Steamboat Willie Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago The SCORE Act is being sold as the magic pill to “stabilize” college sports, which is adorable considering it mostly stabilizes the NCAA’s legal defenses and the conference commissioners’ job security. Enter Cody Campbell—Texas Tech’s billionaire booster, head regent, and newly crowned Patron Saint of Saying the Quiet Parts Out Loud—who showed up just in time to point out that the emperors aren’t just naked, they’re also terrible negotiators. Campbell says the conferences could make billions more by pooling media rights, but commissioners won’t do it because they like controlling their own little fiefdoms. The commissioners, naturally, clutched their pearls and insisted they never said pooling would increase revenue, which is hilarious because the only thing more predictable than a commissioner’s denial is a bowl game corporate sponsor. So now we’ve got a full-on soap opera: Campbell yelling that the money’s on the table, the commissioners yelling that Campbell doesn’t understand the “realities,” and Congress trying to pass a bill that gives the NCAA antitrust bubble wrap while telling athletes they’re definitely not employees but should please enjoy these newly standardized NIL guardrails. If you squint, the SCORE Act looks like “reform.” If you read it normally, it’s the conferences trying to lock in their authority before Campbell shows up with a calculator and ruins the illusion. But sure—let’s pretend the real crisis here is protecting commissioners’ feelings while the industry drifts toward semi-pro status with an “amateurism” sticker slapped on top. Quote
FootLaw Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago Definitely Cody Campbell's burner account. In no way do I want any pooled media rights that allow crap conferences to ride on the coattails of the SEC and Big 10. No thank you. Not saying the SCORE Act is perfect, but Cody doesn't have everyone's best interest in mind either. 2 Quote
Bobby Burton Posted 13 minutes ago Posted 13 minutes ago The SEC and Big 10 are trying to keep a bigger piece of the pie and have control that Campbell doesn’t like. 1 Quote
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