STORRS, Conn. — UConn forward Aaliyah Edwards signed a big name, image and likeness contract this week with adidas Canada, but wasn’t allowed to speak with reporters in Connecticut about it on Tuesday, for fear that promoting the deal might jeopardize her student visa.
Under current United States law, Edwards, who is from Kingston, Ontario, and other international students can only make money in this country with passive NIL deals. She gets a little something, for example, if someone buys a jersey with her name on it at the campus bookstore.
But unlike her teammate Paige Bueckers, who is estimated to be worth more than half a million dollars in the NIL world, Edwards can’t actively participate in endorsements in the United States.
Her financial security no doubt made it a bit easier for Bueckers to decide she will come back to UConn for another season rather than enter this year’s WNBA draft.
Edwards and fellow international player Nika Muhl (Croatia) also have eligibility remaining, but neither of them have announced whether they plan to return or turn pro.
Edwards, who is averaging more than 19 points and 10 rebounds a game for the Huskies (24-5, 16-0 Big East), said Tuesday that her decision will be based on basketball and achieving the goals she has for herself and the team. But she acknowledged that money is also a factor.
PHOTOS: UConn’s Aaliyah Edwards signs NIL deal in Canada, but can’t talk about it in the US
“Maybe a little bit,” she said. “It’s a little influence. But it’s really about the team.”
Adidas did not release terms of Edwards NIL deal, but a spokeswoman told The Associated Press Tuesday that the company is “being respectful of the NIL rules and Aaliyah will only participate in Canada during her NIL adidas Canada deal.”
Muhl said she’s pretty much made a decision on whether to return to UConn and is just waiting for the right time to make an announcement.
The senior guard said because she never had NIL money and it wasn’t part of the reason she chose to play at UConn, it won’t be a factor in her decision to leave or stay.
“The legacy here, the things that you learn are so much more than the money you can get,” she said. “I feel that is going to translate into life later … what you learned about perseverance, resilience, hard work, dedication, discipline. And you’re going to make money later on in life just by having that experience here.”
Their coach, Geno Auriemma, said he would love to see Congress carve out an exception to student visa rules that would allow international students to at least make grocery money, whether or not they are athletes.
But he said he understands the government can’t just open up work visas to anyone who wants one.
“If they can find a way to get these people treated the same as every other student athlete, great,” he said.
The issue has gotten the attention of Connecticut’s two U.S. senators, Richard Blumenthal and Chris Murphy, who have both been pushing for better compensation for college athletes.
Blumenthal, a Democrat, and Oregon Republican Pete Ricketts introduced legislation last October that would create a sub-category within the F-1 visa narrowly tailored to international student-athletes who want to pursue NIL opportunities. Blumenthal said Tuesday he doesn’t have a timetable for passage, but hopes to attach the legislation to an upcoming appropriations bill and get it approved this year.
“These restrictions are totally outdated as applied to NIL, and obviously hugely unfair,” he said.