Liam Greene

I'm Liam Greene and I am currently a Freshman in IUB's Media School, I spend my free time playing video games and DnD.



Projects by Liam Greene

The Hidden Cost of NIL: Stagnant Growth in Varsity Sports

The Hidden Cost of NIL: Stagnant Growth in Varsity Sports

By Oliver Carr, Aparna Krishnan, Liam Greene

BLOOMINGTON, IN (Nov. 5th, 2024)

As the sun begins to set over the Sembower Recreational Sports Complex, the golden sunlight highlights the mounting pressure that begins to take its toll on the Indiana University Lacrosse team. In the midst of a chaotic, lung-busting and end-to-end game, the undefeated Michigan State Spartans begin to assemble what looks like the game-winning attack. In that moment, IU buckles down and makes a crucial defensive stop, and as IU are urged on by a rowdy, and record breaking crowd of 300, they rush to counter-attack.  With three seconds remaining on the clock, that crowd of 300 go crazy as IU scores to knock off the undefeated Spartans.

It’s a sporting moment in time, a moment that deserves so much more. More than the 300 diehard fans who stand in lieu of proper seating. It deserves more than to be played at the Sembower Recreational Sports Field, a nice field, but it’s a venue typically reserved for intramural sports. It’s a moment deserving of lights, cameras and reporters clamoring for interviews with the winning goalscorer. It’s a statement win, deserving of a NCAA Division Ⅰ program. Unfortunately, Division I programs aren’t formed from those moments of sporting magic, or the spirit of the players, it requires a variety of factors, chiefly among them student interest, and a whole lot of money.

A Lacrosse Player prepares pass to his teammate.
Logan LeGrett prepares to fire a striking pass to his teammate. Legrett has experienced all IU Lacrosse has to offer,  including both the highs and the lows.

While the lacrosse team doesn’t control IU’s athletic department finances, according to Logan LeGrett, a junior midfielder for IU Lacrosse, thinks they can certainly hold up their end of the deal, “Lacrosse is in a good spot to be elevated,” LeGrett said. “The team is good, and we’d be playing in the best conference.” One of the biggest roadblocks for any sport looking to elevate the need for brand new facilities.  LeGrett recognized this and believed it to be a non-issue, “There’s not much specific to lacrosse that you need to add.” LeGrett said. “We can just use the soccer field, we play at odd times already, so we wouldn’t really cause them any problems.” Playing at the Bill Armstrong Stadium is a common dream among players and supporters alike, according to LeGrett, “Playing at the soccer stadium would be awesome, much nicer for us and the fans, nice field, nice facility.

Galen Clavio points to a waving hand in a crowd of Junior reporters ready to ask him about NIL
Galen Clavio calls on a reporter in a sea of clamoring hands. A sports media professor at Indiana University, Clavio is deeply engrained in the world of sports journalism and by extension, NIL. Photo by Emma Pearce.

So all that stands in the way of lacrosse’s ascension to NCAA Division I is money. Money that is now more scarce in the wake of the 2021 U.S Supreme Court decision about collegiate athlete’s name, image and likeness rights. (NIL) That money seems to be moving away from athletic departments, and into the hands of athletes. The vast majority of revenue comes from success in football and basketball, and athletic departments will need to pay to stay competitive. Galen Clavio, director of the National Sports Journalism Institute believes this to be a grim side effect of NIL,   “The unfortunate truth is that most athletic departments now have to pay this $22 million a year in NIL money, and they have no additional revenue streams: all of the money is already spoken for,” Clavio said, “Which is probably going to result in a lot of cuts in athletic departments in what are perceived as non-essential areas.”

A photo to help visualize Jeremy Gray
Jeremy Gray poses before an Indiana Men’s basketball game with a white-out theme. As the Men’s Basketball Arena Announcer and Senior Associate Athletic Director for Strategic Communications, Gray is intimately familiar with the inner workings of NIL, and the media storm that follows it.

That’s not all, NIL is even causing those already spoken for revenue streams to start to dry up. Before NIL, donors, often referred to as boosters, would donate their money directly to the athletic departments.  Those same boosters that once lined the pockets of athletic departments are now being funneled into NIL collectives, organizations that are ensuring that the prominent players make their money. Jeremy Gray, senior associate athletic director for strategic communications at Indiana University has witnessed this problem first hand. “The athletics departments feel a little hard done,” Gray said. “Their money is starting to dry up.” 

What the future holds for collegiate sports in a world post NIL remains to be seen, but it’s already showing to have far reaching effects. For lacrosse, it’s made their outlook significantly dimmer in the new NIL landscape, but they’ll keep fighting to take their sport into the limelight of Division I. So for now, they’ll keep knocking off schools who seem to have much more to offer to their respective clubs, marauding around the country on their own dime and playing the sport they love. They’ll do it not for the money, but for the simple love of the feeling moments like scoring a last second winner bring to them.

Many people falsely claim that its destroying the integrity of college sports, and many blindly think its doing only good. In reality,  NIL is an extremely complex issue, that has both positives and negatives.

Tim Cook Introduces New Apple Product

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Tim Cook Introduces New Apple Product

Media Contacts
Elizabeth Hauser
Emily Hunter
Liam Greene

Apple CEO, Tim Cook, unveiled a new product on Tuesday, the Apple Watch, with new features such as, fitness tracking and easy access to texting and calling. The Apple Watch was released as, “one more thing” alongside a new iphone at a convention center located in Cupertino California. The center erupted into an uproar of applause at Cook’s statement revealing the product.

Nobody expected anything more to be released after the unveiling of the iPhone 6, but Apple fans everywhere received a pleasant surprise. Software developer, Kevin Lynch, made an appearance to showcase the watch’s features and highlight the new technology. One of the many highlighted features that Lynch covered was the messaging system and how user-friendly it is. “It lets you send a lot of emotion without interacting very much at all on your watch.” Lynch said. Another functionality Lynch covered was the map functionality, which can zoom in and out by simply using the watch’s crown. Additionally, based on what direction you need to turn after choosing a route, a different vibration will be sent through the system’s haptic feedback that is different for right and left.

Sorority cook shown with an apple watch
Clara Muncie, a cook at Indiana University’s Kappa Delta Sorority, preparing dinner for the members. Muncie, 22, just began her first year working at the house.

Priced at $349, this revolutionary device can read your heart rate, answer phone calls and texts, and has Bluetooth connection. The watch has a battery life of up to 18 hours and is charged on magnetic diodes which can also read your heartbeat.  It comes in sizes of either 38mm or 42mm with a stainless steel finish. With this piece of technology, you can answer phone calls or texts with a device on your wrist.

Apple realized that the typical touch screen on their products wouldn’t work since the screen would be obstructed by the wearer’s hand trying to zoom in and out; they decided to put a spin on a regular watch’s crown and make it into a digital navigation mechanism. If the crown is pressed, the watch will return to its screen. By simply raising or lowering the wearer’s wrist, the device will sense the movement and turn itself on or off. Responding to texts has never been easier; by simply choosing a pre-generated response or speaking into the watch’s microphone, text messages can be responded to by just raising a wrist. The watch band can be easily swapped out for a different one, and the box with the watch contains two watch bands that can fit any size.

A student at Indiana University wearing an apple watch
Libby Wright, an Indiana University student, researching career opportunities on IU’s career website. Wright, 20, began her junior year at IU and her second year living in her sorority house, Kappa Delta.

Cook truly believed that the Apple Watch was the next major step in Apple’s evolution. The Apple Watch is compatible with iPhones back to the iPhone 5. This device will be available April 24th, 2015, and available for preorder April 10th. They can come in colors such as gray, gold, rose gold, and silver. This watch is also splash resistant, which means minor contact with water will not damage the device.

Additionally, the Apple Watch has a slew of personalization features built into it, like “faces”. Kevin Lynch showcased a space setting, or the “Astronomy Face” for the watch which not only told the time, but gave the current cycle of the moon, and the current position and names for each planet in our solar system. It can also be set to either an analog or digital clock.

The apps on the Apple Watch can be arranged in any way that fit the user’s liking and when rotating the watch’s crown, the screen can zoom in and out, showing more or less apps. The Apple Watch also comes with voice activated commands; for example, Lynch asked the watch what movies were playing in Cupertino. The watch answered with a schedule of movies playing that day.

Apple CEO, Tim Cook at the release of the Apple Watch on September 9th , 2014. Cook explained a new revolutionary feature the ‘digital crown’ which allows for smart technology on the small frame

Tim Cook at the release of the Apple Watch. Cook commented on the functionality and wearability of the watch in everyday use. 

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