https://www.espn.com/college-footbal...ansfer-damages
He's being sued over the fact he's performed better at Missouri as a transfer than he did while playing 2 years at Georgia. Kirby is ruthless.
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https://www.espn.com/college-footbal...ansfer-damages
He's being sued over the fact he's performed better at Missouri as a transfer than he did while playing 2 years at Georgia. Kirby is ruthless.
I mean we knew this was coming. I'll be honest, if UGA actually wins this case, I think you will start seeing serious guardrails put into these NIL deals and maybe some form of governance coming back to college athletics.
I actually love to see this.
I'm no lawyer, but couldn't the player just claim he received better coaching and mentoring at Missouri which allowed him to perform better? Not sure how you prove he was intentionally underperforming.
That is nuts. I'm not a lawyer, but why would a school do this. I mean every other school in the country should say "Don't sign with UGA, they will eventually sue you for their money back"
After reading the article, it doesn't sound like his performance had anything to do with the fact that he got sued.
The whole system is in shambles. It's financially unsustainable. Egomaniacal boosters aren't going to continue to pay millions into something that gives them no financial return.
If he broke his contract he should be sued. I admit I didn’t read the whole article. I wonder how long it will be before we hear about the IRS going after some that haven’t filed a tax return?
<sigh> Remember when college sports were uncomplicated and fun.
This is how contracts work.
The real question is who was counseling this kid to be so cavalier about leaving 2 weeks after signing?
The real world lack of awareness is crazy.
A large percentage of the most talented high school athletes in the country come from disadvantages populations. But not always. I dont mean this in a mean way towards the kid, but I actually hope he did something other than "just didn't perform well." If coaches start suing over performance, contracts are basically worth nothing. They may as well go to a 'dollar per yard' scheme at that point.