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Since the emergence of the transfer portal and the advent of name, image and likeness (NIL), there have been countless debates on how to create and adjust a system to establish guardrails when needed.
As the college sports landscape has adapted to the NIL, the gap between college programs with deep pockets and alumni and smaller schools with fewer financial resources has continued to widen. Although he was in a position to potentially take advantage of the perceived advantages during his time as the head coach at Tennessee, Tony Vitello was somewhat against the NIL’s shortcomings.
“It’s a disaster,” Vitello told Taylor Lewan and Will Compton during a recent episode of the “Bussin’ With The Boys” podcast.
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Tennessee head coach Tony Vitello during Game 1 of the NCAA baseball tournament Fayetteville Super Regional between Tennessee and Arkansas held at Baum-Walker Stadium on Saturday, June 7, 2025. (Brianna Paciorka/News Sentinel/USA Today Network via Imagn Images)
Vitello coached the Volunteers to the program’s first national championship in 2024. Despite his lack of coaching experience at the MLB level, Vitello was named manager of the San Francisco Giants last month.
While reflecting on his successful tenure at Tennessee, Vitello shared some of his gripes with the current NIL system.
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“It’s a disaster,” Vitello told Taylor Lewan and Will Compton. “We all have thoughts that you dream a little bigger. I have this weird fantasy or vision of, okay, can college and MLB merge a little bit and help each other? I definitely shouldn’t be patronizing either. But I can connect with the right people and get this thing where it’s a little more fluid. But the one part MLB sports can’t affect is generally where NCAA sports are.”

Tennessee Volunteers head coach Tony Vitello warms up his players before game one of the series against the Arkansas Razorbacks at Baum-Walker Stadium at George Cole Field on May 16, 2025 in Fayetteville, Arkansas. (Wesley Hitt/Getty Images)
Vitello concluded that NIL has contributed to what he remembers as a chaotic environment.
“It’s just a mess. … It’s like you’re driving in the fog and you can’t really see but about 100 or 200 feet in front of you. You’re grasping for what’s real, what you can do, what you can’t do. I’m sure somebody will throw out that I did something wrong or I didn’t do this. But overall, it’s very frustrating that you know the game.”

Tony Vitello (23) of the San Francisco Giants gives an interview prior to his introductory press conference as the new manager of the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park on October 30, 2025 in San Francisco, California. (Andy Kuno/San Francisco Giants/Getty Images)
While going over the disparity between college baseball programs, Tony Vitello also suggested that the NIL era is counterproductive to the push to make schools compete on a level playing field.
“That’s the whole point of athletics or competition, let’s find out who can do it better. But when you really don’t know what the rules are or they’re so skewed in favor of Tennessee over Middle Tennessee State, it’s kind of hard to have that nose-to-nose competition.”
Vitello replaces Bob Melvin, who was waived after two seasons with the Giants. San Francisco has not advanced to the MLB Postseason since 2021.



