Morning Sun

NIL expert predicts $50K lowest pay for Power 5 players

- By Eric Olson

Football and men’s basketball players on scholarshi­p in one of the major conference­s can expect to soon earn a minimum of $50,000 each year he plays because of the influx of cash from so-called booster collective­s brokering name, image and likeness deals.

That prediction, based on market trends, was made this week by Blake Lawrence, co-founder and CEO of a company that helps athletes and schools navigate the ever-changing NIL landscape.

The increasing dollar amounts available to college athletes through the recent formation of collective­s has drawn the attention of the NCAA, which this week released guidance for schools in the hopes of maintainin­g the original intent of NIL compensati­on.

College sports leaders are concerned some collective­s have gone beyond paying athletes for activities such as endorsemen­ts and appearance­s and breaking the payfor-play ban by offering cash to influence athletes’ decisions on where to go to school. NCAA rules

prohibit boosters from making contact with prospectiv­e recruits.

Lawrence co-founded Opendorse in 2012 to facilitate endorsemen­t deals for profession­al athletes. The former Nebraska football player was among the advisers who worked with the NCAA on forming NIL policy, and he expanded his company to bring opportunit­ies to college athletes to cash in on their fame and developed compliance technology that allows schools to keep track of the deals.

Lawrence based his $50,000-a-year per player minimum on the assumption booster collective­s are directing about $5 million annually into NIL pools and that some of the money will go to athletes in other sports. There are collective­s supporting NIL at more than half of the 65 Power Five schools, including Notre Dame, and more are forming.

Michael Leroy, a University of Illinois labor law professor who researches college athlete compensati­on, said Lawrence’s projection is spot on.

“It’s an overheated market,” Leroy said, “and it really reflects the pentup demand to pay players.”

Lawrence said a top, five-star recruit could have NIL earning potential of more than $1 million per year when money coming from sources outside the booster collective is considered, especially if he is a quarterbac­k. Fourstar recruits could earn well into the six figures.

But even a lowerranke­d recruit at a less glamorous position would be well-compensate­d — the $50,000 earner — because the booster collective will make sure of it to keep peace on the team, Lawrence said.

“If an entire class arrives to campus and they are all scholarshi­p athletes and one individual is earning six figures and another is earning zero dollars, that is going to create a rift,” Lawrence said. “What these groups have done in certain markets is realize it’s about equality. Each individual in this locker room will receive some sort of support so there is equality at a base layer. And there may be additional value for the most marketable and influentia­l individual­s in each recruiting class.”

How long booster collective­s choose to fund NIL opportunit­ies is debatable.

Jason Belzer, an attorney and founder of Student-athlete NIL, which has worked with Penn State and Rutgers to set up collective­s, said establishi­ng fair market value for athletes is a moving target and that it is critical for the athletes getting paid to provide real services in return.

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