PARADISE ISLAND, Bahamas β Of the 77 multi-team events being played in college basketball this season, many of them this week, two are especially hard for high-major teams to turn down for pretty obvious reasons.
Thereβs the Maui Invitational, played in an atmospheric band box known as the Lahaina Civic Center, with teams housed in high-end resorts fronting Kaanapali Beach and the Pacific Ocean.
Then thereβs the Battle 4 Atlantis, played in a converted ballroom on an Atlantic Ocean island thatβs literally called βParadiseβ and dedicated mostly to luxury tourism.
But in the NIL era of college basketball where many things are changing quickly, this trend could, too.
A new event in Las Vegas known as the Players Era Festival is guaranteeing each team $1 million in NIL money to play this week, though technically the βNILβ funds are meant to go to players as compensation for off-court activities. Similar events are expected in the works.
So it isnβt a big jump to wonder if that sort of financial incentive β allowing a coach to tell a player heβs guaranteed his share of $1 million for playing in just one event β could siphon appeal from the traditionally coveted MTEs.
βAtlantis and Maui have done a great job of creating a must-go-to event, so I think these two are pretty solid,β Gonzaga coach Mark Few said. βThose of us at the highest level want to be involved and theyβre great places to go to. Obviously, itβs a wonderful, beautiful resort, great part of the world, much like Maui.
βBut everybodyβs adapting. Programs are adapting. Coaches are adapting. Promoters are adapting. And itβs a changing world. So weβll see.β
The Arizona Wildcats are regulars at the Maui Invitational, appearing just about every four seasons, while making their second trip ever to the Battle 4 Atlantis this week.
UA has not announced yet which MTE it will play in next season and coach Tommy Lloyd said βweβve had callsβ about the new events. But, like so many things in the NIL era, thereβs an opaqueness about it all.
βI just donβt know whatβs real,β Lloyd said. βThatβs where Iβm at.β
The NCAA began allowing athletes to profit from βname, image and likenessβ in 2021 but NIL has since taken on many other forms than just commercial endorsements.
Programs have collectives around them that effectively funnel money from fans to to players as long as they participate in some of the collectiveβs events. And neutral-site and MTE games now are being built with NIL events in mind, working in ways for players to profit from appearances or other side promotions around them.
Who knows where it goes next?
βI wish I had a crystal ball,β Lloyd said. βI mean, thereβs so many changes and itβs hard to understand whatβs right and whatβs wrong.
βIβm glad itβs going in the direction where the players are part of it now, but itβs just thereβs so many people grabbing at so many things. And you know what I want to do? I want to play basketball β¦ anything more than that is little bit outside of my wheelhouse.β