$60 Million Sharing Cap

$60 million, $100 million, $1 billion, whatever. Someone will find a way to go around the "limit". Limits mean squat without some type of enforcement.
 
We really need to tax college sports... This is professional sports, not amateur athletics!
How are you going to tax college teams, the stadiums and arenas owned by the university, therefore tax exempt. The media deals would also fall under that same system, unlike professional sports the athletes are not being paid by the university, so they are not paying SS and other taxes on them, they are not university employees. Most college athletic funds are set up as non profit organizations, and therefore pay very little to none in taxes.

How do you tax a none profit organization?
 
Interesting article from Heartland College Sports about the Big10 and SEC wanting a $60 million sharing cap.


One good sign of this that 3rd party NIL endorsements aren't seen as unlimited to the big wigs. They want a $60M cap because they can afford to pay that directly. Apparently they aren't getting from $20M all the way to $60M today, or haven't found a way to shift $40M to third parties for sham NIL deals.

Is this relegation idea plausible?
$60M cap on Revenue sharing but if a football athlete gets Revenue sharing money, they are not allowed 3rd party endorsements (maybe not legal but may be needed)
Champions League - Initially current Big 10 and SEC teams and Notre Dame
Relegation League - Big 12 and ACC
Rebuild League - Everyone else

Football media deals are separated from other sports. There is a separate deal for each league and all teams in that league split revenue equally.
Theoretically lets say Champions League gets $80M per team, Relegation League gets $40M per team, Rebuild League gets $10M per team. Any team in any league can spend up to the $60M cap in revenue sharing.
Bottom 4 teams in Champions League drop to Relegation. Top 4 teams in Relegation go to Champions. Bottom 4 teams in Relegation go to Rebuild. Top 4 teams in Rebuild go to Relegation.

Each team can schedule 2 "friendlies" that don't count towards relegation (to save rivalries). Maybe those games can be sold individually?
10 game regular season within your league only.

Champions League has a playoff for the College Football Champion. They could even have a Play In Tournament to avoid Relegation.

Relegation League as a playoff for Promotion, maybe even a League championship. Play In Tournament to Avoid Relection.

Rebuild League has a playoff for Promotion, maybe even a championship.

Benefits:
1. Maintains rivalries via friendlies.
2. If you get promoted, the bump in media revenue immediately allows you to spend more on players.
3. If you get relegated, your media revenue drops so you can't likely afford to pay as much as players, but you should be in a similar ballpark as others in your league.
4. Because media revenue changes impact what is paid for players (probably), it doesn't impact your athletic department if you drop down.
5. Some promoted schools may choose to not use it all for players but use it for facility upgrades.
6. More teams have something to play for. Not just the college football playoffs, but promotion.
7. The promotion/relegation aspect might mean lower level team's media rights are better than they are today.
8. Its a fun idea. As a long term Iowa State fan, if we were in the Bottom league in theh 90's, how cool would getting promoted be? Insight Bowl with Mac was an awesome feeling. Getting a promotion would have been an even greater feeling.
 
The Big10 and SEC agreed to the current structure for 10 years as part of the House settlement. I don’t see anyway it gets modified voluntarily.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Kinch
No way the big 10 and Sec will enforce a hard cap amongst themselves so their word is meaningless. They are born liars.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1SEIACLONE
Fine, $60 million cap, now let's talk how is this money going to be policed to make sure schools do not go above the cap.

1. Every athlete signing a NIL, play for pay contract that specifically points out the money they are due and when.

2. All "contracts" are submitted to a body to make sure that each contact is correct and the player gets his money. Basically just making sure no one goes above that amount, and the player is paid.

3. Any school attempting to go above the agreed amount loses all NIL funding for their athletes for 3 years. No sign for $5 million but only report $3 million and the other $2 million is under the table. You cheat and get caught, you lose all rights to fund your NIL for 3 seasons.

Sounds great until somebody files a lawsuit and a fanboy judge goes a long with it. It will never end. They should just go back to no pay at all with under the table cheating.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Kinch
How are you going to tax college teams, the stadiums and arenas owned by the university, therefore tax exempt. The media deals would also fall under that same system, unlike professional sports the athletes are not being paid by the university, so they are not paying SS and other taxes on them, they are not university employees. Most college athletic funds are set up as non profit organizations, and therefore pay very little to none in taxes.

How do you tax a none profit organization?
The legislature could pass a law severing the AD from the Regents universities then require the resulting entities to pay for the rights to use the university’s name plus taxes, just to spitball an idea.
 
The legislature could pass a law severing the AD from the Regents universities then require the resulting entities to pay for the rights to use the university’s name plus taxes, just to spitball an idea.
They could. That will probably eliminate Olympic sports if the public is for it.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: FarmerCy1
Im kind of at the point where they just say SEC and Big 10 go your own way and play each other. The rest of us will be in a different division. You want to be in the NFL, Go play the Raiders or something. This is getting stupid. IT's like every one is trying to destroy the college sports scene. Nobody is thinking of the games, just the money. It's stupid
 
  • Like
Reactions: FarmerCy1
They could. That will probably eliminate Olympic sports if the public is for it.
To be fair, I didn’t say it was a good idea. It would probably be the end of the vast majority of all college sports, outside of the M2