NIL, College Sports
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Deion Sanders slams current NIL deals
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In another twist in college athletics’ new revenue-share era, attorneys for the plaintiffs in the House settlement believe the NCAA and power conferences are violating terms of the legal agreement and are threatening to report the wrongdoing to the court.
Big 12 Media Days opened the door for several coaches in the conference to voice their frustrations with the current state of college football. With players making millions and programs finding loopholes to boost their roster,
Colleges can pay athletes up to $20.5 million for the use of their NIL, but plaintiffs in the settlement are asking questions about the amount.
A bill designed to end ambiguity surrounding name, image and likeness (NIL), establish professional guidelines for agents and protect collegiate leagues from antitrust lawsuits received a strong endorsement from a bipartisan group of nine congressional representatives Thursday.
The College Sports Commission, an organization overlooking the new revenue-sharing system, issued a memo Thursday with further guidance on rules related to third-party name, image and likeness deals.
Big 12 coaches sat in a roundtable setting, nodding in agreement that college athletics' NIL system is not just flawed, it's impossibly screwed up. FOX Sports' RJ Young details their proposed solution.
The bill would federally protect and recognize the ability of student-athletes to profit from their name, image and likeness.