Wednesday, July 1, 2026

How Middle Tennessee State Added $668,000 to Its NIL Budget

The Blue Raiders cut their alternate uniforms and created a substantial pool of money for their players.

Middle Tennessee wide receiver Cam'ron Lacy (86) catches a pass and carries the ball during the season final home football game against New Mexico State on Saturday, Nov. 23, 2024.
Helen Comer/Imagn Images
Jun 17, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Las Vegas Aces guard Chelsea Gray (12) against the Phoenix Mercury at Mortgage Matchup Center. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images
Exclusive

WNBA Star Chelsea Gray to Join Prime Video As Player Contributor

Gray is the latest active player to join the media.
Read Now
June 29, 2026 |

The resources of Power 4 college football programs are unmatched—Texas’s lineup of Lamborghinis for recruiting visits, and reports of some rosters built off $20 million in NIL (name, image, and likeness) funds.

Even uniforms are a massive investment, especially for schools such as Oregon, which boasts an annual array of new gear. For the 68 non-power schools with a Division I FBS team, including Middle Tennessee State, dropping hundreds of thousands of dollars on new uniforms isn’t just a drop in the bucket.

For the upcoming season, the Blue Raiders made a new commitment to their football players to gain a financial—and competitive—edge. Backed by newly appointed GM Dana Marquez, MTSU has saved $668,000 by eliminating several alternate uniforms and cutting back from 408 helmets to reinvest into its football program—including NIL. 

“How are we going to best compete against different positions if we’re sitting here spending money on stuff that really we’re only wearing one time a year?” Marquez tells Front Office Sports. The three-year plan started with cutting two of their uniforms (black and gray) and four of their helmets. “We just went with one color, and we did a game helmet and a practice helmet,” Marquez says.

A half-million dollars will come from the helmet reductions, and eliminating the two uniforms will save $84,000 each. The money is going toward easing salary-cap burdens in the post–House v. NCAA settlement era, and hiring new people within the football program. But a large percentage is going toward NIL payments.

Thirty percent of the roster is receiving some amount of NIL payout, Marquez says. And although MTSU is using some of its saved money to directly fund these monthly infusions, it’s also earmarked a portion of it to form a pool of cash that will go to players. 

The catch: They must earn it. 

“If we’re going to pay you $2,000 a month and you want to make $4,000, you’ve got to work to get the $4,000. And we show you how to do that,” Marquez tells FOS.

Players are eligible to increase their monthly allocations by working directly for the Blue Raiders. For example, the team visits the local farmers market every Saturday and meets with the vendors. The offensive linemen recently met with a peanut butter company, T’s Nuts, and created their own spreads they help sell. 

Players, divided into position groups, have also turned into ticket salesmen. They’re currently competing for a grand prize for the most tickets sold to the Aug. 30 home opener against Austin Peay. (Marquez declined to provide the prize.) The special teams unit has already filmed a local commercial.

“What it’s doing collectively is getting them engaged in the community, and now our fan base is now recognizing our players,” Marquez says. “That’s what NIL was supposed to be. It wasn’t meant to be, ‘Here’s a bunch of money. Go play football.’ Our big difference, across the country, is that our athletes have bought in.”

As MTSU is finding success, why aren’t other Group of 5 schools taking the same approach to NIL money? Marquez believes other programs haven’t been flexible in a new world of NIL demands, either unable or outright refusing to adapt to the new landscape.

“Everybody’s still running off of an old model of, ‘This is the way athletes are done,’ and they’re trying to compete with the Power 4, and that’s not who we are,” Marquez says. “My goal was to educate our players, our parents, our agents, of having my own business and understanding what it [takes to be] an entrepreneur.”

It’s a different approach—but he says that if MTSU can explain the model to athletes during their recruiting visits, “you [can] show that you care about the athlete more than just a football player. I think you earn that trust a little bit more than what you would normally do.”

After finishing 3–9 in 2024–25, the team’s second straight sub-.500 season, MTSU produced 247Sports’s No. 3 recruiting class in Conference USA—its best since 2013—behind only Jacksonville State and UTEP. NIL and the earning model played a big part in building the roster.

As the college football season begins, MTSU is eyeing its first bowl game since 2022. Reaching the milestone would be validation that its uniform experiment is working—and that maybe, with money tighter than ever in the revenue-sharing world, the Blue Raiders have found a new blueprint.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Sign up for
The Memo Newsletter

Get the biggest stories and best analysis on the business of sports delivered to your inbox twice every weekday and twice on weekends.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Jun 30, 2026; London, United Kingdom; Serena Williams of the United States returns a shot during her match against Maya Joint of Australia on day two at All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club.

Serena Williams Loses in Return to Singles at Wimbledon

It was her first singles match since the 2022 US Open.
Rob Stone speaks during the Fox Sports Big Noon Kickoff NCAA football pregame show, Saturday, Oct. 9, 2021, at the Pentacrest in Iowa City, Iowa.

A Bandwagoner’s Guide to the USMNT World Cup Run

Rob Stone breaks down the Americans’ outlook ahead of Wednesday.

Physicist Explains Why World Cup Ball Is ‘Flummoxing’ Goalies

New technology, grooves, and altitude all shape the ball’s flight.

Comcast’s NBCUniversal Split Could Give the NFL More Leverage

The forthcoming split will reverberate throughout the entire media business.
podcast thumbnail mobile
Front Office Sports Today

A Conversation with Mia Hamm on the World Cup, NWSL Growth, Angel City Ownership, and Women’s Sports Narratives

0:00

Featured Today

June 26, 2026

In an Era of $1,000 Tickets, $10 Watch Parties Bring Fans Together

Stadium watch parties now rival home-game experiences.
June 25, 2026

Italian Americans Have Severe World Cup FOMO

Bars and restaurants in Boston, Philly, and beyond are missing the Azzurri.
Indiana Fever guard Lexie Hull (10) celebrates a three-point basket Monday, June 22, 2026, during the game at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis. The Indiana Fever defeated the Phoenix Mercury, 86-77
June 24, 2026

Female Athletes Are Trying to Build the ‘Athleisure of Beauty’

“Performance cosmetics” have emerged alongside the women’s sports boom.
June 18, 2026

Why U.S. Open Host Sites Are on a 25-Year Plan

The U.S. Open has already picked out 22 future sites through 2051.

College Sports Roster Spending Soars Beyond $20.5M Rev-Share Cap

The $20.5 million rev-share cap was a new floor for roster costs.
Nov 22, 2025; University Park, Pennsylvania, USA; Penn State Nittany Lions running back Kaytron Allen (13) runs the ball into the end zone for a touchdown during the fourth quarter against the Nebraska Cornhuskers at Beaver Stadium.
June 25, 2026

Court Hands NCAA, Conferences Win in Fight Over NIL Enforcement

Schools are still going above the revenue-sharing cap.
June 26, 2026

West Virginia AD: McAfee’s Value to School ‘Maybe Eight Figures’

The sports media star played at West Virginia nearly two decades ago.
Sponsored

Josh Childress: Why Now Is the Time for NBA Expansion

Josh Childress on why he invested in the Portland Thorns, the case for NBA expansion, and donating to Stanford NIL.
June 25, 2026

The Clippers Have Innovated the NCAA Draft-and-Stash

No. 57 pick Narcisse Ngoy will still play for Auburn this season.
Mar 16, 2026; Dayton, OH, USA; Detailed view of the “NCAA” logo during the Howard Bison a practice session ahead of the first four of the men's 2026 NCAA Tournament at University of Dayton Arena.
June 24, 2026

Players Sue NCAA Over New Five-Year Eligibility Model

The players are suing after being excluded from the new policy.
June 23, 2026

NCAA Approves New ‘Age-Based’ Eligibility Rule

Two attorneys are preparing lawsuits on behalf of at least 50 players.
Mar 21, 2026; Storrs, CT, USA; Iowa State Cyclones guard Jada Williams (8) returns then ball against the Syracuse Orange in the first half at Harry A. Gampel Pavilion.
June 23, 2026

Women’s Basketball Players Blast College Sports Bill

“Where we disagree is—Congress shouldn’t be deciding who makes those rules.”