Bea33

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    • #245080
      SLC-UteFan
      Participant

      And he got a very good bump up on 247, from their previous of .91 to .94, with a composite of .9489. Climbed 81 spots on 247.

      247 Link

    • #245078
      D T
      Participant

      You registered just to post this?

      • #245083
        Tanner
        Participant

        Hey I didn’t intend for it to be spam or anything like that and I didn’t just register for this. I actually had no idea this existed. Life long Utes fan and season ticket holder if it inappropriate I will take it down

    • #245076
      Tony (admin)
      Keymaster

      Members: Do you consider this spam or should I leave it? This user registered just to post this.

      • #245084
        Tanner
        Participant

        Tony let me know I will take it down if needed. I don’t want trouble. I saw a different thread through a google search taking about someone wanting to find replica rings back in 22 and that’s how I found out that this site existed.

      • #245082
        Central Coast Ute
        Participant

        I consider it spam

      • #245081
        2008 National Champ
        Participant

        I would consider anything promoting a different website or selling anything as spam.

        Exceptions would be:

        1. Visitors from other teams inviting us to join their chats
        2. Seat availability

    • #245074
      Central Coast Ute
      Participant

      Serious question, do people really buy replica rings for a team they never played on?

      • #245075
        Tanner
        Participant

        Absolutely! Usually not to wear around cause that would be silly where we didn’t play on the team but displayed in a case in my office makes for a cool conversation piece and memory! I collect sport memorabilia for all my teams.

    • #245079
      Stone
      Participant

      I totally agree. The thing that gets lost on many is that NIL cannot be controlled by the NCAA or the schools because, technically, it is just the same as Nike or Adidas signing a contract with a pro player. The NFL does not control that. A player is free to sign a shoe contract with anyone he wants. That is the same in college with NIL. The NCAA and schools cannot prohibit a player from talking to a potential sponsor. That was the whole point of the litigation that brought this about.

      The difference is that in the NFL, the actual salary paid by the team is significant enough that the “NIL” deals are *generally* smaller. So a player in the NFL is not typically leaving as a free agent to a bigger market for sponsorship dollars (although, that does happen to some extent). In college, there is no official salary paid by the school, so the incentive structure of the NFL does not apply. If there were college salaries and contracts, then the tampering thing would make sense. But schools and the NCAA cannot enforce tampering against sponsors.

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