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Looks like Fox just took out some trash.

"Hey Wallace, don't let the door hit you on the a** on your way out. And another thing-- don't leave mad-- just leave!! And one more thing you POS Democrat--- Good Riddance!!"

"So Chris, why are you leaving Fox since Fox has a zillion viewers and laughing stock CNN has like dozens?"

"Well, I was about to be demoted and handed a pay cut at Fox so I thought I should leave before I was fired. And CNN was the only network who would take me so the decision was easy. It has really been a downhill fall for me after my national display of incompetence as a presidential moderator so now I'll be joining all the other Trump-hating incompetents at CNN."
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POSTGAME NOTES

KU STARTERS
Christian Braun

Dajuan Harris Jr.

Remy Martin

Ochai Agbaji

David McCormack

SERIES INFO:

Kansas leads, 1-0

KANSAS’ WIN...

• Made Kansas 9-1 or better for the third time in the last four years and 11th time in head coach Bill Self’s 19 seasons at KU.

• Extended its non-conference win streak to 24 straight games in Allen Fieldhouse.

• Made Self 738-224 all-time, including 531-119 while at Kansas.

• Made Kansas 2,332-872 all-time.

TEAM NOTES

• Kansas knocked down 21 free throws on Saturday night. KU has made at least 20 free throws in back-to-back games after hitting 22 free throws against Missouri on Dec. 11. It is the first time with consecutive games of at least 20 FTM since Nov. 27 - Dec. 1, 2020.

• Kansas’ defense forced Stephen F. Austin into 20 turnovers, matching an opponent season-high (third time). The Jayhawks also created 20 Missouri turnovers. The last time that Kansas forced their opponent into 20 turnovers in consecutive games was Nov. 25-26, 2019 vs. Chaminade/vs. BYU in the Maui Invitational.

• Kansas held Stephen F. Austin to only four free throw attempts in the game. That is the lowest number of free-throw attempts by an opponent since Dec. 21, 2019, at Villanova (2 FTA).

• Kansas held a 38-31 advantage at the half. KU has led at the half in all 10 games this season.

INDIVIDUAL NOTES

• Junior Christian Braun recorded a game-high 21 points on 8-of-12 (66.7 percent) shooting, a team-high-tying six rebounds, three assists, two blocks, and one steal in 36 minutes.

• Senior Ochai Agbaji shot 4-of-9 from three-point range to finish with 18 points and five rebounds in a season-high 39 minutes. Agbaji now has 1,140 career points to move him into 45th on the all-time KU scoring list, passing Wayne Hightower (1,128 points). He also moved into 12th place in three-point field goals made by a KU player with 178 career triples, passing Tyrel Reed (176 3-PT FGM).

• Agbaji started his 87th consecutive game on Saturday, he is ninth on the all-time list for consecutive starts at KU.

• Super-senior Remy Martin had 15 points, a team-high-tying four assists, and two steals in 35 minutes on the floor.

• Super-senior Mitch Lightfoot played a season-high 26 minutes and finished with six points, a season-high-tying six rebounds, three assists, two blocks, and one steal off the bench. He was averaging 11.1 minutes per game coming into tonight’s contest.

• Redshirt-sophomore Jalen Wilson added a season-high 10 points and four rebounds in 20 minutes as a reserve.
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Utah State

Wins their bowl game over Oregon State behind third string QB who had zero pass attempts in his career until tonight.

Recruit at least one QB every year.

Happy for Blake Anderson. Heckuva coach who has been through rough time losing his wife to cancer in 2019. Have friend who is Utah State grad and donor, and he was thrilled when they hired Anderson.

BYU Extreme NIL

Found this article re: pay for play at BYU for all players, mainly walkons.

Let the trouble with new member BYU begin....

‘They’re shooting in the dark’: Why the NCAA is looking into BYU football’s tuition deal for walk-ons, and why experts say it was inevitable

Built Bar is paying the cost of tuition for 36 Cougar walk-ons. Experts believe the NCAA’s investigation could help clarify its own nebulous rules on name, image and likeness.
(Jaren Wilkey | BYU) Built Bar co-founder Nick Greer announced a historic NIL agreement to the BYU Football team. Built’s individual NIL agreements with BYU players include compensation to all members of the team, including compensation to all walk-on players in the amount comparable to the costs of tuition for the academic year. The NCAA is investigating BYU's deal with Built for a possible NIL violation.(Jaren Wilkey | BYU) Built Bar co-founder Nick Greer announced a historic NIL agreement to the BYU Football team. Built’s individual NIL agreements with BYU players include compensation to all members of the team, including compensation to all walk-on players in the amount comparable to the costs of tuition for the academic year. The NCAA is investigating BYU's deal with Built for a possible NIL violation.
By Alex Vejar
| Dec. 17, 2021, 7:00 a.m.
Editor’s note • This story is available to Salt Lake Tribune subscribers only. Thank you for supporting local journalism.

The CEO put his arm around BYU freshman quarterback Nick Billoups and recounted a story he heard about how the walk-on felt like he’d become “part of something” since arriving in Provo. He described Billoups as “a fighter,” then said the words that sent the entire room into a frenzy.

“At Built, we want you to be employee No. 1,” Built Bar CEO Nick Greer said. “We want to pay for your tuition.”

Green later asked every BYU walk-on to stand up and described them as “employees 1-36,” indicating that Built would pay the tuition for all of them last fall. The players in the room went wild.

Greer and his company entered into a multiyear name, imagine and likeness agreement with all 123 of BYU’s football players in August. The deal gives scholarship athletes the ability to earn $1,000 if they promote the brand in certain ways.

Non-scholarship athletes, however, can earn the equivalent of what it costs to attend BYU. Their compensation will be paid directly to them and they can spend that money how they choose, associate athletic director Gary Veron told ESPN.

Last fall, a video of BYU’s walk-ons learning their tuition would be covered went viral. Now, the nature of the deal between Built and the school is now the subject of a probe by the NCAA, per a report in Sportico. Of interest to college athletics’ governing body is whether the agreement violates pay-for-play rules, which are still in place despite a change earlier this year to allow student-athletes to be compensated for their name, image and likeness (NIL).

“We have communicated with the NCAA concerning the Built Bar NIL arrangement,” BYU associate athletic director Jon McBride said in a statement. “They have informed us they do not have any additional questions at this time. We will continue to monitor and abide by the NCAA interim NIL policy.”

The NCAA, per Sportico, is also looking into a team-wide NIL deal at the University of Miami that covers all athletes on scholarships. NCAA President Mark Emmert said recently that there are “a number” of schools being looked at for possible NIL violations.

Experts in college athletics and sports culture who spoke to The Tribune look at BYU’s deal with Built and the NCAA’s interest in it as the inevitable outcome of a nebulous policy on NIL compensation.

The NCAA’s rules simply state athletes can get paid for their names, images and likenesses so long as they adhere to the NIL laws in their respective states. If their state doesn’t have a law, they can still profit so long as they don’t break any NCAA rules. Utah has no such law.

The NCAA’s concern has always been what’s termed “pay for play,” which essentially amounts to a player receiving a salary for playing their sport. That idea goes against the NCAA’s rules on amateurism and the concept of a “student-athlete.”
But BYU’s and Miami’s NIL deals might be toeing the line, experts said.

“I think these are two situations in which you have a clear implication of pay-to-play that it puts the NCAA in a position where they almost have to respond publicly in some way,” said Daniel Durbin, director of the Annenberg Institute of Sports, Media and Society at the University of Southern California. “And it may, to a degree, be the tip of the iceberg.”

BYU officials are cooperating with the NCAA’s inquiries. Coach Kalani Sitake, who effusively advocated for the partnership when it was announced, did not seem concerned about the NCAA’s probe when asked about it Wednesday.

“We have nothing to hide,” Sitake said. “We care about our players, and that means our walk-ons as well. So if they want to question that, that’s OK. We’ll be fine.”

Steven Rackley, a professor in the sports management program at Rice University with more than 20 years of experience as a college athletic director, argues that the NCAA had plenty of time to iron out a coherent NIL structure that wouldn’t lend itself to schools flirting with rules violations.
“What bothers me about the NCAA is they had a year and a half to try and figure this out, and they didn’t,” said Rackley, who earned his undergraduate degree at the University of Utah. “They spent their time trying to get Congress nationally to pass a bill. Prior to that, they spent years fighting this coming on.”

The NCAA in 2014 lost a class action lawsuit brought by former UCLA basketball player Ed O’Bannon five years earlier and joined by Oscar Robertson, Bill Russell and several others. The judge ruled denying athletes payment for their names, images and likeness violated antitrust law.

California then passed its own NIL law in September 2019 despite the NCAA actively lobbying against it by sending a letter to Gov. Gavin Newsom arguing the law “would upend level playing field for all student-athletes.” That law was originally slated to go into effect in 2023 before the NCAA reversed course and announced its own interim rules would take effect July 1, 2021.

Durbin said the NCAA is likely interested in BYU specifically because of how open the university has been about compensating players, particularly the walk-ons. When the video of Greer’s speech was described to him, he said something like that five years ago would be “going so far over the line they’ll close your program down.”

In Durbin’s eyes, BYU’s deal with Built is effectively a “pay-for-play” situation. “You do come to essentially the point where it is a pay-to-play,” Durbin said. “If you’re even giving money to non-scholarship players, but only of one sport, then there is a pay-to-play, ‘We’re going to pay you to be on this team’ element to it.”


The NCAA allows a maximum of 85 scholarships on any Division I Football Bowl Subdivision team. Any NIL deal like BYU’s that gives anyone outside of those 85 the opportunity for financial relief would likely be welcome. Sophomore offensive lineman Clark Barrington earlier this week said he wasn’t aware of the NCAA’s probe, but voiced support for the partnership.

“We’re happy to be partners with Built Bar and the boys are doing their job to hold up our end of the deal and Built Bar is following through with them,” Barrington said. “It’s been a blessing for lots of boys on the team and we’re excited to continue that partnership.”

The NCAA’s actions both in the past and with BYU and Miami now point to what Durbin and Rackley view as the governing body’s shrinking influence and its attempt to demarcate the boundaries of NIL payments. But Rackley did not seem confident that the NCAA will succeed in that endeavor.

“In just looking at their very vague guidelines, I don’t know how they’ll be able to do that,” Rackley said. “It just seems to me like they’re shooting in the dark here, hoping to hit something.”

More potential NIL violations are bound to emerge in the coming months as more universities and their athletes sign sponsorship deals and the NCAA continues to define what crosses the line. Rackley thinks a more balanced approach will likely be solidified in the next few years.
In the meantime, the result of the NCAA’s interest in BYU and Miami could portend what happens next in the NIL space.

“My guess is this will set a precedent,” Durbin said. “Whatever their response is will set a precedent for the NCAA, for their response to the next situation. I think … what they’re going after is setting a precedent for what their rules mean.”

POSTGAME NOTES

KU STARTERS:

Christian Braun
Dajuan Harris Jr.
Remy Martin
Ochai Agbaji
David McCormack

SERIES INFO:

Kansas leads, 175-95

KANSAS’ WIN...

• Made Kansas 8-1 or better for the fourth consecutive season and 12th time in head coach Bill Self’s 19 seasons at KU.

• Extended Kansas’ win streak against Missouri at Allen Fieldhouse to 14 consecutive games.

• Made Self 737-224 all-time, including 530-119 while at Kansas.

• Made Kansas 2,331-872 all-time.

TEAM NOTES:

• Kansas’ 37-point win was the largest margin of victory by KU in the series since defeating Missouri 96-49 (+47) on Dec. 28, 1977. Saturday’s win was the third-largest margin of victory in the series, trailing only the game already listed in 1977 and a 98-54 (+44) win on Feb. 15, 1966.

• Kansas scored 100 points for the first time since Nov. 15, 2019, vs. Monmouth (112 points). This was the first time since Feb. 7, 2011, that KU scored over 100 points in the series against Missouri (W, 103-86 at Allen Fieldhouse).

• Kansas recorded its second consecutive wire-to-wire victory. The last time the Jayhawks had back-to-back games that they never trailed or were tied was Feb. 1, 2020, vs. Texas Tech and Jan. 27 at Oklahoma State.

• Kansas shot 55.9 percent (33-of-59) from the field, its seventh game this season shooting at least 50.0 percent. • Kansas knocked down a season-high 14 three-point field goals and shot a season-high 51.9 percent from beyond the arc.

• Kansas had all five starters finish in double figures for the first time this season.

• Kansas dished out 20 assists on Saturday, the third time this season the Jayhawks have had at least 20 assists.

• Kansas held a 49-27 advantage at the half. The 22-point margin was a season-most at the break. KU has led at the half in all nine games this season.

• Kansas has played at least 11 different players in every game this season. The Jayhawks played 13 against Missouri.

INDIVIDUAL NOTES:

• Senior Ochai Agbaji finished with a game-high 21 points on 7-of-12 (58.3 percent) shooting, including 5-of-7 (71.4 percent) and four rebounds in 30 minutes. His five three-point field goals matched his career-high (sixth time). He has now scored 20+ points in three straight games and seven of nine games this season and 14 times in his career.

• Agbaji started his 86th consecutive game on Saturday, he is ninth on the all-time list for consecutive starts at KU.

• Redshirt-sophomore Dajuan Harris Jr. had a career-high-tying 13 points on 5-of-6 (83.3 percent) shooting, including 3-of-4 (75.0 percent) from three-point range, two rebounds, and two assists in 25 minutes. His five field goals and three three-pointers both tied his career highs (March 20, 2021, vs. Eastern Washington.).

• Junior Christian Braun finished with 13 points on 5-of-9 (55.6 percent) shooting four rebounds, three assists, a game-high three blocks, and one steal in 28 minutes.

• Senior David McCormack contributed 11 points, a game-high seven rebounds, three assists, one block, and one steal in 21 minutes of action.

• Super-senior Remy Martin recorded 10 points, three rebounds, and a game-high five assists in 28 minutes on the floor.
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