Declaration
Declaration
on the University of Tennessee Knoxville (UT) football team. This declaration is based
under oath.
2. I was a part of the UT football team prior to the NCAA's Interim Name,
Image, and Likeness (NIL) Policy and have played every year since the Interim NIL
Policy went into effect. The NCAA's Interim NIL Policy finally allowed collegiate
athletes to earn NIL compensation in certain circumstances. Before the Interim Policy,
my teammates and I were forbidden from earning any compensation from our NIL. I
was not allowed to leverage the fact that I was a student-athlete at one of the greatest
3. I understand that the Plaintiffs are challenging NCAA rules that prevent
recruits and current student-athletes in the transfer portal from fully engaging in NIL
school athlete. I was nationally ranked by the major recruiting services and I received
and took dozens of visits to college campuses during my recruiting process. Although
I was recruited prior to the Interim NIL Policy, I often host or interact with recruits on
visits as a member of the UT football team. From this experience, I have a good
understanding of the different factors that recruits consider when deciding where to
when choosing a school. To name just a few, those can include academic prestige and
coaching staff, style of play, program and campus culture, fan support, opportunity for
early playing time, NFL track record, and career opportunities after football. Those
factors are highlighted during the recruiting process as schools and coaches emphasize
how deeply the fan base supports their teams. And much like every other student, I
wanted to enroll. All of those factors weighed into my decision to commit to Tennessee.
6. In my experience, today's recruits consider the same factors, but they now
they also ask about all the same factors I considered in the pre-NIL world. Just like
finances are a factor for every other college student's decision for where to enroll, how
much weight a recruit puts on financial costs and opportunities ought to be up to them,
as simply part of finding the right fit for a given athlete's circumstances. In my
observation, NIL has become one of the top factors that current recruits consider when
teammates playing skill positions get larger and more frequent NIL deals than I do,
which is understandable. However, at a school like UT, there is a massive and deeply
9. I am always happy to see one of my teammates land a new NIL deal. For
many student-athletes (and incoming recruits), college sports are their first and only
chance to monetize the highly valuable skills they've dedicated thousands of hours to
football, my experience confirms what the statistics show - that even those student
athletes that are fortunate enough to move on to the next level do not have lengthy
professional careers.
of people each year, both in person and on television. Hundreds of thousands of fans
know our names and the names of my fellow student-athletes playing other sports at
UT. After every game, there are hundreds of fans lined up outside the stadium just to
get a picture or an autograph. Often a similar dynamic takes place when we go out into
the community.
11. I've seen first-hand how NIL has helped so many student-athletes. I've
seen my teammates finally find an avenue to monetize their name recognition and UT's
fandom. Some of my teammates have been able to use NIL deals to help with living
expenses, to send money back home to help support their family, or to save those
12. I am concerned about any NCAA policies that restrict the short window
13. When I interact with recruits as a student-athlete, I often tell recruits about
throughout the state. There are a lot; Vols' fans are unmatched in their support for
college sports. To the extent that the NCAA's rules force recruits to choose a school
essential that recruits have direct and open conversations with a third party like a
collective and commit to a school knowing the full scope of NIL opportunities available
to them in college.
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that handles most NIL activities. After formally committing to a school by signing a
National Letter of Intent (LOI), a recruit will be effectively limited to that school's
collective. I am not aware of any collectives signing deals with a recruit after he or she
15. The signing of the LOI signals the end of the recruiting process. Once the
LOI is executed, competing schools are forbidden from contacting that recruit. While
the LOI, that does not necessarily signal the end of the recruitment process. Recruits
still have the power to reconsider their commitment, and some recruits make it clear
that they are still willing to hear from other schools, thus potentially shopping one
verbally committed to one school "flip" to another school on or before signing day.
While I verbally committed to UT in the spring of my junior year of high school, the
recruiting did not officially stop until I signed my LOI during my senior year. Had I
given off indications that I was still amenable to offers from other schools before I
signed, it is possible that my recruiting process would not have even slowed down.
and wanted by multiple schools. Recruits are no longer "available" after they sign the
LOI. It is my understanding that February 7th is the beginning of the last, brief period
America that the foregoing is true and correct and that this declaration was executed