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Next part of the NIL lawsuit will be small colleges seeking compensation for
Tiger Boards - The Amphitheatre
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Next part of the NIL lawsuit will be small colleges seeking compensation for

2

Jun 4, 2024, 8:52 AM
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transfers. If they take a kid no one else wanted...coach him up to the point he IS wanted...they will feel they are entitled to compensation for their work/investment when the player transfers to another school.

I don't think they would be wrong. Doesn't even have to be limited to small colleges. Clemson has sent quite a few to other schools with no investment recovered.

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They would be wrong . . .

1

Jun 4, 2024, 9:30 AM
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and I think it's highly unlikely they could find any legal cause of action to ground that well enough to make it stick.

Unless there's a contractual arrangement in place that entitles them and obligates someone else to pay them for said investment of time, then they've got nowhere to go with it. The current developments are making players more like employees, which means the contractual arrangements, whether direct or through collectives and union type organizations, are going to be for services rendered, not something nebulous and subjective like "increased value over time from coaching development."

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Re: They would be wrong . . .

1

Jun 4, 2024, 9:43 AM
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I agree, its not really any different than employees switching companies to get a raise.

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Except companies have contracts all the time

1

Jun 4, 2024, 9:48 AM
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requiring a certain amount of time in service in order to get certain benefits without having to pay them back.

Education, training, relocation expenses, signing bonuses often have time requirements associated with them.

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