News

U.S. District Court Judge Claudia Wilken of the Northern District of California, approved a $2.576 billion settlement in ...
The new agency vetting name, image and likeness deals in college sports reached an agreement that relaxes standards on player ...
The College Sports Commission, a regulatory agency created to enforce the watershed $2.8 billion House v. NCAA class action ...
President Trump on Thursday introduced new rules for the NIL and revenue-sharing deals that have shaken up college sports in ...
President Trump just signed an executive order that could reshape the future of college athletes and NIL money. Here’s what ...
The NCAA has agreed to close the backward-facing (NIL backpay) portion of the settlement with a whopping $2,700,000,000 payout to athletes who competed as far back as 2016 for lost NIL earnings.
NCAA President Charlie Baker had little comment on a judge’s ruling that all but told the NCAA it couldn’t enforce its own NIL rules.
Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti said the injunction ensures athlete rights will be protected from the NCAA’s “illegal NIL-recruitment ban.” He said the bigger fight continues.
While the NCAA continues to press for Congressional legislation concerning some standardization of college athletes’ activities making money from their names, images and likenesses (NIL), one of ...
Since the NCAA lifted its ban on college athletes earning money for use of their names, images and likenesses in the the summer of 2021, it has been operating without detailed rules regarding NIL.
The NCAA guidance wasn’t completely ignored, says Blake Lawrence, the CEO of the NIL marketplace Opendorse, a company that helps manage several booster-led collectives.
More: NCAA updates NIL recommendations to address pay-for-play concerns Sign up for our sports newsletter: All the latest sports news delivered straight to you!