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Sounds like the Buffs are going to lose a coach

Non-compete clauses are worthless and flat out illegal in some states. In CA for instance, non-competes can effectively only be used in the event a business owner sells their business. The employees, non-owners, of the business are not subject to non-compete clauses.

Non-solicitation clauses are relatively easy to get around.
I don't have any data, but this certainly matches my perception that in most cases where a non-compete is challenged in court, it's dismissed.
 
Meat’s 100k + 50k buyout was essentially his noncompete penalty. Oregon laughs at that kind of money if it buys his son’s talent and any bonus transfers. Who cares if he can coach?
 
I don't have any data, but this certainly matches my perception that in most cases where a non-compete is challenged in court, it's dismissed.
You are correct. Although when I went to fight one, my lawyer said you will win but do you have $30k to reach that point because your old employer does.
 
If we’re now saying that college athletes are the equivalent of upper management/C-suite level employees, we’d better up the pay.
I am nowhere near upper management or C-suite level and I have a non compete.

Regardless, if the lifeblood of a college football program is recruiting/talent/players, then yes, they are important enough to have non competes. Btw, I am not suggesting no transfers, but this is simply a counterpoint to the people who think players should be able to go wherever they want, whenever they want while not sitting out because, “regular people at normal companies can do that”. The comparisons are dumb
 
A non compete clause doesn’t matter if your new company will fight on your behalf. Only corporate secret stealing matters. And none of this is analogous to college football. The only things the Buffs can do is increase the buyout, which has risks of course. The way around that is to increase the PAC 12 buyout only. In Meat’s case it was an extra $50k if he takes a PAC 12 job. Maybe UO would think twice if this was some ridiculous sum.
 
A non compete clause doesn’t matter if your new company will fight on your behalf. Only corporate secret stealing matters. And none of this is analogous to college football. The only things the Buffs can do is increase the buyout, which has risks of course. The way around that is to increase the PAC 12 buyout only. In Meat’s case it was an extra $50k if he takes a PAC 12 job. Maybe UO would think twice if this was some ridiculous sum.
Good luck attracting any coach with a massive buyout for leaving
 
I am nowhere near upper management or C-suite level and I have a non compete.

Regardless, if the lifeblood of a college football program is recruiting/talent/players, then yes, they are important enough to have non competes. Btw, I am not suggesting no transfers, but this is simply a counterpoint to the people who think players should be able to go wherever they want, whenever they want while not sitting out because, “regular people at normal companies can do that”. The comparisons are dumb
I’ve worked as a very highly compensated and very valuable employee for a long time. I’ve negotiated non-competes out of every contract/pay plan offer I’ve ever received.
 
I’ve worked as a very highly compensated and very valuable employee for a long time. I’ve negotiated non-competes out of every contract/pay plan offer I’ve ever received.
I left it in one writing a note that I planned to challenge it in CO if it ever became applicable. Got another draft. It was deleted.
 
Good luck attracting any coach with a massive buyout for leaving
Nah, just a Pac 12 non compete. Leave the rest standard. That seems reasonable. If a prospective coach won't sign that, they have one foot out the door anyway. If they do good work, get noticed and get a better offer from a big boy outside to conference, fine. But Oregon poaching our coaches has to stop.
 
I’ve worked as a very highly compensated and very valuable employee for a long time. I’ve negotiated non-competes out of every contract/pay plan offer I’ve ever received.
Ok. And that’s kind of the buyout for coaches. For players, it’s that they used to lose a year of eligibility.

My point is that comparisons are dumb. There are plenty of real world examples of employees not being able to do whatever they want, whenever they want, without some kind of ramification.
 
Ok. And that’s kind of the buyout for coaches. For players, it’s that they used to lose a year of eligibility.

My point is that comparisons are dumb. There are plenty of real world examples of employees not being able to do whatever they want, whenever they want, without some kind of ramification.
Sure, but it is very limited and often maleable. If coaches aren’t on non-competes, I am unclear why the players would be held to this standard.
 
Why would we not hold the people making millions to a higher standard?
I’m not sure what coaches have to do with players? Why would each group be held to the same standards?
This is a bad argument. Not for profits with a virtual monopoly don’t get to claim the NFP status and make those demands.
“Not for Profit”… you can’t possibly believe this as it pertains to college football.
 
I’m not sure what coaches have to do with players? Why would each group be held to the same standards?
You're right. They don't have to be held to the same standards. Let's hold coaches to higher standards. Make them sit out a year, or whatever the hell you want to do to make college football more equal. Making athletes sit out a year won't lead to more meritocracy. We had that rule in place for many years. The top schools absolutely dominated those years. This just seems like coaches panic whining and not wanting to spend even more time doing roster management.
 
You're right. They don't have to be held to the same standards. Let's hold coaches to higher standards. Make them sit out a year, or whatever the hell you want to do to make college football more equal. Making athletes sit out a year won't lead to more meritocracy. We had that rule in place for many years. The top schools absolutely dominated those years. This just seems like coaches panic whining and not wanting to spend even more time doing roster management.
How do you manage coaches having to sit out a year? A quarter of your coaches not employed year over year? Who is coaching that year, some random HS coach?

Ultimately, similar rules to what the NFL has will be the only options forward. Right now, there are no rules and regulations and it literally is the wild west. We have to accept that the have's will always be the have's and the have nots, will always be the have nots. No rules are going to change that in today's landscape.
 
You're right. They don't have to be held to the same standards. Let's hold coaches to higher standards. Make them sit out a year, or whatever the hell you want to do to make college football more equal. Making athletes sit out a year won't lead to more meritocracy. We had that rule in place for many years. The top schools absolutely dominated those years. This just seems like coaches panic whining and not wanting to spend even more time doing roster management.
As I said earlier, there are two types of people on this issue… people who want the players to have freedom to do whatever they want, and those who want what’s best for the sport.
 
How do you manage coaches having to sit out a year?
Just make them sit out. That'll devalue them a bunch and that's the point.
I'd be okay with them not having to sit out if they take a job for equal or lesser pay. They can get a pay increase when their contract from the old school was supposed to end.
I'd also be okay with them not sitting out if their contract has run out, or maybe if there's only one year left on it. Hopefully this'll help schools keep good coaches.
 
As I said earlier, there are two types of people on this issue… people who want the players to have freedom to do whatever they want, and those who want what’s best for the sport.
I want to see more ideas about how we can keep good coaches at their current school by limiting their options. I don't see enough of that.
 
If that was how their agreements were structured. I'm actually surprised that schools are offering this kind of guaranteed money without a non-compete clause. Could you imagine the IBM CEO being able to leave for the same job at Apple? University folks are terrible businesspeople. At the least, you'd think that there would be a collective bargaining agreement among NCAA member P5s with a set of rules similar to how they behave in the NFL (no poaching of HCs & no leaving your current gig for a promotion if your season is still going on).
I think a non-compete would only go so far-like it could prevent moves like the one Martin is making-but what if Martin was talking to......Auburn for example?
 
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