A pro agent's case for privatizing college football and paying the players

The Church of College Football is about to open for services. It is perhaps the most passionate religion we have in this country, a seductive blend of our most popular sport and the romantic notion that the young athletes are playing for their schools, not for money.

Two BCS championship coaches recently launched attacks on sports agents for allegedly defiling this house of worship by giving college players what the National Collegiate Athletic Association calls "impermissible benefits" -- benefits that make those players pros and not amateurs. "The agents that do this, and I hate to say this, but how are they any better than a pimp?" Alabama's Nick Saban so memorably put it last month. "I have no respect for people who do that to young people. None." And Florida's Urban Meyer said that the problem is "epidemic right now" and that agents and their associates need to be "severely punished."

Yet, I suspect that virtually everyone in our industry -- players, coaches, administrators, boosters, agents and fans -- shed our naivete a long time ago. We know that the sole focus for many star college players is getting ready for pro ball, that coaches are looking for financial security on the backs of teenagers and that boosters enjoy the ego stroke that comes with virtually owning a piece of a team. There isn't anything inherently wrong with these goals, but there isn't anything "amateur" about the process, either.

Read the whole article for Mr. Yee's point-by-point suggestion for privatizing the sham that is big time college football.

HT: @agwarner

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Is this the best baseball catch ever?

Masato Akamatsu of the Hiroshima Toyo Carp climbs the wall like Spiderman.

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What an N.F.L. Training Camp Is Really Like

Your body says No, but your brain says Yes.

Yes, you will get out of bed. Yes, you will try to eat breakfast. And Yes, you will put on your pads and run out on that field. Despite the pain, the doubt, and the fear, you will say Yes. You always say Yes.

Training camp is hell. Some players adapt to hell well, some burn up quickly. But there is no way around the psychological and physical warfare that players will endure this month.

Playing football is god-awful way to make a living. Yes, the money is good - for a short time. But for most players it takes a toll physically and psychologically that may only be evident years later.

Good article from a player's perspective. Read the full article by following the link.

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Chasing the Rangers: Marc Cuban explains his reasoning and process in bidding on Texas Rangers

Chasing the Rangers

Aug 5th 2010 2:13PM

First of all, nothing but the best for Chuck and Nolan.  I want the Rangers to win the World Series as much as any fan does and I think they have the right people on the field and off to help them do it.

So why did I go chasing the Rangers despite all the negative media attention ?  Because I believe  it was the right thing to do.

FIrst some background. This wasn’t a spur of the moment thing.  More than a year ago, before the current parties were involved (or at least I was told there weren’t others involved), I was contacted by someone  the team owed a lot of money to and asked if I would be interested in buying the team side by side with them.  I said yes.  Got information. Did some very preliminary homework and told the group I was interested. That fell through. They decided not to go forward.

Then I was contacted by the departing owner of the Rangers and asked if I would be interested in investing in the team . I said no, but to get in  touch if there was the opportunity to buy the team.  Not long after that, I was contacted and started the process of discussing a purchase of the team.  We had a few meetings and quite a few options were discussed. Most of the options required that I also purchase and take on expenses and assets/liabilities that I believed  were not core to the operation of the team and could in fact make things more difficult. I was not willing to do that.

What I was willing to do was to  make a significant enough of an investment that would catch the team up on all of their debt and provide some working capital (it would require the creditors to make some adjustments, but early discussions suggested that it would not be a problem). I was willing to go forward if i got control of the team. I want to win Championships and in my mind there was hope of winning a World Series with the Rangers

At that point we also had some preliminary discussions with MLB who were on board because it would avoid what appeared in my and others opinion  to be inevitable, bankruptcy.  I thought I was on my way to buying the Rangers.  At that point we signed some paperwork so we could have further meetings. It was at this point I also spend 2mm dollars on bonds in the Rangers holding company in order to get access to information about the Rangers, and also the Stars (because they are my co-tenant at the AAC). Why get the information that way ?… Trust but verify. It gave me a way to confirm what i was being told.

Unfortunately,  in our further discussions, I was not able to get anywhere close to doing a deal that did not have those obligations I was not willing to take.  They were deal killers for me.

Fast forward to December, Chuck and Nolan get exclusive rights to negotiate for the team. Which IMHO was great.I knew Chuck from back in Pittsburgh and he was coming to Mavs games and schmoozing his way through Dallas in impressive fashion. Like I knew he would.   Then the next month there was the discussion of bankruptcy. Then in  May,  the team is put  into bankruptcy. Then June. .Then  Chuck and Nolan sign their deal. Then mid July, the Rangers go to auction.

Around  the 2nd week in July, I got asked by someone who was considering bidding in the auction if i wanted to partner with them.  I told them that i doubted it , but I would take a look.  From that first look, it appeared to me that all those obligations that I didn’t like were still in the deal. But I was soon informed that  because of the bankruptcy auction, they could be removed.  That got my attention.

In my opinion if those operational issues could be removed, there would be more operating cash flow for the team. That’s a good thing.  In addition, as everyone told me time and again,  the Rangers TV deal ran out in 4 years.  Combine that with the Mavs TV deal running out just a few years later and it could either form a foundation for a new sports network, or preferably cause Fox to pay an ungodly amount of money to keep the teams on FSN.  Fox had more to lose from a competitive sports network being formed, particularly in Texas,  than a new network had to gain from being created. So the leverage of owning both teams was enormous.

That was a financial win for both teams.  The ability to earn more money from TV revenues for both teams meant more money could be put on the field/court.  It was a unique situation.

But I still had not committed to bid on the Rangers, either on my own or with someone else.  I wanted to contact Chuck first. In my mind, the ability to move Chuck /Nolan and their investors to a new group would accomplish two important things, it would get them out from under the bad obligations and it would allow them to use the leverage of the Mavs to their benefit as well. Of course I realized there were going to be huge legal bills involved in trying to figure out how to make it all work, but that came with the territory. It was the next day i made the comment to a radio station that I was trying to help and act as a backstop.

I got in touch with Chuck and briefly described all this. He thanked me and said that he would check into it. He quickly got back to me and said he had to keep things as they were. Which I completely understood.

While I understood it, to me it was a lost opportunity.  The economics got too good once the external stuff and TV were considered.  So I started looking in parallel at doing a bid myself or working with the initial folks who contacted me.  Going forward at that time meant to me that there were 3 basic outcomes:

1. The GRE group refuses to remove those 3rd party costs and obligations. At which point I/we win the auction and  go to Chuck and Nolan and and their  investors ask them to join our group.  Now why would they join our group ?  I couldn’t see any way on this earth that Nolan Ryan would ever leave his players and team behind.  He loves this team too much.  He has been around the league long enough to know that owners come and go, but the commitment to the guys you go to war with comes first. So i truly wasn’t concerned about him not coming. Chuck may have been more difficult. It would have been my job to convince him.  There aren’t enough hours in the day for me to run both teams like i do the Mavs. Chuck had already proven he could do the job. I would have worked hard to convince him. For Chuck/Nolan and all their investors, without the garbage expenses, the team was in a much better place.

I realize a lot of “commentators”  were villian-izing me. Suggesting I was trying to break things up.  They were of the opinion that there was no way Chuck or Nolan would ever come on board. I obviously thought they were wrong. And I didnt care what they said.  What I have learned in 11 years in the sports business is that the dumbest guys in the room are always the media guys. Some do a decent job of reporting, most just spew opinions.  And those opinions change more often than they brush their teeth. So what the media was saying was of zero impact or influence on what i was going to do. Listening to the media only increases your odds of failing at whatever you are doing.  So I ignore them.

2.  The GRE group gives up those 3rd party costs and obligations and we have an auction . If they win, which is what happened, they no longer have those obligations and as best I can tell are now in a better financial position.  Their stated purchase price before the auction was $575mm.  It ended up being around $600mm. So for 5pct they got rid of the costs and obligations. If we win, we still try to bring on Chuck and Nolan as investors and operators and we change nothing. Absolutely nothing … On the baseball side. On the business side, we start marketing hard and leverage all the success of the Rangers and we work towards increasing our media revenues by playing off Fox against starting a new network.

3. Someone else comes in and blows away both GRE and me in the auction and its over. In this case, at least we both gave it a shot and someone just beat us.

I could live with any of the 3 options.

As it turns out , I wasn’t in a position to go after this myself. Why ? Two reasons. First, despite what people think, I don’t keep hundreds of millions of dollars in a checking account. I prefer that it earn money doing things for me.  It is not easy to get liquid to the point of $400mm dollars or more in just a few weeks.  And in those few short weeks, its not easy to go to the banks and get a loan for a baseball team. Lots of reasons.  Some I don’t like, but it’s not.  Second, I didn’t have enough time to do all the due diligence my folks needed to do.  You don’t read every contract and get people to run numbers and advise you on what all the implications of a bankruptcy auction are in a couple weeks. I was paying people to work round the clock. I was killing my General Counsel Robert Hart to the point of exhaustion. There wasn’t enough time.

So a meeting was set up with Jim Crane. I liked him. He had been working on the Rangers for several years. He had all the due diligence in place. His people had scoured the contracts , etc. He had smart people around him and he had his money ready to go as well. Plus he had a relationship with the existing creditors who were willing to loan us money in order to facilitate a competitive auction. Of course the creditors were very self serving. If lending us money helped us, it helped them potentially earn more money from the auction. Together we could put together a bid.  As it turns out we could afford a purchase price up to about $600mm dollars. (Right where we left the bidding last night/this morning.)

From then until the auction date it was really about looking for gotchas.  What were the things that could hurt our bid in the Auction.  Most were elements that applied dealing with the bankruptcy court and the auction process.  There was a ton of paperwork that had to be in by the day before the auction and we had to figure out what went on it.

Along the way of course things always get interesting.  Last friday one of the parties tried to stop the auction and do a side deal. We had to shut that down. Same thing on tuesday night.

Fastforward to this past Tues.  We turned in our  purchase agreement with all our numbers and all the documentation saying what we would pay  for, what we wanted excluded (all those 3rd party costs) and the information required to qualify for the bid. Everyone got their copies that night.

The morning of the auction, Im up early. We get to the courthouse about 8am to meet. The first thing we have to do is meet with the debtors. The people who owed the money to the creditors. They are of course squeezing to include every penny they can and to exclude every type of liability. Then we have to fight over how to evaluate all that stuff.  That takes hours. It’s also why you heard GRE complain about not having our bid.  The people who owed all the money were fighting us to protect themselves. IMHO, to the negative of the people who were owed the money. We just wanted to be able to bid. GRE just wanted to know what our starting bid was.

We got to the courtroom and all the screaming and shouting started. There were enough blogs that tweeted and covered all that, im not going to.  It’s never fun watching how the sausage is made. And Im not a bankruptcy lawyer so I couldnt begin to explain all of it.

But some how the auction went on.  I have to honestly tell you there were more than a few times I thought we had the thing won. They were arguing about everything and anything to knock down our bid. I thought it was because they were out of it. As it turns out, they obviously were not. They beat us fair and square. As a result , I think they are in a better position than when they started the auction . But thats my opinion.

Now lets talk about MLB.  It seems to be a fun media sport to talk about how there is no way i will ever get approved  buy MLB to buy a team.  At the hearing yesterday it was mentioned that our group only had a 50/50 chance of ever being approved.  I tend to never look at the glass as being half empty or half full. I look to see who is pouring the water and to deal with them. Not the media.  I am pretty confident we would have been approved.

Finally lets talk about finances. Lets talk about the bonds I own. I have been getting a bunch of emails from reporters asking how much money I made on the bonds I own. Suggesting that I bid up the price of the Rangers in order to increase the value of the $2mm i spent on bonds. To all of you I offer a lesson in economics.

It is NEVER a good idea to risk hundreds of millions of dollars on the purchase of a team AND to spend what could come to more than a $1million in professional fees in order to increase the value of the $2mm you bought in bonds. I know its something for the media to talk about. But if any of you out there think it through, I dont want you to think i was stupid enough to do something that stupid.

Marc Cuban is a very savvy businessman - controversial, of course - but he knows what he is doing. Very interesting read.

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Namath: Jets 'suited' for Super Bowl

Joe Namath is all for the constant refrain at SUNY Cortland that it’s Super Bowl or bust for the 2010 Jets.

“(It’s) justified,” Namath said this morning when asked about the Super Bowl talk. “This team I’m looking at today is more suited to be able to follow through with a championship, or to get a championship, than what we’ve had out there.

“This training camp, to me, we have the most legitimate contender we’ve had. That’s as simple as I can put it.”

Joe Willie knows a thing or two about brash predictions. Should be interesting.

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Knicks' target Brown signs with Lakers - NYPOST.com

Shannon Brown is returning to the Los Angeles Lakers, turning down more lucrative offers for a shot at a third straight championship.

Brown’s agent, Mark Bartelstein, told The Associated Press on Thursday that the high-flying free agent guard agreed to a two-year deal worth $4.6 million to return for his third season with Los Angeles.

“He’s been there two years, and they’ve won two championships,” Bartelstein said. “There’s very few times you have a chance to go for a threepeat. When you have that opportunity, he couldn’t pass it up.”

Bummer. This would have been a good pickup. Anyway - time to focus on the J-E-T-S Jets Jets Jets

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Knicks targeting Shannon Brown

The Los Angeles Lakers have made it clear that re-signing Shannon Brown is their top priority. He has an excellent relationship with Kobe Bryant, was a significant contributor during their title runs, and would be one of the few returning faces on the team's revamped second unit. 

But because they're not the only team that covets Brown, the Lakers have been in contact with several available guards in case they need to replace his services. While they remain optimistic that the guard will choose to return to Los Angeles, there are several factors making his decision a difficult one.

The New York Knicks are trying to pry Brown away from the Lakers and they have put together an offer that will likely get his attention. While he is happy with the situation in Los Angeles, the Knicks can provide Brown with more playing time, a bigger contract, and a system that he could thrive in due to his style of play.

According to one source, New York is prepared to open up their wallet for Brown, offering a multi-year contract that would end up paying him roughly $4 million per season. The Knicks are willing to spend this money because they envision an increased role for Brown in New York playing under Mike D'Antoni. Joining Amar'e Stoudemire, Raymond Felton, Anthony Randolph, and Danilo Gallinari as part of the team's core, Brown would be able to receive his big payday and see consistent, predictable minutes for the first time in his career.

By offering the two things that the Lakers cannot, money and minutes, the Knicks are making Brown evaluate his priorities.

Is he willing to sacrifice those things to play for one of the best teams in the league or is he looking for the chance to contribute more and find stability on an up-and-coming team?

After winning two rings as a role player, some feel that Brown wants to step up and see what he can do outside of the supporting cast role. Many players turn down less money to join the Lakers' second unit, as we've witnessed several times this summer, but it's often to win a ring or gain exposure. Brown has done both during his time in Los Angeles and that's why some feel he's ready to move onto new things.

Brown will be forced to decide what he wants out of these next several years and which destination is better for his future. Both sides can offer different things and at the end of the day, he'll have to choose which situation is best for him.

I like this move. While I think it is unlikely that Brown will leave LA (multiple championships, best organization in the league, etc.) this is a good opportunity for him to step up to the next level. And a smart move by Donnie Walsh to get more talent without going the trade route (a la Chris Paul).

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Knicks Get Primer on Avoiding Chris Paul

On Tuesday, the National Basketball Association sent its teams a delightful common-sense reminder not to tamper with players under contract like the New Orleans superstar Chris Paul, who had been the subject of numerous illicit trade rumors and seductive Tweets from Cleveland ex-pat LeBron James.

The following is the tampering reminder sent to the New York Knicks, who were among the teams reportedly intrigued by Mr. Paul:

1. If Chris Paul sends you flowers, send them back. See if he wants Eddie Curry, too.

2. If Chris Paul sends you Zabar's, send it back. Okay, keep the rugelach. But that's it.

3. If Chris Paul tries to friend you on Facebook, ignore the request.

4. If Chris Paul can get you two tickets to ''Merchant of Venice,'' don't go.

5. If you are introduced Chris Paul at a party, keep mistakenly referring to him as Ron Paul.

6. If Chris Paul asks to see the top of the Empire State Building, show him the roof of Gray's Papaya instead.

7. If Chris Paul wants to pitch the 8th inning for the Yankees instead of Joba, deny him. Actually, you know what? Let him.

8. If you see Chris Paul walking down the street toward you, immediately hold your phone to your ear and begin having a very loud, animated pretend conversation about your head lice. Or the Mets.

9. If Chris Paul asks for the name of a good Italian restaurant in New York, start laughing uproariously, and tell him there are no Italian restaurants in New York, and never have been.

10. If Chris Paul asks for the time, just tell him it's "Time to Bring in Bobby Valentine."

11. If Chris Paul asks to meet the two biggest celebrities in New York, bring him Ernie Anastos and Dr. Zizmor.

12. If Chris Paul moves into your apartment building, regularly steal his copies of Free Agent Point Guard and The New Yorker in the vestibule.

13. If you meet a person who is very ill, and their last wish is to meet Chris Paul, be respectful, but secretly try to get them excited about Amare Stoudemire.

14. If Chris Paul says he can explain 'Inception,' ignore him. Okay, listen for a minute and see if he's figured it out.

15. If Chris Paul comes up to you and whispers that he really, really wants to come to play for the Knicks, just walk away. But first, sneak him the rugelach.

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