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Nick Saban calls for NIL regulation in order to maintain a 'competitive balance' in college football

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ATLANTA โ€” Nick Saban began his session at SEC media days by lamenting the fact that when heโ€™s on vacation, heโ€™s the prisoner of his wifeโ€™s to-do list โ€” sweep, mop, take out the garbage. Ole Miss head coach Lane Kiffin showed up for his session proudly open-collared and without a tie, even though every other coach has always worn one.

These are men who crave control in every phase of their lives, not just their work. In the vast new landscape of NIL, theyโ€™re seeing the limits of their control, and theyโ€™re fighting back against their dwindling influence.

โ€œI don't dislike name, image and likeness. I'm all for the players. I want our players to do well,โ€ Saban said at his Tuesday morning session. โ€œBut there's got to be some uniformity and protocol of how name, image and likeness is implemented.โ€

Saban offhandedly noted that his Alabama players made $3 million in NIL revenues last year; Heisman trophy winner Bryce Young alone may have accounted for as much as a third of that. Itโ€™s a substantial total โ€” $3 million more than players were (legally) receiving the prior year, of course โ€” but itโ€™s a small fraction of the $9.75 million Saban earned in salary last year.

The $3 million figure, Saban said, was the highest in college football last season โ€” which may or may not be true, given the breadth of booster collectives now pooling funds for players โ€” but itโ€™s also likely to look as minuscule as pro athletesโ€™ salaries of prior decades. Texas Tech announced Monday afternoon that its donorsโ€™ collective would sign up to 100 players to $25,000 annual deals, a total potential outlay of $2.5 million for that single endeavor alone.

That volume of money flowing, uncontrolled and unmonitored, into the Venmo accounts of college players โ€” and through the hands of those entrusted to handle those funds โ€” is what troubles college coaches, both because of the effect on the players themselves and, more importantly, the potential for even further disruption of the imbalance that already exists in college football.

โ€œIt's like a payroll in baseball. What teams win over a long period of time? Teams that have high payrolls and can pay players a lot. We're in a situation not any different than that,โ€ Kiffin said. โ€œI said day one, you legalize cheating, so get ready for the people that have the most money to get players. Now you have it. It is what it is.โ€

The rhetorical counterargument โ€” if itโ€™s legalized, itโ€™s not cheating anymore โ€” doesnโ€™t matter as much as the fact that the gates are now wide open for money that might not have flowed into an underground economy. In the same way that legalization of sports gambling draws in new waves of gamblers, NIL gives a wider range of boosters a new, direct way to funnel money into their beloved program.

More money, more people, less control. Itโ€™s no surprise that coaches are regarding this new NIL landscape with a skeptical eye.

โ€œThe biggest concern is how does this impact and affect recruiting?โ€ Saban said. โ€œOn the recruiting trail right now, there's a lot of people using this as inducements to go to their school by making promises as to whether they may or may not be able to keep in terms of what players are doing.โ€

โ€œIf you have boosters out there deciding who they're going to pay to come play, and the coach isn't involved in it, how does that work?โ€ Kiffin said. โ€œThey could go pick who they want, pay him however much. Are the boosters going to tell you who to play, too? When they don't play, how is that going to work out?โ€

Alabama head coach Nick Saban speaks during NCAA college football Southeastern Conference media days Tuesday, July 19, 2022, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)
Alabama head coach Nick Saban speaks during NCAA college football Southeastern Conference media days Tuesday, July 19, 2022, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)

Both men framed their objections as questions, but both have an answer: more regulation, more oversight, more coach involvement in the NIL process.

โ€œIdeally, if we're going to be in an NIL world,โ€ Kiffin said, โ€œit's going to get capped so that there's some way of controlling it and keeping playing fields close to the same. Otherwise, you're just going to have these glaring differences within Division I football. โ€ฆ Ideally I would think that the coach should be part of managing that.โ€

โ€œThere is no competitive sport anywhere that doesn't have guidelines on how they maintain some kind of competitive balance,โ€ Saban said. โ€œThat's why they have rules in the NFL where you have a salary cap, you have difficult schedules if you have a successful season, you draft later if you have a successful season, you draft early if you have an unsuccessful season.โ€

Saban understands exactly how Alabama, of all teams, complaining about an unfair state of play comes across. So he framed his comments in a rising-tide-lifts-all-boats way, saying that NIL oversight would โ€œcreate a competitive balance issue between the haves and have nots. We're one of the haves. Don't think that what I'm saying is a concern that we have at Alabama because we're one of the haves.โ€

Itโ€™s a compelling pair of arguments โ€”weโ€™re advocating regulation for the good of the game, and weโ€™re just trying to protect the players โ€” except both arguments sidestep the fact that pro athletesโ€™ endorsement income isnโ€™t counted against a salary cap. One year from now, Bryce Young will be able to sign whatever endorsement deals he wants, and not one nickel will count against the cap of whichever NFL team drafts him.

Kiffinโ€™s concerns about overly optimistic agents filling a playerโ€™s head with dreams of playing time would hold more weight if coaches on the recruiting trail hadnโ€™t already been doing exactly that since recruiting began. Fears of unscrupulous boosters or unethical money managers taking advantage of unaware and overwhelmed families are a problem โ€” but again, thatโ€™s always been a problem in college athletics, just not an above-board one.

One potential form of salvation comes right from Sabanโ€™s own defense. Earlier this year, linebacker Will Anderson, a potential 2022 Heisman candidate, created the agency A3 with the express purpose of aiding players in navigating the complex world of NIL.

โ€œI donโ€™t know too much about NIL, I just know the deals I get help me and my family,โ€ he said with a laugh. โ€œWith the whole NIL thing, it was kind of overwhelming at first, because you donโ€™t know a lot of the verbiage and terminology when it comes to deals. So with A3, itโ€™s going to help players such as myself, and younger players under me, come together with my advisory team to help go over contracts to take the load off your family to read over everything thatโ€™s going on.โ€

Over and above all the discussion about whether NIL is or isnโ€™t ruining college athletics is this: Itโ€™s a marketplace, and a marketplace functions on demand. A player might get an NIL deal to join a team, but if he doesnโ€™t perform, further deals arenโ€™t likely to materialize. Itโ€™s why Young says he keeps his focus on what got him here.

โ€œThe biggest thing for me is having priorities,โ€ he said. โ€œMaking sure the main thing is the main thing, making sure that whateverโ€™s best for the team comes first, and whateverโ€™s best for the individual, NIL-wise, comes second to that.โ€

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