Breaking news
South Africa stripped of their 2023 Rugby World Cup title…U.S. women’s national soccer team starts World Cup with 3-0…Pakistan vs Jordan 0-3: FIFA World Cup 2026 qualifier –…World Cup 2023-24 prize money: How much did Mikaela Shiffrin…T20 World Cup 2024: England star Ben Stokes pulls out…Former Michigan football tight end selects transfer destination – Yahoo…Egypt’s Late Goal Denies Mozambique’s Thrilling Comeback in the African…Ghana Suffers Heartbreaking 1-2 Defeat to Cape Verde Islands in…FIFA and Coca-Cola Men World RankingLionel Messi wins football’s Ballon d’Or for the eighth timeTwo individuals tragically lost their lives before the scheduled football…WORLD CUP QUALIFIERS: Brazil’s Coach Diniz Praises Neymar and Vinicius.Morocco, Portugal and Spain joint bid FIFA World Cup 2030The Best 2023: Over One Million Votes Cast with the…Euro 2028 to be hosted by Britain and Ireland, while…Portugal secures their inaugural World Cup victoryPreview of the 2023 ICC Cricket World Cup Match: India…Welteji and Kessler achieved world record breaking performancesAsian Games 2023: Gilas Pilipinas win first men’s basketball gold Cricket World Cup 2023: Pakistan beat NetherlandsPakistan vs Afghanistan15 ways to make the most of your new cameraSocceroos coach Graham Arnold makes bombshell decision after team's awful…Running Back Start 'Em, Sit 'Em Picks For Fantasy Football…Graham Arnold quits Socceroos after poor start to World Cup…Severna Park girls soccer blanks Chesapeake, 2-0, in physical battle…OTD: Do you remember Yuvraj Singh's six sixes in an…

Urban Meyer believes NIL in college football has evolved into cheating: 'That's not what the intent is' – CBS Sports

Play Now
Men’s Brackets
Play Now
Women’s Brackets
A Daily SportsLine Betting Podcast
NFL Draft recap
Three-time national champion coach Urban Meyer blasted the current status of name, image and likeness earnings in college football by calling it “cheating” during an interview on the “Lou Holtz Show.” The 59-year-old three-time national champion said NIL is “great” but lamented the “arms race” it has created.
“If you’re a woman basketball player like the great girl from Iowa and they want to put her on a billboard and pay her, they should be able to do that,” Meyer said. “But that’s not what happened. What’s happened is the arms race of collecting money from donors and the donors are simply paying players. That’s what I understand is happening, and I don’t like that.”
Meyer last coached in college football during the 2018 season. Though that was only six years ago, where it was another era entirely. Since Meyer’s seven-year run at Ohio State concluded, the arrival of NIL, unlimited transferring and conference realignment have rocked the sport.
“If Lou Holtz or Urban Meyer or Marvin Harrison Jr., or C.J. Stroud, they want to go use their name and help sell cars, help a business, that’s great,” Meyer said. “But to have a 17-year-old demand money for a visit, to pay these players a lot of money to go visit a charity for 20 minutes and they write you a check for $50,000, that’s cheating. That’s not what this is all about. I’m very disappointed in where it went.”
While a large-scale revenue-sharing model is in the developing stages in college athletics, player compensation for now is stuck in the collective model under the guise of “NIL,” which doesn’t sit well with Meyer.
“There’s these things called collectives where they go out and get money from donors and get this big, giant mass of money and they pay players,” he said. “That’s not what the intent is.”
More: Ohio State AD Gene Smith says ‘of course’ Michigan’s rivalry wins should have asterisk
© 2004-2024 CBS Interactive. All Rights Reserved.
CBS Sports is a registered trademark of CBS Broadcasting Inc. Commissioner.com is a registered trademark of CBS Interactive Inc.
Images by Getty Images and US Presswire

source

Share this post

PinIt

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

scroll to top