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Jay Biggerstaff-Imagn Images
Missouri defensive end Damon Wilson II, a former University of Georgia football player, has filed a lawsuit against the University of Georgia Athletic Association and its NIL collective after Georgia sued him earlier this month.

Georgia had taken Wilson to court seeking about $390,000 in damages, asserting that after signing a NIL contract with Georgia’s Collective in December 2024 and receiving one payment, Wilson breached the agreement by transferring to Missouri, triggering a liquidated-damages clause that Georgia says makes him liable for the remaining contract value.

In his countersuit, Wilson alleges that the contract was unenforceable and that Georgia and the collective engaged in a coordinated effort to punish him for entering the transfer portal, interfere with his ability to secure new NIL opportunities, and hurt his career prospects — including allegedly making false claims to other programs about the financial penalties he would face.

Wilson’s suit, filed in Missouri, also includes claims of defamation tied to statements made by Georgia’s representatives about the case.

Filed Under: SEC Football
Originally published on SECRant.com
14 Comments
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omahawg2 days
I really hope this holds up for Georgia. A precedent needs to be set.
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ForeverGator1 day
No. You really don't want Georgia to win. What we need is Congress to step in and make sure the regulations are set. Or, that the players unionize and agree to 2-year contracts with schools. If Georgia wins, they (along with other schools) will just talent hoard and hold players to their contracts. Horrible idea. Georgia isn't going to win though. They didn't pay him $390k, and they have to show damages. Georgia just looks like a bully and I don't know why players will want to go there after this.
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FluffyBunnyFeet22 hours
Yeah, that's what we need. Congress to get involved. Great plan.
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Soonerd7820 hours
Huh he got payed a payment and in the contract it states you must fulfill the contract to its entirety more than likely. If that’s the case yes he can be sued for the whole amount . Kids can’t walk away with zero penalty . You have to start somewhere … your great faith in the government has worked out for you in the past ?
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Lynxrufus20122 days
Dude signed a contract. Seems straightforward. Took money.
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Here we go, it’s only the beginning.
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Sick 'im Dawgs!
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OGTiger2 days
This is simply the tip of the iceberg. Wait until worker’s comp claims, tax issues, etc. come around. Just a matter of time.
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RECConspiracy2 days
I hate to say this, but Go Dawgs! Make him pay.
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RockyRococco2 days
this will actually be BAD for players if he wins. the amount people will be willing to spend will plummet if players can literally take the money and run
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Fan19584 hours
Arkansas has a case pending against one of the Imaleavin brothers. This has to be found in Georgia's favor for breach of contract.

But then again the schools need to pay the players like the NFL. Nothing is guaranteed and you are paid on a game-by-game basis. No lump sum payments and if you opt out of a bowl or playoff game without a verifiable injury, you don't get paid.

You pull a stunt like this guy did, you just forfeit your money because it was never earned.
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This is what is needed in college football right now. You signed a contract you need to be held responsible for your actions! Colleges need to make these young men libel if they fail to uphold the business contract they signed! Georgia needs to not settle this out of court so it becomes a precedent for future law suits!
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TrueLefty1 day
I heard a former Georgia quarterback been hired at LSU. Is that true?
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