The law firm of AI, ChatGPT & Grok has weighed in with an analysis
(Roman Capra post)
Not an attorney ... but this looks like a decent interpretation of the issues being presented ... and if at all accurate it is a 100% win for Miami.
The law firm of AI, ChatGPT & Grok has weighed in with an analysis
(Roman Capra post)
Not an attorney ... but this looks like a decent interpretation of the issues being presented ... and if at all accurate it is a 100% win for Miami.
These coaches are doing the same stuff and then whining when it's done to them.Let's get Bama on their too for Horton and TVD I guess lol, these coaches are lame af. Everyone back channels and tampers is it wrong yes but it comes with the game.
Has to be all that cheese and dairyWisconsin certainly produces some cvnty corches...
I haven’t been following but are there any illusory contract issues given that the contract was based on a future law being passed or whatever it was???On the deal with the Wisconsin collective, yes. It’s the same-old same-old with NIL-collective deals.
But the Wisconsin rev-share MOU is a new thing. So we really don’t know how the first judge would compare it to traditional NIL deals.
The better defense would simply be to argue that the MOU isn’t a contract. Because it isn’t a contract.
Like you mentioned at the top of the video, I was a bit disturbed to learn that the B1G is the "man behind the curtain". Should we be worried that they've retained Dewey, Cheatham, & Howe?
I haven’t been following but are there any illusory contract issues given that the contract was based on a future law being passed or whatever it was???
One of the elements to proving tortious interference is that the poacher knows of the contract. This assertion in the article (if accurate) that the contract is "proprietary" could be problematic for UW. I'm wondering if the contract Lucas signed has a confidentiality provision (presumably to keep the players from posting it on the internet). That little bug could tank UW's case.From the article:
After a clause about the loss of a “student-athlete with valuable NIL rights” — which makes sense in the context of losing the paid endorser Wisconsin is purporting Lucas to be — plaintiffs’ attorneys wrote this: “Further harms include the loss of financial benefits UW-Madison stood to receive from Student-Athlete A’s continued participation in its football program.” If Wisconsin wasn’t paying Lucas to play football, then why would that matter in the context of the case?
AND
Or the lawsuit be a lot of noise without an intent to follow through. Wisconsin’s complaint is intentionally vague. Often, plaintiffs will include a copy of the contract in question as an exhibit. Wisconsin opted not to do that in this case, presumably because the schools do not want that contract language released to the public.
Bingo.
Article basically summed up every single point we’ve said here in this thread. Andy’s not bad, for a Gator.