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Just curious ….

Jan 19, 2005
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I have been reading about our NIL woes on this board. What is the solution? How many on this board has contributed?

When my kids were in high school I tried to get them interested in in my alma mater. I sponsored a few scholarships through the rams club for four season tickets. It was not cheap. But I was glad to do it. After a few years and a lot of money spent on flights and hotels they left for colleges. One went to a school in Boston. The other went to a PAC 12 school. So now I still follow but limit my financial support. I gave up my rights to the tickets to my brother.

The point is I was glad to give when there was a good reason. My brother spends money supporting UNC because he now has good reasons. He took his family of four for the Maui classic. He wants his kids at UNC.

Where does Kentucky get its NIL money? Duke? Kansas? How does UNC generate its NIL funds? Is it a lack of interest?
 
Interesting questions, for sure. Thanks for supporting our alma mater, Calvin.
I have donated to academic scholarships for Carolina students through the years.
As much as l love and appreciate the efforts of our student-athletes, l personally cannot support the NIL system
that has evolved over the last few years.
I believe the job of our university is actually to educate students, especially those
from families who struggle to afford the expense of college. I love sports, and
played a sport at Carolina, but am ambivalent about a pay-to-play NIL system
for what is essentially high quality entertainment for the general public. Just my $.02.
 
I contribute to scholarships and buy season tix but I balk at directly supporting the pay-for-play model. For example, some friends and I purchased some of those memorabilia boxes but I refuse to pay for signatures. I would rather see UNC stick to principle and seek out lower tier talent to develop than become mercenary U! UNC has been playing on an unlevel playing field for decades and managing to be competitive. I expect it will continue until the system cycles back to what it is supposed to be! I can be patient until either UNC finds a way to compete (it already has) and/or the system reverts back closer to what it should be!
 
Good question. I don't really understand this issue myself. What type of donors support this? Is it corporations or large donors or simply multiple small contributors. I personally agree with the above posts and would not contribute to this. I think a scholarship and free room and board is a good deal.
 
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I contribute to scholarships and buy season tix but I balk at directly supporting the pay-for-play model. For example, some friends and I purchased some of those memorabilia boxes but I refuse to pay for signatures. I would rather see UNC stick to principle and seek out lower tier talent to develop than become mercenary U! UNC has been playing on an unlevel playing field for decades and managing to be competitive. I expect it will continue until the system cycles back to what it is supposed to be! I can be patient until either UNC finds a way to compete (it already has) and/or the system reverts back closer to what it should be!
You think the toothpaste is going back into the tube?
 
Good question. I don't really understand this issue myself. What type of donors support this? Is it corporations or large donors or simply multiple small contributors. I personally agree with the above posts and would not contribute to this. I think a scholarship and free room and board is a good deal.
I blame the players very little in this. The reality is most college basketball players have their 4 or 5 college years to maximize on their basketball playing careers. Some of the more talented ones will have 10 years. Some of the really lucky ones will have 15-20 years including college and pro to squeeze as much out of their basketball talent as they can. So I don't blame the kids for wanting more than a scholarship and free room/board.

This is the consequence of being late to adapt and having 0 organizational competency at the highest level of the NCAA. Anyone could see pay for play coming probably 15+ years ago and that system of just a scholarship being enough was doomed. Players were starting lawsuits and the discussions were getting louder and louder. Then you open the floodgates without any plan really and you get what you deserve.

I will always blame the grownups over the kids. Especially if the kids aren't really doing anything wrong.
 
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