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UNLV QB takes redshirt due to NIL dispute

It's the disorganized, unregulated way that this new reality has come about which creates absurd messes like this. While you do get the rare pro player hold out over a contract dispute, the circumstances around that are usually established during the off-season resulting in the player making it clear from the beginning of the season that they won't participate. In this crazy case, this kid is now walking out on his team and fanbase after they've started an exciting season. How demoralizing is that.

It's just another example of how the stupid NCAA and conferences should have solved this player compensation problem before it turned into the wild west.
this is what happens when multiple governing bodies (NCAA, state legislatures, etc.) create rules they cannot reasonably police and enforce.
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End of the Prime mystique

Sanders is a carpet bagger, he’ll be out of Boulder as soon as Hunter and his sons enter the NFL draft.
First it was he was a bad coach and Colorado wouldn’t do anything.

Now it’s he’s going to abandon them for a big job because another school thinks he’s a good coach.

Even if he does leave, he’s increased the profile of the university, increased the number of black applicants substantially, and begun to turn around arguably the worst P5 program. You can hate his personality but it’s been quite the journey.
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How many wins?

Not necessarily. If we were assigned a 30% chance of winning each individual remaining game, we wouldn't be favored to win any particular game, but we would be expected to win 2 of them. There would be only a 5.8% chance of winning zero.
But you gotta take a few of those games off the board before you even start using 30% on the rest. I mean se supposedly have a 0.1% chance against dOSU and not a whole lot better against Mich

UNLV QB takes redshirt due to NIL dispute

Sounds like UNLV reneged on a NIL deal, and Sluka isn’t having it. A college football player who wants to decide his own future: surely the world is coming to an end…
It's the disorganized, unregulated way that this new reality has come about which creates absurd messes like this. While you do get the rare pro player hold out over a contract dispute, the circumstances around that are usually established during the off-season resulting in the player making it clear from the beginning of the season that they won't participate. In this crazy case, this kid is now walking out on his team and fanbase after they've started an exciting season. How demoralizing is that.

It's just another example of how the stupid NCAA and conferences should have solved this player compensation problem before it turned into the wild west.
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