The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

League: No easy answers on NIL

- By Mike Griffith DawgNation

DESTIN, FLA. — SEC leadership advanced the ball on NIL issues challengin­g college football, but by no means has anyone crossed the goal line.

“We understand there’s no ‘easy button’ to push,” SEC commission­er Greg Sankey said at the conclusion of the league’s annual spring meetings at the Sandestin Hilton. “One of the mantras this week is, it’s never going to be the way it was, but it doesn’t have to be the way it is.”

As things stand, collegiate athletics are in an uproar with the name, image and likeness legislatio­n put in play last summer, at the same point the NCAA passed a one-time transfer exemption.

Sankey, who’s beginning his eighth year as the SEC’s commission­er, said there was “high level and deep dialogue” among the league presidents, chancellor­s and athletic directors at a joint meeting Thursday. The main topics: Name, image and likeness Transfers

NCAA transforma­tions State legislatio­n Congressio­nal interests and legal activity.

“A very complex set of problems,” Sankey said.

The most pressing and challengin­g of which is NIL, as it affects the revenue model for college athletics.

Football, which drives the revenue train for athletic department­s, is dealing with a freeagency dynamic when recruiting and trying to retain players.

“Look at the NFL model, they have contracts, they have free agency, they have a players associatio­n,” Alabama coach Nick Saban said. “A lot of these things don’t exist and never really needed to exist in college football, but as soon as you start paying people, or people start earning money, then you’ve got to start thinking about how do you control these things in a way that creates uniform balance.”

Georgia coach Kirby Smart, whose program ran up the highest recruiting budget in the nation pre-COVID-19, confirmed that living-room conversati­ons have changed.

“It is changing the narrative for the player,” said Smart, who has suggested before that championsh­ips, facilities, and developmen­t don’t mean as much to recruits as they did pre-NIL. “I just would like it where a decision isn’t based on where (the recruit says), I’m going to the highest bidder.”

Brian Kelly, the coach with the most wins in Notre Dame history (113 victories) before assuming the LSU head coaching job in December, touched on the lack of transparen­cy in NIL dealings.

“This has turned into a runaway train that has moved well past student-athlete and is moving too fast toward a profession­al contract,” Kelly said in Destin. “And, what’s real and what is fiction? A kid could say, ‘I was offered $1.5 million to come to ‘X’ school, you better get on board or you’re not going to get me.”

Texas A&M coach Jimbo Fisher, whose well-documented verbal spat with Saban made headlines, said unificatio­n is key for college leaders to find a sustainabl­e model for NIL dealings.

“Instead of going, ‘ready, aim, shoot’ in this deal, we went ‘ready, shoot, aim,’ and that’s what has caused all the discomfort,” said Fisher, who rotated in as the chairman for the coaches’ group at this year’s meeting. “The thing you have to have is uniformity. It has to be concrete across the board, whatever each state’s rules or laws are, and I don’t know how you get to that. So the answer is there is no answer.”

At least not yet, which Sankey concedes. He also suggests that identifyin­g the root issues represents progress itself.

“You unpack the impact of state laws and the limits on some decision making at the conference level because of the state law implicatio­ns, that’s an ‘aha’ moment,” Sankey said. “You start to realize the complexiti­es, and then we can start to refocus on direction, which I think we’ve done.”

 ?? RUSSO/ASSOCIATED PRESS RALPH ?? Texas A&M coach Jimbo Fisher said unificatio­n is key for college leaders to find a sustainabl­e model for NIL dealings.
RUSSO/ASSOCIATED PRESS RALPH Texas A&M coach Jimbo Fisher said unificatio­n is key for college leaders to find a sustainabl­e model for NIL dealings.

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