIII.

Football NIL deals tend to be hefty, with an average of $3,390.95 on Athliance and $3,396 on INFLCR.

Women’s sports overall received $1,084 on average for an NIL deal, per INFLCR, with women’s gymnastics soaring to a $7,054 average.

MEN’S VS. WOMEN’S

As of June 20, men’s sports received 62.7% of total compensati­on in the NCAA and NAIA combined, compared with 37.3% for women’s sports, Opendorse said. Remove football and women flip it to 52.8% vs. 47.2% for men. The difference in Division III was stark through May 31: 82.9% men vs. 17.1% women.

Football (49.9%) and men’s basketball (17%) dominated total NIL compensati­on by sport in Opendorse’s platform through June 20, with women’s basketball (15.7%), women’s volleyball (2.3%) and softball (2.1%) rounding out the top five. Football also took the top spot in INFLCR’s number of NIL transactio­ns through May 31 with 23.7%, followed by men’s basketball (22.3%), softball (8.2%), baseball (6%) and women’s basketball (4.7%).

When it comes to total NIL activities, Opendorse says football (29.3%) is the leader, then baseball (8%), men’s basketball (7.6%), women’s track and field (5.6%) and women’s volleyball (5.5%).

Donor money also favors men’s sports — a whopping 93% of it, Opendorse said. The average monthly compensati­on from donors at the DI level is $1,012.

WHAT THE SCHOOLS HAVE DIVULGED

Ohio State says its athletes have gotten more than 1,000 NIL deals since July 1, 2021 — up from about 600 worth a total of $2.98 million at the six-month mark.

Kansas athletes inked 219 deals from July 1, 2021, to May 5 — a period that includes the Jayhawks winning the men’s NCAA basketball tournament — for a total value of $380,915.01, according to public records obtained by the Topeka Capital-Journal. The majority of deals were for less than $1,000.

At least one Kansas athlete from all 18 sports had at least one deal, according to a recent news release from the school.

 ?? (AP/David J. Phillip) ?? Kansas forward David McCormack helped lead the Jayhawks to their first national title in men’s basketball since 2008 in April. At least one Kansas athlete from all 18 sports had at least one Name, Image and Likeness deal, according to a news release from the school.
(AP/David J. Phillip) Kansas forward David McCormack helped lead the Jayhawks to their first national title in men’s basketball since 2008 in April. At least one Kansas athlete from all 18 sports had at least one Name, Image and Likeness deal, according to a news release from the school.

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