Cookie917
Recruit
- Joined
- Jun 27, 2017
- Messages
- 3,813
I dont see this being an unpopular opinion. Seems pretty basic. I would just add a few caveats....OK, this is going to be unpopular, but I’m objective so idgaf.
Ruiz just said there was never a $9.5m on the table for Rashada. OK, here’s the problem I see w/ Rashada’s camp trying to sue Napier/UF…it’s a NIL deal. At what point did UF or its Collectives monetize off Rashada’s name, image, or likeness?
-Was it when they sold his jersey? No, that didn’t happen. -Was it b/c of viewership to watch him play? No, that didn’t happen.
-Was it at an event that he attended to help sales for the booster group? No, that didn’t happen.
As I told my lil homie’s mom, whose son now attends UW, b4 signing anything u have to read the entire document until u see a blank page, & have someone versed in financial law to read along w/ u. If UF made verbal promises, but didn’t fulfill said promises by a specific timeline, then it was up to the Rashada’s to either a) make the decision the program wasn’t for them & go elsewhere or b) enter into the NIL agreement & enroll thus making them fully liable. Also, if UF upon review felt that the kid wasn’t worth the price point, then they too had the right to bow out & move on.
They chose option a; now here’s the thing:
From 3 NIL contracts I’ve seen, enrollment + playing time were buried in the language. I’m not sure what his agreement was, but it appears to be sour grapes on The Rashada’s part b/c they chose the bush v. the bird in hand. The fact is, this kid & his camp played themselves. They used us to leverage more $$ from other programs, & instead of doing due diligence or better yet staying loyal, they got burned.
If I’m the courts, I’m being very weary of this type of suit b/c it would set up precedence, rewarding kids, parents, handlers for making ill informed decision to not follow throw on a commitment going to the highest bidder.
However, let’s be clear….if college students want to be treated as employees, welcome to adulthood.
1. Ruiz did not say Rashada never had a 9.5 million deal on the table. He said Lifewallet and Ruiz never had a deal for 9.5 million. He could have agreed to pay him 6 million and the canes collective paid him the other 3.5 million. Ruiz seemed to choose his words carefully and him being a lawyer is not surprising if he is electing to toe that line.
2. If you want to see Rashada's NIL agreement it was posted, I can send it to you if you want but I did not see anything about playing time but enrollment in a secondary education institution as defined by fla stat was in there.
3. Yes it could be seen as rewarding kids for de-comitting and playing games, it could also be seen as forcing individuals on the other side to follow-through on promises.
4. like you mentioned, if the kids want to be treated as employees, welcome to adulthood but take the same analogous situation and put it in the real world. I am unsure what you do for a living but I was headhunted to be at my current employer from my previous. I was employed at my old employer, thus "committed" to them, however new employer swooped in and promised me more money. It was a very good deal so I took that to my current employer as a courtesy if they wanted to match who said they were unable to match. I then quit and went to work for my new and current employer. If in that exact scenario I quit but then new employer re-negged on their offer of more money and now I am unemployed do you see that as I made an ill-informed decision or the cold call new employer induced me to quit then left me up **** creek?