It will he hard, but it is the only path. The smart people said from the start that this NIL/Collective stuff was not sustainable without regulation. It's not really a, put the toothpaste back into the tube type situation. It's more, grab the tube back and control how the toothpaste comes out going forward. The SEC and Big Ten are on a path to a breakaway. That breakaway will include a more fair and more regulated NIL model, with the money coming from TV deals, not fans. So, a revenue sharing model basically. NIL will still be allowed on the side for players, but it too will be more structured and regulated. Sankey and Petittie have been working on this, with support of their AD's and school presidents. It won't be easy, but it is the only path to a sustainable future for college football, and what we are seeing now (publicly) is Saban (and a few others) laying the foundation for it. The alternative is watching it slowly die on the vine.