About 30 minutes into a daylong discussion about the future of college sports Thursday in Washington, D.C., Arizona president Robert C. Robbins asked a question that arguably spoke to the heart of it all.
It was about money, of course.
The UA president asked Jason Belzer, who works with multiple NIL collectives as founder of Student Athlete NIL, what the average compensation has been for major college athletes in the NIL era.
Belzer, who had risen from the audience to tell NCAA president Charlie Baker that 95% of collective money goes to football and menβs basketball players, told Robbins that heβs found power conference football starters average $45,000 and power conference basketball starters average $75,000.
So there it was. There are still no public contracts, registries or formal guidelines to NIL compensation β just a bunch of opaqueness stitched together by a patchwork of differing state laws that college administrators are lobbying to have overridden via federal legislation β but the numbers have been floating out there anyway, fueling the transfer-portal merry-go-round.
For athletes, it can work like this: Donβt like getting less than $75,000? Upset that a teammate makes more than that? Think you can get more elsewhere?
Dip into the transfer portal and take a look around.
βWhen you sign your contract with the collective, youβre not bound,β said Walker Jones, head of the Ole Miss-focused Grove Collective, during a discussion about NIL.. βYou can go, `Well, you know what? Iβve got my bird in the hand so Iβm gonna use that as a bargaining tool. I kind of like it here, but Iβm gonna go use this to make some money.β I donβt think anybody loves that.β
Certainly not UA football coach Jedd Fisch. Sitting on a panel later that discussed the transfer portal, he talked about the challenges of building a roster when even starters are liable to have wandering eyes.
βWeβre talking about when your best receiver on your team is going to go to another program to go get paid β and thatβs why heβs going β because thereβs really no other reason to go to the other program,β Fisch said. βIf youβre a starter and youβre producing and life is good and youβre enjoying your opportunity β and youβre leaving β youβre leaving for money. And thatβs the part of the NIL, transfer-portal piece that I think is significant.β
While Fisch annually has an 85-scholarship-player roster to juggle, the UA menβs basketball program has lost and received starters in just the past few months. Starting point guard Kerr Kriisa left for West Virginia while North Carolinaβs leading scorer, Caleb Love, and San Diego State starter Keshad Johnson both joined the Wildcats.
The Wildcats also lost a more βtraditionalβ transfer this spring when seldom-used wing Adama Bal left for Santa Clara for what will likely be a bigger role.
βThereβs two portals: Thereβs the elite-player portal, and then thereβs the portal. And the elite-player portal is where NIL is coming into play,β Fisch said. βThe other 95% are doing it because they canβt make it on the team. They donβt feel like they are the right fit because theyβre the third linebacker rather than being in the two-deep, or β¦ (itβs because) `you brought in a freshman whoβs better or a portal (player) whoβs better, so Iβm going to just move on and try my luck in a different program.β
βThe problem is when the elite-transfer portal and NIL intertwine. Thatβs what I think we have to regulate.β
Fisch said having players sign binding contracts could help coaches plan better, while panelists debated whether deals should be registered or otherwise more transparent β and whether there should be a cap on payments distributed.
Arizonaβs two collectives, Friends of Wilbur and Wilma and the menβs basketball-focused Arizona Assist, have mostly discussed NIL payments only in an aggregate sense. Jones said the Grove Collective does not publicize its deals with Ole Miss athletes.
βA lot of student-athletes donβt want that out there,β Jones said. βNumber two, itβd be a competitive disadvantage. Iβve got Georgia and my buddies in the SEC in the room, but weβre all trying to kill each other at the same time. But Iβm not against some sort of registry where maybe thereβs information about `itβs a starter on the womenβs basketball team thatβs a sophomore, who was a transfer, made this.β That could help.β
Baker said having no visibility into the NIL market βputs everybody at risk,β noting the high percentage of athletes who enter the transfer portal and wind up finding nowhere to go. He said incorporating a legitimate commitment to Title IX could also help, alluding to Belzerβs estimate that only 5% of collective funds go to womenβs sports and other menβs programs.
βI havenβt talked to anybody at any level of college sports who doesnβt think we need to deal with accountability and transparency,β Baker said. βSo I actually view that as an opportunity for us to demonstrate that we can speak with one voice and communicate effectively about why this matters β and especially make the case that for student-athletes and their families in particular, this is important and we should work with them to get it right.β
Baker and many other college sports officials have been asking lawmakers about potential legislation that could override varying state NIL laws, making for a potentially more equal playing field. A new California bill aiming to force schools to share revenues with athletes is another concern of many college administrators.
βThatβs why a lot of us are here this week in DC,β said ACC commissioner Jim Phillips, who spoke in favor of NIL contracts for athletes and agent registration. βMaybe the percentage of something getting done federally is small, but weβre all here because we still think that thereβs an opportunity. At the end of the day, if youβre going to have intra- and interstate competition, there has to be rules that are similar across the board.
βWe need some help. We really do.β