The NIL Arms Race: The Death of Amateurism
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About this listen
Carolina’s Own takes a deep dive into the wild west of NIL and what it means for the future of college football. We react to reports surrounding Miami’s Malachi Tony securing a deal worth nearly $2 million annually, plus added benefits like unlimited yacht access and luxury suite privileges at Dolphins games. That leads to a bigger debate: where is the line between NIL and improper benefits, and can the NCAA realistically regulate perks that do not have a defined dollar value?
The conversation expands to Texas Tech’s billionaire-backed collective openly discussing building a roster with major financial backing. Is college football becoming Major League Baseball, where the biggest spenders win? Should there be a hard cap? And if enforcement is nearly impossible, has amateurism officially died?
We also debate eligibility after Aguilar was denied extended years while others have received medical exemptions. Should college football implement a strict five-year maximum with only true catastrophic injury exceptions? With players now stretching careers six and seven years, is the system being gamed?
From NIL caps to the possibility of separating football from the NCAA entirely, we explore whether college football is already a professional developmental league in everything but name. Ronnie even floats a bold idea: an NFL-style farm system where pro teams draft players out of high school and assign them to regional college programs.
We close by shouting out former Tar Heel Jeb Terry and his company COSM, which is building next-generation immersive sports viewing venues in major cities.
The system is wide open. Players are cashing in. The question is not whether change is coming — it is how drastic that change will be.
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