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03-05-2022 kslmadmin
In a case sure to be watched closely by many parties throughout the NCAA, the University of Georgia is seeking damages from a player who pocketed name, image and likeness (NIL) money from the school and subsequently transferred.
Georgia is seeking $390,000 in damages from former defensive end Damon Wilson, according to Friday reports from multiple media outlets.
This is one of the first instances nationally of a school seeking damages from a player related to an NIL dispute.
Wilson, a junior pass-rusher at Missouri who finished his 2025 regular season with nine sacks, transferred to the Tigers in January mere weeks after allegedly signing a contract with Georgia’s Classic City Collective.
Most NIL contracts of the type Wilson is said to have signed contain language centered around requirements related to “buying out” the remainder of a deal (or a sum similar) in the event of a transfer.
Georgia is asking a judge to force Wilson into arbitration to settle just such a clause.
Of particular interest for observers is that the sum being sought by the university is substantially higher than the amount Wilson actually received in compensation, reportedly in the range of $30,000.
The liquidated damages clause in the deal is meant to substitute for a buyout clause that universities generally utilize for employees, in order to maintain that distinction that athletes aren’t employees.
Yet, the structure effectively acts as a penalty, many experts argue, and Georgia will ultimately have to demonstrate that the $390,000 sought is a reasonable assessment of the damages the school sustained due to Wilson’s transfer.
–Field Level Media
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Written by: kslmadmin
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