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HUGS FOR HURLEY
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[QUOTE="Demo Square, post: 4612085, member: 10861"] NIL is a very good pragmatic reason why any coach in his 60's would not wish to become a serious bagman, kissing teenagers' A__'s for a living. Especially after winning it all as Hurley has now done. Many past coaching legends have already left the profession for that very reason. Without clear regulations & limits on NIL payments to players, college basketball - under NIL - can only get worse (more professional & run by unscrupulous, unregulated agents & greedy relatives). The exploitive colleges actually need the kids to be their greatest PR assets. So they bring in the moneymen to pay to play & the outrageous salaries of these coaches that makes them the highest paid employee in their states. And with fewer kids in NIL even going to class at all or graduating with real knowledge or meaningful degrees ( c'mon. sociology, black studies & communications are the weaker programs where they hide exceptional athletes these days) it leaves players vulnerable after college - or when their knees give out. NIL further diminishes the value of a meaningful bachelor's degree to players & their families. They've gotta know that only 1% of college players earn their way to one of the mere 450 jobs available in the NBA. How can NIL - era coaches preach going to class when NIL provides such a disincentive to do so? This change from amateur to professional will have many fall through the cracks, including coaches. I really enjoyed watching UConn win it all again today, over the course of this year. And it happens that a lucky, collection of new hired hand, NIL players via the transfer portal made this one of the deepest College teams of all time (like Wooden's legendary 60's-70's teams). With NIL, some years it will work for coaches, but many combinations with not work together not leading to UConn's lucky success this year. It's a very unstable job being a coach when more money is always the anwser. By nature, it encourages cheating. One thing is certain, with NIL & its money straight-jacket, the smaller mid-major coaches won't have much of a chance in the new game at all. This year, two years into NIL, & after struggling with how to maximize the best combinations of these new players, Danny Hurley & his staff crafted a great team of deep talent mid-season that had an answer to every question - one that annihilated the NCAAT field like a buzz saw. Congratulations Huskies! But after considering what an unregulated NIL environment will do to coaches, couldn't you see why few would NOT pursue the profession into their 60's? Father Demo [/QUOTE]
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HUGS FOR HURLEY
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