A New League’s Shot at the N.C.A.A.: $100,000 Salaries for High School Players

Authored by nytimes.com and submitted by wandercreate
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But there are almost as many risks as there are benefits for the young athletes. Most start-up professional sports leagues, no matter how innovative, fail. Overtime Elite will require tens of millions of dollars to operate on the scale its founders envision, but if it does not succeed, its athletes could be left with nowhere to play.

“We are genuine in really investing in hiring really serious and legitimate people to run every aspect of the company,” Porter said. “I don’t want to mess around with kids’ lives. I don’t want people to mess around with my kids’ lives. There is a moral obligation that goes with that.”

Weiner said the company is “extremely well capitalized” to start the league. Overtime, Porter added, raised a “meaningful” amount of cash in a previously undisclosed funding round last fall, and planned to use it to pay players, hire employees and lease housing, office, gym and education spaces.

Some details on what the league will actually look like or how fans can watch are still unsettled. There will be no permanent teams, but instead dynamic rosters within the league, and Porter and Weiner envision some sort of barnstorming tour of Europe. Games will no doubt be viewable online, but Overtime promises the games themselves and content around them won’t look too similar to typical basketball telecasts.

Overtime Elite isn’t the only basketball league that spies opportunity in the shifting rules around amateurism and a desire by players to get paid immediately. David West, a former N.B.A. player, has started the Professional Collegiate League, and the N.B.A.’s development league has recently begun courting top 18-year-olds who want to skip college altogether on their way to the N.B.A.

But Overtime Elite is the first serious league aimed at paying high school players, LaVar Ball’s failed Junior Basketball Association notwithstanding.

Porter and Weiner talk down the idea that they are challenging high school state athletic associations, the N.C.A.A., high school coaches and the many other entities invested in the current system.

BecausetheAcidFaces on March 4th, 2021 at 15:41 UTC »

Already making more than WNBA players lmao

Agnostickamel on March 4th, 2021 at 15:39 UTC »

Would this make them ineligible to play college sports?

Jack-Cremation on March 4th, 2021 at 15:33 UTC »

Employee 30 of them? So are the teams going to be limited to 7-8 players? If so, how they going to practice 5-5. If it’s limited to 30 and they only have 3 teams, that season will be over in 2-3 weeks. Way too many variables that they haven’t thought through yet.

I’m all for challenging the NCAA and giving kids other options but it has to be realistic and have potential for the long run.