Perhaps Randy Levine will convince Baltimore natives James Bishop and Brendan Adams to turn their backs on the O's and help sell Yankee tickets in paid commercials. Or maybe Russ Ramsey might arrange for Ricky Lindo to become a paid endorser on behalf of the Greater Washington Partnership.
GW & NIL? I'd love to see it but I just don't.
Here's what's happened so far at Dayton. A former star player, Brian Roberts, hired several basketball players to go on social media and promote some area apartments that Robert's company was trying to rent. The women's team struck a new apparel deal for which they will be compensated.
Dayton. The place with a 14,000 seat arena which always seems to come close to selling out.
Dayton. A city, not a small town, with zero major professional sports teams and for that matter, without any real college sports competition.
Dayton. With an active and vibrant fan base.
There will be athletes, at major programs, who earn hundreds of thousands of dollars in NIL income. They are not our competition.
Dayton is our competition. So is St. Louis. And Richmond (albeit split between 2 schools). And Kingston. And Amherst. And perhaps there is now enough of a following in Olean to join this club. These are places where our A10 brethren represent the only basketball game in town.
On the NIL train, we are behind Maryland. And Georgetown. And perhaps one can make the case for George Mason given their alumni. Our alumni, by and large, moved away. Or, they are still here but don't attend very many games.
Playing in a major city will not help GW, St. Joe's, La Salle or Fordham when it comes to NIL. I wouldn't think.
I sincerely hope I am wrong about this. If you're in a position to step up, please do so. If you know someone in a position to do so, please talk to them.
What will recruits be looking for in a school? You're kidding yourself if you don't think NIL opportunities will be a consideration. A major one among families who can really use the money.
NIL is great for the players and long overdue. Just not sure it's great for our program.