Current:Home > ScamsIt's a new world for college football players: You want the NIL cash? Take the criticism. -MoneyFlow Academy
It's a new world for college football players: You want the NIL cash? Take the criticism.
View
Date:2025-04-15 04:19:29
We have to stop this madness, this reactionary dog pile because the mean man has suddenly hurt the feelings of innocent players getting paid to play football.
Players wanted this setup -- pay for play, free player movement, the right to choose their playing destiny -- and now they've got it.
And everything that goes with it.
Failed NIL deals, broken dreams, public criticism. It's all out in the open, for all to see.
“We’ve got to find a guy,” Auburn coach Hugh Freeze said after the Tigers’ loss to Arkansas last weekend, “That won’t throw it to the other team.”
And here I am, a strong advocate for player rights, pay for play and defacto free agency in college football, wondering what in the world is wrong with that criticism of the Auburn quarterbacks?
You can’t demand to be treated like an adult, and expect to be coddled like a child.
You can’t expect to be paid top dollar and given a starting job, then get upset when a coach uses criticism to motivate you.
You can’t negotiate multimillion dollar NIL deals and be given free movement with the ability to wreck rosters, and be immune to criticism.
In this rapidly-changing, ever-ranging billion dollar business — the likes of which we’ve never seen before — coaches with multimillion dollar contracts are held accountable. Why wouldn’t players be, too?
If UNLV quarterback Matthew Sluka has the business acumen and public relations sense to announce he's sitting the remainder of the season because NIL promises weren't kept -- the ultimate leverage move while playing for an unbeaten team -- these guys aren't emotionally fragile. They can handle public criticism.
The idea that coaches can’t say the quiet part out loud in this player-friendly environment is utterly ridiculous.
Auburn quarterbacks Payton Thorne and Hank Brown are playing poorly. In fact, maybe the worst of any quarterback room in the Power Four conferences.
Auburn quarterbacks in wins vs. gimme putts Alabama A&M and New Mexico: 10 TD, 0 INT.
Auburn quarterbacks vs. losses to California and Arkansas: 3 TD, 8 INT.
Auburn is one of six teams in FBS averaging more than eight yards per play (8.03) — but is dead last in turnovers (14). Those two things don’t align, and more times than not lead to losses.
Galling, gutting losses.
Soul-sucking losses that lead an exasperated coach to stand at a podium, minutes after a home loss that shouldn’t have happened — rewinding in his mind, over and over, the missed throws and opportunities — and playing the only card remaining in the deck.
Criticism.
Fair, functional criticism that somehow landed worse than asking why Toomer’s Drugs doesn’t sell diet lemonade.
Heaven help us if the quarterback with an NIL deal — and beginning next season, earning part of the expected $20-23 million per team budget in direct pay for play — can’t hear constructive criticism.
The days of coaches couching mistakes with “we had a bust” or “we were out of position” or “we have to coach it better” are long gone. No matter what you call it — and the semantics sold by university presidents and conference commissioners that paying players doesn’t technically translate to a “job” is insulting — a player failed.
I know this is difficult to understand in the land of everyone gets a trophy, but failure leads to success. Some players actually thrive in adversity, using doubt and criticism to — this is going to shock you — get better.
So Freeze wasn’t as diplomatic as North Carolina coach Mack Brown in a similar situation, so what? Brown, one of the game’s greatest coaches and its best ambassador, walked to the podium after a brutal loss to James Madison and said blame him.
He recruited his roster, he developed the roster, he chose the players. If anyone is at fault, it’s him.
“I just hate losing so much,” Brown told me Sunday. “I want to throw up.”
So does Hugh Freeze.
He just said the quiet part out loud.
Matt Hayes is the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports Network. Follow him on X at @MattHayesCFB.
veryGood! (973)
Related
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Haley’s exit from the GOP race pushes off — again — the day Americans could elect a woman president
- Arizona’s Democratic governor vetoes border bill approved by Republican-led Legislature
- Ex-Honduran president defends himself at New York drug trafficking trial
- Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
- CFPB caps credit card late fees under new Biden admin rule. How low will they go?
- One of the world's most populated cities is nearly out of water as many go days if not weeks without it
- Riverdale’s KJ Apa and Clara Berry Break Up After 4 Years
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- A man who crashed a snowmobile into a parked Black Hawk helicopter is suing the government for $9.5M
Ranking
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- EAGLEEYE COIN: The Rise and Impact of Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDC)
- Ex-Air Force employee pleads not guilty to sharing classified info on foreign dating site
- Microsoft investigates claims of chatbot Copilot producing harmful responses
- Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
- Las Vegas’ Bellagio pauses fountain show when rare bird visits
- Get 57% off Abercrombie Jeans, $388 Worth of Beauty for $40- Peter Thomas Roth, Tarte, Oribe & More Deals
- How Putin’s crackdown on dissent became the hallmark of the Russian leader’s 24 years in power
Recommendation
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
Police search for a suspect after a man is shot by an arrow in Los Angeles
How Caitlin Clark pulled the boldest NIL deal in women's basketball
Texas sheriff who was under scrutiny following mass shooting loses reelection bid
New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
'Real Housewives' star Heather Gay on her Ozempic use: 'Body positivity was all a big lie'
2 women killed, man injured in shooting at Vegas convenience store; suspect flees on bicycle
Missouri Supreme Court declines to hear appeal of ex-Kansas City detective convicted of manslaughter