Yet another professional football league is coming and this one will be a bit different than the others debuting in the near future.

The Pacific Pro Football, which will be commissioned by former NFL receiver Ed McCaffery, plans to play in the summers not in the spring as the Alliance of American Football league plans to do starting in early February. The Pacific Pro Football league plans to have four teams, all based out of Southern California, and will allow players directly out of high school to compete in the league.

The league plans to begin play in July of 2020.

League co-founder Don Yee, the agent for Tom Brady and several other NFL players, was a recent guest of Nashville-based The Midday 180 of 104.5 FM during the program’s Super Bowl leadup from Atlanta and shared some insight into what the league will be and how it plans to stand out from the rest of the upcoming professional leagues.

“This will be the first professional football league specifically designed for players not yet eligible for the NFL. The NFL is the only major professional league in the world that doesn’t have a hand in the developmental path of its next-generation talent,” Yee said on the program. “What we want to do is offer that talent an employment opportunity and to start professionalizing them in the NFL way so that the learning curve by the time they get to the NFL is shortened.”

The only player Yee mentioned by name was Trevor Lawrence, Clemson’s true freshman starting quarterback, but conceivably, many other elite college football underclassmen would be targeted by the league.

“Our player population will be players, for example, such as Trevor Lawrence at Clemson. We would like to make him an employment offer, professionalize right away,” Yee continued. “Be our Joe Namath. Adidas is one of our founding sponsors. I think they might want to make him an endorsement proposal. And he would be professional, and he would learn an NFL-style of game with us before he declares for the draft.”

Considering this league won’t be up and running until late 2020, it seems very unlikely Lawrence would leave Clemson his junior season to play in the inaugural season of a four-league team, but you can’t blame Yee for throwing that name out there to gain some attention for his new venture.

The fact of the matter is, these elite college players have more name recognition than this entire league at the moment. Until an elite player actually becomes the first player to jump at this opportunity, this seems more like a ploy for attention than anything else by Yee and Pacific Pro Football.