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Baseball NIL and minor league
Posted on 3/10/26 at 11:18 am
Posted on 3/10/26 at 11:18 am
Baseball seems like a sport where a little NIL could go a long way? I know much less people care about it, especially outside of the SEC. But a quick google search shows minor leagues pay on avg $50,000 or so a year.
Seems like you could fairly easily beat minor leagues with NIL?
Seems like you could fairly easily beat minor leagues with NIL?
Posted on 3/10/26 at 11:21 am to baldona
Revenue share changed the game. Before that, most baseball players were only able to get partial scholarships thanks to Title 9 numbers. Now, they get a big fat check. So, college baseball is at the point right now where it beats out the minors.
Posted on 3/10/26 at 11:24 am to baldona
ESPN made WBB a premium sport. Simpletons can’t get enough of that trash product.
Baseball is awesome. When you care about a team, it is the best spectator sport.
But simpletons follow whatever espn is barking about.
Baseball is awesome. When you care about a team, it is the best spectator sport.
But simpletons follow whatever espn is barking about.
Posted on 3/10/26 at 11:33 am to Landmass
quote:
So, college baseball is at the point right now where it beats out the minors.
Not just money, better facilities, trainers, more fans
Posted on 3/10/26 at 11:35 am to baldona
Nobody gives a shite about baseball outside of the swamp rats, so it doesn’t really go anywhere at all
Posted on 3/10/26 at 12:07 pm to Old Sarge
I’m betting better travel accommodations and hotels too
Posted on 3/10/26 at 12:17 pm to baldona
College Baseball is far more competitive with the minors than it used to be. Tennessee signing a pitcher with pure stuff of Chase Burnes a couple years ago would have been unthinkable 10 years ago. This far from the only example. Talent in this league is unbelievable.
Posted on 3/10/26 at 12:25 pm to baldona
quote:
Seems like you could fairly easily beat minor leagues with NIL
The guys that would potentially get serious NIL in college will get fat signing bonuses with MLB teams that draft them on top of their minor league salary.
Posted on 3/10/26 at 1:32 pm to Landmass
quote:I don't think revenue sharing has changed much. What really has changed things is going to fully funded 34 scholarship (no more partials) and NIL. Most schools that are funding the full complement are not directing much revenue sharing to baseball (typically, school are allocating 75% to football, 15% to men's basketball, and spreading the remaining 10% between non revenue sports).
Revenue share changed the game. Before that, most baseball players were only able to get partial scholarships thanks to Title 9 numbers. Now, they get a big fat check. So, college baseball is at the point right now where it beats out the minors.
Still, getting a full ride and even $10,000 in NIL beats riding the bus in the minors, given that your room and board is covered, you have superior workout facilities and staff support, and better travel (at the top levels anyway), not to mention college girls.
Posted on 3/10/26 at 1:51 pm to twk
quote:
I don't think revenue sharing has changed much. What really has changed things is going to fully funded 34 scholarship
That's how they got the scholarships freed up.
Posted on 3/10/26 at 2:20 pm to baldona
quote:
Baseball seems like a sport where a little NIL could go a long way? I know much less people care about it, especially outside of the SEC. But a quick google search shows minor leagues pay on avg $50,000 or so a year.
Seems like you could fairly easily beat minor leagues with NIL?
NIL might beat out or cover A ball salary, but it doesnt beat out signing for $3M up front.
Ultimately the very highly rated kids who forgo draft and come to college just want to play in college, they would still be making more signing a pro deal and doing that.
NIL helps some in baseball, but not as much as people might think. It's not like there are college baseball players getting paid 7 figures like a football or basketball player. Whole SEC teams payroll might be just into 7 figures on average. These guys are just happy to get something from NIL and a tiny bit of rev share.
Ultimately for really good players who could go pro out of high school, do you really want to go on the road and travel living the minor league lifestyle for several years or experience college for 2-3 years and then spend less time in the minors. For many now they are choosing college more and more.
I think its possible down the road MLB teams lean even more on college for early development to eliminate more of their farm system cost. MLB is finding out colleges are doing a pretty good job developing players for them having to only spend 1-3 years in minors instead of 4-5 in a lot of cases for high schoolers to make the show. It's less money and development on their end to still get same product basically in the end.
This post was edited on 3/10/26 at 2:24 pm
Posted on 3/10/26 at 2:48 pm to baldona
MLB cut their minor league systems a few years ago. That has altered CBB more than NIL. Schools have been dancing around the scholarship issue with state lottos for years.
Posted on 3/10/26 at 2:51 pm to baldona
No school is spending money on baseball players. The gave football, both basketballs and volleyball to deal with. Good baseball players go from high school to the minors
This post was edited on 3/10/26 at 2:52 pm
Posted on 3/10/26 at 3:44 pm to kywildcatfanone
This is why Kentucky is always terrible in baseball.
Posted on 3/10/26 at 5:43 pm to kywildcatfanone
Your overview of the minor leagues vs NIL is just like your athletic program... trash
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