


The Billionaire's View
The article's title is Tech's Cody Campbell but gets at more than him and his Tech cronies that fund the Matador Club. But, you have to get pretty far into the article to get to what I think is the core of the article.
The concern over the lawsuits that HAVEN'T been filed yet and the frustration college sports biggies have with Congress' unwillingness to give them protection.
The second was about sustainability and ROI for booster money.
Only one other "big" booster that USA Today contacted would speak on the record. Florida's Gary Condron's take reminded me of what @Goldbug has been speaking out about.
"USA TODAY Sports spoke with more than 10 boosters at high profile power conference schools, and only one outside of Campbell would talk on the record about the fluid crapshoot that is NIL and paying players.
Every booster contacted said there’s a limit to the giving — and it’s arriving sooner than later.
“NIL space for boosters is like throwing money into a deep, dark hole with little to no return on the investment,” said Florida booster Gary Condron. “Nobody likes this. Not athletic directors, not coaches, not boosters. The only ones who like it are the players, and the attorneys and agents.”"
The article's title is Tech's Cody Campbell but gets at more than him and his Tech cronies that fund the Matador Club. But, you have to get pretty far into the article to get to what I think is the core of the article.
The concern over the lawsuits that HAVEN'T been filed yet and the frustration college sports biggies have with Congress' unwillingness to give them protection.
The second was about sustainability and ROI for booster money.
Only one other "big" booster that USA Today contacted would speak on the record. Florida's Gary Condron's take reminded me of what @Goldbug has been speaking out about.
"USA TODAY Sports spoke with more than 10 boosters at high profile power conference schools, and only one outside of Campbell would talk on the record about the fluid crapshoot that is NIL and paying players.
Every booster contacted said there’s a limit to the giving — and it’s arriving sooner than later.
“NIL space for boosters is like throwing money into a deep, dark hole with little to no return on the investment,” said Florida booster Gary Condron. “Nobody likes this. Not athletic directors, not coaches, not boosters. The only ones who like it are the players, and the attorneys and agents.”"