Updated
Updated · The Denver Post · Jun 15
Deion Sanders Urges College Football Gambling Crackdown as $40 Million NIL Gap Fuels Reform Push
Updated
Updated · The Denver Post · Jun 15

Deion Sanders Urges College Football Gambling Crackdown as $40 Million NIL Gap Fuels Reform Push

3 articles · Updated · The Denver Post · Jun 15

Summary

  • Deion Sanders said betting by players on college football is fundamentally wrong, speaking as a Big 12 gambling controversy intensified after Texas Tech quarterback Brendan Sorsby regained eligibility through a court order.
  • Sanders tied the issue to a money-driven college landscape, arguing NIL and transfer-era incentives are distorting the sport and pushing people toward what they can extract rather than contribute.
  • His proposed fixes include an NIL salary cap, a retired-coach commissioner in the mold of Nick Saban, an age limit, tighter transfer rules and a 24-team College Football Playoff.
  • Citing roster imbalance, Sanders said one program can spend $40 million while another spends $10 million, making outcomes predictable and strengthening his case for centralized oversight.
  • The comments come as Sanders, 58, says he has regained his health and a more hands-on role at Colorado after bladder cancer treatment and a spring scare with blood clots.

Insights

Deion Sanders now critiques the transfer portal he mastered. Is this a genuine change of heart or a strategic move for a new era?
Will the 'Protect College Sports Act' truly safeguard athletes, or does it just create a new system to cap their earnings and mobility?
With a 24-team playoff looming, will college football sacrifice its cherished regular season traditions for a bigger television payday?