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Tiki 😎🏝🏴☠️
@1997Aggies
Fighting Texas Aggie Singing Cadet ‘97, SEC PIRATE & CFB Troll. Owner & CEO: Bulk Material Equipment, an Industrial Manufacturing EPC Firm 😎🏝️🏴☠️
Tiki Island, TX Katılım Ağustos 2014
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Trump’s most recent Executive Order on college sports—the “Urgent National Action to Save College Sports” signed April 3, 2026—primarily targets the “pay-for-play” system in CFB (and basketball) by cracking down on booster/collective-driven NIL deals that function as disguised compensation for playing/recruiting.
It builds directly on his July 2025 “Saving College Sports” EO, which first declared third-party pay-for-play payments “improper” while still allowing legitimate fair-market NIL endorsements and school revenue-sharing.
The new order defines “fraudulent NIL schemes” as payments (via collectives or similar entities) that exceed the actual fair market value of the NIL/services provided, when tied to athletic participation. It prohibits universities from participating in, accepting contributions for, or using federal funds on such schemes.
Enforcement relies on federal leverage: Agencies will assess whether schools violating updated NCAA/governing-body rules on pay-for-play, transfers, eligibility, or revenue-sharing are “unfit” for federal grants/contracts. Rules must be updated by August 1, 2026.
Impact on Recruiting Moving Forward (Post-August 1, 2026)
Recruiting in CFB has been dominated by collectives offering massive “NIL” packages (often $500K–$2M+ for top prospects/transfers) as de facto pay-for-play. This EO aims to end that arms race
No more overt bidding wars via collectives: Future recruiting offers can’t rely on inflated, performance-tied payments from boosters. Deals must reflect genuine fair-market NIL value (e.g., actual brand endorsements unrelated to the school’s athletics program) or the school’s direct revenue-sharing pool (capped under the House v. NCAA settlement).
More emphasis on non-monetary factors: Programs will compete harder on coaching, development, facilities, education, playing time, and culture. Smaller or less booster-rich schools could gain ground.
Roster stability from other rules: The EO pushes for a 5-year eligibility window (with limited exceptions) and structured transfer rules (generally one transfer during the 5-year period, plus one more post-degree). This reduces portal chaos, making long-term recruiting more predictable and less about constant re-recruiting current players.
Overall effect on CFB: It could slow the financial escalation in Power conferences, preserve resources for non-revenue/women’s/Olympic sports, and reduce “pay-to-play” recruiting inducements that have destabilized programs. However, it will almost certainly face immediate lawsuits (as Trump predicted in March), and full impact depends on NCAA rule changes and court rulings. State NIL laws that enable loopholes may also be challenged.
In short, recruiting won’t go back to the pre-2021 amateur era overnight, but the wild west of collective cash as the #1 recruiting tool should be significantly curtailed once enforcement kicks in.
What Happens to Existing Pay-for-Play Contracts?
The EO does not retroactively void or cancel existing contracts. It is forward-looking and sets policy/evaluation criteria effective August 1, 2026:
Current deals (for players already on rosters) are likely to remain enforceable until they expire, consistent with how the July 2025 EO was interpreted (analysts noted it wouldn’t disrupt agreements already in place).
Schools and athletes can still honor legitimate fair-market NIL or revenue-sharing deals.
However, any new or renewed arrangements after the compliance date that are deemed “fraudulent NIL schemes” (i.e., pay-for-play in disguise) would violate the policy. Schools continuing them risk federal funding scrutiny.
No grandfathering clause is explicitly stated, but the order focuses on prohibiting future improper activities rather than unwinding past ones.
Bottom line: Existing contracts aren’t immediately torn up, but the landscape for future recruiting and roster retention changes dramatically. Expect legal challenges, possible delays, and ongoing negotiations with Congress/NCAA
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@AndrewKrivak I just saw he is going on a Farewell Tour
I’m going to be at one of those events!
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