Big changes for the NCAA likely to upend scholarship limits and roster sizes across college sports May 29, 2024 Union leader: Multibillion-dollar NCAA antitrust settlement won’t slow efforts to unionize players May 25, 2024 With revenue sharing coming to college sports, are NIL collective...
College sports is experiencing tremendous uncertainty. A proposed settlement in the House v. NCAA lawsuit is primed to disrupt college sports in a way many could never have imagined. Revenue sharing for athletes is on the horizon, and as a result, many schools have begun tightening ...
College Athletes In Revenue-Generating Sports As Employees: A Look Into The Alt-Labor FutureRoberto L. Corrada
Following theHouse v. NCAAsettlement, which provides for backpay and permits revenue sharing with student athletes, Division I colleges and universities are grappling with regulatory, compliance, and financial challenges that can impact their fiscal health, reputation, and ability to attract top at...
Media TNT Sports continues post-NBA rights haul with Mountain West deal 2 Jul 2024 US College Sport Finance & Law Big Ten Conference revenue grows to record $880m ahead of expansion 21 May 2024 Basketball Media Women’s college basketball title decider shatters viewership records 9...
The NCAA and the nation's five biggest conferences have agreed to pay nearly $2.8 billion to settle a host of antitrust claims, a monumental decision that sets the stage for a groundbreaking revenue-sharing model that could start directing millions of dollars directly to athletes as soon as th...
California bill calls for revenue sharing in college sports A California lawmaker introduced a bill Thursday that would require schools that play major college sports to pay some athletes as much as $25,000 annually, along with covering the cost of six-year guaranteed athletic scholarships and ...
College basketball players can now be compensated during the postseason through imagery or text on fan gear. The new NCAA NIL License permits this for all sports for fair compensation of athletes. Maybe this too will bond players and fans.
But, as college sports heads into its revenue-sharing era (which will cost athletic departments like Florida’s upwards of $20 million annually, starting next fall), it can’t be too shocking to see a decision like this. How would Stricklin justify a $26 million...
Essentially what it means is that Pavia was set to earn at least $1 million of NIL money (Name, Image, Likeness), according to Yahoo Sports. Then in July, because of the House anti-trust settlement, revenue sharing begins. As much as $20.5 million can be shared annually with programs....