Please Scroll Down to See Forums Below
napsgear
genezapharmateuticals
domestic-supply
puritysourcelabs
UGL OZ
UGFREAK
napsgeargenezapharmateuticals domestic-supplypuritysourcelabsUGL OZUGFREAK

Willis Mcgehee Is Smart!!!

  • Thread starter Thread starter KAYNE
  • Start date Start date
K

KAYNE

Guest
HE TOOK OUT A $2.5 MILLION INSURANCE POLICY TWO WEEKS BEFORE THE GAME. PAYABLE AFTER 1 YEAR IF HE CANNOT RETURN TO FOOTBALL IF HE GOT HURT. WELL, HE GOT HURT. I GUESS WE WILL HAVE TO WAIT TO SEE IF HE CAN RETURN.




KAYNE
 
i was just asking someone about this.... i remember webber, rose, howard all had policies like that with the fab five...
 
A lot of college players do this. The bigger question is how do they afford the premiums and stay eligible under the NCAA rules. Mcgehee's premium was $20,000. His family took out a loan to pay for it.
 
big4life said:
A lot of college players do this. The bigger question is how do they afford the premiums and stay eligible under the NCAA rules. Mcgehee's premium was $20,000. His family took out a loan to pay for it.


YOU JUST ANSWERED YOUR OWN QUESTION. THATS HOW THEY AFFORD IT.

ITS A WISE INVESTMENT. YOU CANT GO WRONG REALLY. THE SIGNING BONUS ALONE IS MULTI-MILLION FOR A FIRST ROUNDER.



KAYNE
 
one of my buddies who plays d1 bball is insured by the ncaa this year. he was a projected lottery pick last year but returned to school for his senior year. because of that, the ncaa insured him. i THINK they insure the top 5 rated preseason seniors each year.
 
KAYNE said:
HE TOOK OUT A $2.5 MILLION INSURANCE POLICY TWO WEEKS BEFORE THE GAME. PAYABLE AFTER 1 YEAR IF HE CANNOT RETURN TO FOOTBALL IF HE GOT HURT. WELL, HE GOT HURT. I GUESS WE WILL HAVE TO WAIT TO SEE IF HE CAN RETURN.




KAYNE

Oh. The subject of your post really shocked me. I thought you were going to announce that he could read or something.
 
Monday, January 6
Updated: January 7, 11:04 AM ET

Decision could secure McGahee's financial future

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
By Darren Rovell
ESPN.com


When Keith Lerner saw University of Miami running back Willis McGahee go down in the fourth quarter of the National Championship game, he bolted from his couch, went into his home office and immediately began rifling through the papers.

Only five hours before, Lerner, an insurance agent based in Gainesville, Fla., had completed the paperwork on a $2.5 million insurance policy for the sophomore stud who was projected to be a top NFL draft pick in April.

"I faxed his physical information to Lloyd's of London at 3 o'clock on Friday," Lerner said. "The ink wasn't even dry on the paper yet."

McGahee might have had only one game left in his collegiate career, but he approached Lerner -- who had written policies for former Miami players Santana Moss, Ed Reed and Bryant McKinnie -- and wanted a large policy. Thanks to that decision, if McGahee, who had surgery on his torn anterior cruciate and medial collateral ligaments Sunday, never returns to the gridiron, he will collect a tax-free $2.5 million one year from the date of the injury -- Jan. 3, 2004.

"I originally said I could get him a $1.5 million policy, but he wanted more," said Lerner, president of the financial consulting firm Total Planning. "Then, I got $2 million and he still wanted more. So eventually we got to $2.5 million, which is a very large policy and possibly the largest policy a sophomore has ever had."

Lerner declined to give the exact premium, but he did say McGahee's family took out a loan and paid less than $20,000 for it. Premiums usually cost about $10,000 per $1 million policy, but McGahee was able to get a better rate partly because it only covered him for the National Championship game and up until he signed an NFL contract.

McGahee was also able to get a larger policy because his projected draft status rose throughout the season. Lerner said that if McGahee took out a policy in October, he only would have received about $500,000 in total coverage. McGahee finished the season with a school-record 1,686 yards and 27 touchdowns this season

Lerner visited McGahee at HealthSouth Doctors Hospital on Monday.

"He was a little surprised to see me," Lerner said. "But he had a smile on his face. He wouldn't have taken this out if he was 100 percent sure he wasn't going to get hurt. I think it's very unfortunate that he was minutes away from a big payday in the NFL and now that situation is changed. But he did make a smart intelligent decision."

Lerner most recently paid out a $1 million tax-free policy to former University of Florida defensive tackle Ed Chester, who collected in the fall of 1999.

About 70 football players are part of the NCAA Exceptional Student-Athlete Disability Insurance Program, according to Juanita Sheely, travel and insurance coordinator for the NCAA. The NCAA provides athletes, who are projected to be picked in the first three rounds of the NFL draft, with a loan to take out a premium. Sheely declined to say if McGahee had insurance through the NCAA's program, administered by ASU International.

Penni Key, associate athletic director of compliance at the University of Miami, said that athletes are encouraged to look at the NCAA's program as opposed to outside underwriters because the school wants to make sure that an agent isn't paying a premium for the athlete, which would be an NCAA violation. Key said that about five University of Miami football players are covered by some insurance policy each season.
 
I THINK HE WILL BE ABLE TO COME BACK. HE MAY NOT BE A FIRST ROUND PICK, BUT HE WILL BE AN UPPER ROUND PICK.




KAYNE
 
He could still end up being a first rounder, he's only a sophmore. If he decides to go full term, he will have 2 more years to get his stats back up.
 
YEAH BUT I DONT THINK HE WILL STAY PAST NEXT YEAR. I'M NOT SURE WHAT DEPTH MIAMI HAS AT RB BUT I'M SURE SOMEONE IS ON HIS HEALS.

I THINK HE WILL MAKE IT BACK AFTER THE FIRST FEW GAMES OF NEXT SEASON AND THEN GO INTO THE DRAFT. NOT SURE IF HE CAN MAKE IT BACK UP TO 1ST ROUND STATUS THOUGH SINCE HE MAY NOT BE BACK FOR THE WHOLE SEASON. GUESS TIME WILL TELL.




KAYNE
 
Torn ACLs are tough to recover from ... ask Terrell Davis and Jamal Anderson. McGahee won't be back for next season. I think he will be lucky to return for his senior season.
 
Okay...so if this guy is out for a year he collects....now, what if he comes back a year or two after that....and is able to somehow make it in the draft...what happens then? I am sure there is a policy on that...but just being curious. By the way, this is his second knee surgery in 4 or 5 years....he is damaged goods and probably won't have any confidence in his knee when/if he comes back
 
It is a insurance company called Lord (something) he has had the policy all year.. My best friend plays for Michigan and we were out last night. The only way he gets the money is if he misses an entire year in the NFL....he payed about $15,000 for the policy... but still a smart move..
 
LORD'S OF LONDON IS THE INSURANCE COMPANY. IF I'M NOT MISTAKEN, I READ AN ARITCLE THAT SAID HE JUST GOT THE POLICY.

I ALWAYS WONDERED ABOUT STUFF LIKE THIS BUT THIS IS ACTUALLY THE FIRST I AM HEARING OF IT.



KAYNE
 
Top Bottom