Sports
Related: About this forumNCAA, Power 5 agree to deal that will let schools pay players
The NCAA and its five power conferences have agreed to allow schools to directly pay players for the first time in the 100-plus-year history of college sports.
The NCAA and its leagues are moving forward with a multibillion-dollar agreement to settle three pending federal antitrust cases. The NCAA will pay more than $2.7 billion in damages over 10 years to past and current athletes, sources told ESPN. Sources said the parties also have agreed to a revenue-sharing plan allowing each school to share up to roughly $20 million per year with its athletes.
All Division I athletes dating back to 2016 are eligible to receive a share as part of the settlement class. In exchange, athletes cannot sue the NCAA for other potential antitrust violations and drop their complaints in three open cases -- House v. NCAA, Hubbard v. NCAA and Carter v. NCAA.
The agreement does not resolve all the pending legal issues that have revolutionized the business of college sports and destabilized the multibillion-dollar industry. Athletes and their advocates are still fighting to become employees or find other ways to collectively bargain in the future, which could reshape a revenue-sharing agreement. This week's agreement, though, potentially decreases the NCAA's exposure to antitrust litigation, which has been the most powerful tool in pushing schools to provide more for athletes.
https://www.espn.com/college-sports/story/_/id/40206364/ncaa-power-conferences-agree-allow-schools-pay-players
SarahD
(1,732 posts)Top tier college athletes don't learn much, anyway. Many of them are illiterate. They should get something for their effort.
MotownPgh
(372 posts)I went to a major football college where the players couldn't go home for holidays (no airfare or had games), didn't have spending $$ for dates or snacks, had dinner after our dining halls were closed because they practiced twice a day, and brought millions into the school. And they still sell the shirts with their names on them LONG after they're gone with NO compensation to the athletes. Enough.
underpants
(187,345 posts)Before you could transfer at all, kids got signed just to make sure their rival didnt get them. Sat them on the bench and they never played.
malaise
(278,776 posts)Rec