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Alum '04 wrote:
GWRising wrote:
I am fine with the questions in advance. It's potentially a larger audience and zoom calls with many participants randomly asking questions can often become unwieldy. If you have additional questions I am sure there will be a forum to ask them. The idea behind advanced questions is to keep it moving (given the finite time) and to try to eliminate redundant or similar questions. This isn't some press conference with hard hitting journalism.
Then why wouldn't you take questions via say email during the event? You're still screening questions. Only accepting questions in advance prevents viewers from submitting questions as they arise from new information.
Due to interest of time - if you have to read questions that may be embedded in a longer email often with a statement included. What if you got a hundred questions on the spot. How do you decide which ones to answer? And yes, some questions are not appropriate. No one is going to tell you how much James Bishop has earned in NIL. Why? Because you just let the competition know what GW pays its better players and also provided information that James may not want out there. There are certain aspects to this that cannot be openly addressed.
However, I am quite certain that if someone has additional questions that can be answered there will be another forum to ask them..
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I had something else come up and wasn't able to join the call.
I would appreciate a summary of any important points.
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Given that NILs don’t have to disclose their donors, is there anything preventing a school with means from paying their coach an extra, say $2 million a year, and then the coach putting $2 million of personal money into the NIL as a de facto way of the school funding its own NIL program?
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One of those things that you can do, but could blow up in your face.
FC, other tidbits that I can recall (I was multitasking): Focus on protecting the team and GW. Doing everything as conservatively as possible. Raised "in the mid six figures" last year. Two ways to donate: Through non profit work where the student athlete will have to work at a non-profit for the money (tax deductible), or, run-of-the-mill NIL. International students can't do the former. Targeted towards men's hoops, but available to all student athletes.
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Free Quebec wrote:
Given that NILs don’t have to disclose their donors, is there anything preventing a school with means from paying their coach an extra, say $2 million a year, and then the coach putting $2 million of personal money into the NIL as a de facto way of the school funding its own NIL program?
Tax planners, attorneys, and the IRS would love you!
I joined the call, and if you are familiar with the NIL environment, there really wasn't much new to explain beyond the university's desire to help athletes understand the financial consequences and needs of making more money and distributing NIL opportunities beyond MBB.
Last edited by Merrick (1/22/2024 4:15 pm)
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BM wrote:
Two ways to donate: Through non profit work where the student athlete will have to work at a non-profit for the money (tax deductible), or, run-of-the-mill NIL. International students can't do the former. Targeted towards men's hoops, but available to all student athletes.
If you are interested in donating via the non-profit, here is the link
For the international kids, they said it was easy to do this year because our MTE was in the Bahamas so the NIL work could be done in conjunction.. Might be harder the years we stay within the US.
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Thanks for the info.
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This is the only reason that's keeping me from donating too - I'm sure they're all figuring it out, but some sort of guidance would be helpful. I know they operate in a different stratosphere, but look at all the resources and information UConn's put together here, for example.
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trops_fc wrote:
This is the only reason that's keeping me from donating too - I'm sure they're all figuring it out, but some sort of guidance would be helpful. I know they operate in a different stratosphere, but look at all the resources and information UConn's put together here, for example.
LOL. UConn has $5 million dollars in NIL money and has won 2 straight national championships - it's not in just a different stratosphere - it's in a different universe. How about we compare apples to apples? Show me what other A-10 teams are doing.
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GWRising wrote:
trops_fc wrote:
The Ross-Man! wrote:
Are they providing you with anything for the monthly donation? The website seems pretty bare bonesThis is the only reason that's keeping me from donating too - I'm sure they're all figuring it out, but some sort of guidance would be helpful. I know they operate in a different stratosphere, but look at all the resources and information UConn's put together here, for example.
LOL. UConn has $5 million dollars in NIL money and has won 2 straight national championships - it's not in just a different stratosphere - it's in a different universe. How about we compare apples to apples? Show me what other A-10 teams are doing.
I’d say UMass has a pretty sophisticated Collective. One thing they do is have all the athletes they sponsor on their website and the date they signed:
One thing that FOG could do that all other fundraising organizations do is in person events. Why not rent out Tonic sometime this summer with the FOG-sponsored players in attendance? Or have a FOG-donor only open practice?
In my personal experience, putting faces to names and building relationships goes a long way.
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Been away from posting for awhile but always visiting board to get the pulse on GW Hoops. Just saw this note on scholarships. Had no idea on the Utz connection. We need the Rice family to think more about contributing to GWU NIL fund vs Law School.
Also noted Kerry Washington set up $1M scholarship for the arts.
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Whine less donate more
30 years of incessant whining about GW on the 2 sites has played a small role in ....
Do you want to win? Support this athletics department. Stop crying about it and certainly stop lying about it that would be a good start there's been a lot of both over the many years of the two sites
Raise High
Online!
The Dude wrote:
Whine less donate more
30 years of incessant whining about GW on the 2 sites has played a small role in ....
Do you want to win? Support this athletics department. Stop crying about it and certainly stop lying about it that would be a good start there's been a lot of both over the many years of the two sites
Raise High
I find myself in complete disagreement with you on this one. Respectfully, if the university wants donations, It needs to be transparent. To simply suggest we stop complaining about this and just to give more is tantamount to suggesting we should give to a charity whose mission we believe in but who squanders its funds.
This is a highly complex situation. There’s not a single person on this message board who doesn’t want to see good things happen for GW. But to put on the rose-colored glasses that you have and not recognize that answers need to be forthcoming is something that even the greatest true believers among us likely cannot or will not do.
I do not agree with those on this board who are critical of GW’s athletic department simply because our basketball team hasn’t achieved high results. But I absolutely don’t agree with you that we have a responsibility to just keep giving if we are troubled by the off-the-court results.
My GW education taught me to think critically and make decisions based upon the evidence at hand. The problem here is the evidence isn’t yet known and (while I am as rah-rah Go GW as they come) it is not clear how this happened in the first place.
My hope is that the investigation shows that there was a contractor who did a study about the feasibility and that they didn’t do their due diligence. I hope that athletic department leadership is vindicated and that this was not their fault.
And I hope that there really is an option two and that plans can move forward.
I am continuously horrified by the amount of money spent by division one universities on athletics. However, in this case, it is clear a practice facility must be made available.
Raise High should mean supporting GW because you believe in not just what the university wants to achieve but also how they’re doing it. It is unreasonable on your part to virtually demand that GW fans have a responsibility to just keep giving when they have legitimate questions.
For me, I am not an active donor nor do I have the means to do so. But I continue to want nothing but the best for the university and the sports teams. My views are personal to me, just like yours are to you and also how those who are mad about this are to them. We all have our own standards annd expectations and I think this is a fine forum to allow those views to be respectfully voiced — whether you or I agree with them.
And to that, I say Raise High.
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Exceptionally well put BGF. You beat me to it but suffice it to say that your words came across far more eloquently than mine would have. Am reasonably certain that The Dude's post was a thinly veiled attack on my "incessant whining" but so be it.
We're kidding ourselves if we don't believe that there is a cumulative effect involved with respect to all of the mishaps this century. The Dude or anyone can let me know which of the following wasn't worthy of some whining:
Karl Hobbs brings in players who are eligible to play according to the NCAA Clearinghouse but who is later hung out to dry by GW administrators, rather than backed by these same administrators who were in the know all along, after the NY Times and Washington Post ran stories about the fraudulent prep schools that certain players came from. The negative residual impact was that recruiting restrictions tightened severely, resulting in the school missing out on certain players who had agreed to play for GW but now found themselves failing to academically qualify.
Mike Lonergan/Patrick Nero ends up being a two year saga that ends with the school backing the wrong choice in Nero. Lonergan, portrayed as a monster by some, is somehow decent enough to lead his team on a trip to Japan, only to lose his job days later. Nero's misdeeds are ultimately exposed and he shamefully leaves the school the following year. The school's immediate choices as replacements are each made in-house without any type of national search. There was no time for such a search to replace Lonerrgan, but there were also questions on how: a) the least experienced assistant coach in Maurice Joseph was elevated to the top position on an interim basis and b) why this interim tag was removed and his contract extended. (Actually, there were reasons for that which I will not go into but suffice it to say that GW was putting its checkbook as a very high priority.) In the case of TV, I do not know what or how much TV knew about Nero's erratic behavior so I am not going to suggest that she never should have been hired (though a case could be made that cleaning house under these circumstances would have been warranted). The fairer criticism should be offered based on what has happened on her watch.
Whether Jamion Christian should ever have been hired or not, the school was not in a financial position to terminate his contract with two full seasons remaining. (This lends itself to absurd reasoning that GW can afford to fire coaches under contract but subsequently can afford little else.) There were undoubtedly behind-the-scene forces at work here and two years later, I would consider CC an upgrade (though I also was very opinionated about his candidacy before JC was hired). Nevertheless, this was just another example of the school using what limited funds it claims to have to pay someone not to work, joining ML and inexplicably, PN on this list.
The scoreboard came crashing down to the floor. Thank God nobody was hurt.
And now, the plans for a new practice facility deemed necessary to compete with other A10 programs have also come crashing down. If you don't think this is something worth whining about, then you might be wondering why Dr. Granberg has initiated an investigation as to how and why this miscalculation has occurred.
And all the while, the men's and women's basketball programs have not returned to being top 4 contenders in the A10, and most other sports aside from swimming and diving have also performed below par.
It should be recognized that we all live in a performance-based society. Those who contribute the most to their professional organizations tend to be paid the most money. Those volunteers who are the most loyal and committed tend to be the ones who receive the honors and awards. Those who put their families above all else with their hearts and souls tend to be among the more fulfilled people I know.
Please donate to GW athletics and/or NIL if you'd like to. Please hold out for more transparency as BGF suggests if you'd like. Or, here's another thought. GW Athletics: let's start doing better or let's stop screwing up.
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Thank you BGF and Mayhem for the additional color. Dude, I wasn’t whining but merely pointing out there’s a pathway to boost our NIL with recent generous donors like the Rice family and Kerry Washington.
I haven’t seen any promotions or sponsorships for Utz at the Smith Center in my 40 years of GWU fandom. Based on recent activities and corporate sponsorships across the college sports landscape, why not approach the Rice family to strike a deal for naming rights, signage, promotions, snack give aways, etc…Looks like a great opportunity, rather than whining.
BTW- I do contribute to the athletics program- men’s basketball and women’s soccer annually, just not to the extent that a corporation could provide.
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To MSC's point: Memphis and FedEx recently entered into a partnership where FedEx will provide $5 million annually for NIL opportunities promoting FedEx initiatives, with the program initially centered around football, men’s and women’s basketball, and additional women’s sports. Could a similar program be created for GW where GW athletes are promoting UTZ products or reading Punchbowl news (*cough* Jake Sherman *cough*)? It would behoove someone in the athletics department to see if there are any entrepreneurial alumni who could provide actual NIL opportunities as opposed to just Venmo'ing a player $1,000 a month through FOG.
To the other point: I definitely fall more on the side of BGF that there should always be greater transparency when it comes to asking for money. I called alumni during my time at GW (mostly because it paid the most on campus). The one thing they drilled into us was to call it "contributions" as opposed to "donations" because "donating" money connotated giving money away with no expectation of a tangible result. What all of us hope for is that alumni contribute in many ways to the athletics program (and specifically men's and women's basketball) through season tickets, club membership, and FOG NIL. With those contributions comes the university's responsibility for being transparent about how those contributions further our shared goal.
AT Hiker said in the facility thread that the new president is a big fan of GW basketball and has increased support for Caputo. Let's all hope that remains the case. And if the athletics programs continue to flounder, I hope our most loyal contributors use their lines of communication to potentially address changes in leadership. I'm sure Vogel has metrics by which she is judged as Athletics Director, and I would assume that any decision to retain/fire her would be based on some formula of on-field success, academic performance, and fundraising.
I've always contended one of Lonergan's biggest mistakes was assuming that the school would have his back once the Post story came out. It couldn't have been any clearer what the outcome would be given how we reacted to the Omar story. Maybe Granberg would've reacted differently, but it was folly to think that a lame-duck President would come to Lonergan's defense. In hindsight, the most shocking part was the fact the school didn't just clean house completely in September 2016.
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"whine less donate more" say's the "dude" who hasn't given a penny to the men's basketball team!
Dude, whatever you donate to the men's basketball team in the next 30 days (including $ to NIL), I will match!
Time to step up.
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1) Agree with a great deal of what BGF, GMayhem, MSC, GW0509 have to say.
And find Joel Joseph's challenge intriguing.
2) Regarding Mayhem's post, have no idea why we want to ignore the scandal that got us
here, including wasted buyouts. We seem to keep repeating mistakes, so perhaps we could openly and
honestly discuss why we are here, instead of say, highlighting other teams and other coaches.
The past near-decade in GW basketball may be a bit more relevant on GW basketball messsage board. Of course, we can't change the past unfortunately, but we can learn from it. If need to be, I can bring in a famous quote about this.
3) This whole discussion is food for thought about our place in college athletics. More about college athletics, as such really. But we have to deal with the current and future reality.
4) When you think about commenting on other posters, think about what you would say not only if you
were sitting next to someone, particularly a stranger, at the Smith Center. Much less in a bar.
Accusing people of whining when they state a position is not only needlessly provocative, but a lazy
way to make a point.
And ironically, you're then whining about whining.
How about we all just keep it civil making your points and respectful argument?