It’s interference because now there are no rules placed around collectives or business or individuals from contacting and negotiating with any player outside the boundaries of what coaches can do. So during dead periods when coaches can’t contact players, guess who can? When coaches can’t visit a player or their family, guess who can? When there are limits placed on how many official visits for coaches, guess who also can pay for a player to “unofficially” visit a school or a facility or an office? When coaches have to wait for a player to enter the portal to contact them, guess who doesn’t have to wait? Basically the court says the NCAA cannot create nor enforce any rules as it relates to NIL. It corrupts the process.
It is essentially pay for play, when NIL was not billed as pay for play (in fact the arguments made before NIL came into effect is that players have value outside of their attachment to the universities they play for and that’s all they were looking to capitalize on—and the practical reality is the opposite being true). And I for one don’t think it’s a great idea for people not employed by the university to be negotiating outside of the university structure to basically pay the salaries of these players. I’d much rather the courts just rip the bandaid off, call them employees of the university, and turn them into U23 minor league teams with various different tiers.