Chasing the NIL mirage

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The Wall Street Journal’s recent dive into Florida’s high school transfer free-for-all should awaken every parent, educator, and legislator. The article reveals not a trend but a full-scale crisis.

It is about a youth sports economy that will mint few stars and leave countless others academically stranded and unprepared for adulthood.

The piece follows 16-year-old football wide receiver, Ah’Mari Stevens circling Miami in a helicopter while a videographer captures the distortion, “Everybody and their mama wants to know where he’s going to play ball next year,” the cameraman says.

A teenager is being marketed like a big-time professional free agent, not treated like a student.

Florida’s open enrollment and the rise of Name, Image and Likeness (NIL) money have created what the Journal calls “a first-of-its-kind high school transfer portal.” The numbers are staggering: 7,028 athletic transfers this year from 5,688 the year before. Some have transferred eight times. Coaches openly recruit. Parents strategize like agents. Meanwhile, the Florida High School Athletic Association (FHSAA) admits it has little ability to police misconduct.

This is not mobility.

It is chaos.

As one Tallahassee athletic director said, students bouncing between schools “are not learning anything because there is no rhythm.” Counselors must stitch together transcripts from three, four, even five schools. Seniors arrive missing credits and any sense of academic continuity. But the machine keeps moving because the adults around them, coaches, parents, social‑media promoters, are all chasing the mirage of NIL riches.

FHSAA director Craig Damon said the quiet part out loud: “It’s an economic thing now.” High school sports, once a local institution, have become a speculative athletic market. The goal is no longer team development, character formation and education. The goal is exposure, branding and to be “in a better place by the end of my junior year,” as one coach explained.

No one in the NIL gold rush wants to admit that most of these kids will never see a buck. Only about 2% of high‑school athletes nationwide will play Division I. Those who do face a recruiting landscape reshaped by the NCAA transfer portal, where coaches increasingly prefer proven college players over high-school prospects.

What happens to the rest who spent high school chasing a highlight reel instead of focusing on education only to discover that the path ends abruptly at graduation.

The article offers a glimpse: empty bleachers, fractured communities, burned‑out coaches and players who have never learned to deal with failure.

One veteran coach was blunt: “It doesn’t teach them the mindset to persevere.

That is the real crisis.

Not NIL, the transfers or even the money. The tragedy is that we are raising a generation of young athletes to believe that loyalty is optional, academics don’t matter and adulthood is something you can transfer out of when it things get difficult.

A few will make it. A few always do. But the overwhelming majority will be left with no scholarship, no NIL deal, no academic foundation and no roadmap for life beyond the game.

The warning could not be clearer.

The future of youth sports is here and it is a mess.

The question is whether we will keep pretending it is all about opportunity or finally admit it is exploitation dressed up as blind ambition.

Contact Your Elected Officials
Greg Maresca
Greg Maresca
Greg Maresca is a New York City native and U.S. Marine Corps veteran who writes for TTC. He resides in the Pennsylvania Coal Region. His work can also be found in The American Spectator, NewsBreak, Daily Item, Republican Herald, Standard Speaker, The Remnant Newspaper, Gettysburg Times, Daily Review, The News-Item, Standard Journal and more.
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