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College Sports

NCAA sports set to change forever with innovative model after $20.5M decision

The NCAA and its five power conference leagues have come to a nearly $2.7-billion settlement in a pair of federal antitrust lawsuits, with college athletes set to be paid for the first time 05:04 ET, 08 Jun 2025 The recent NCAA settlement has brought an end to college sports’ foundation of amateurism(Image: Getty Images) The […]

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NCAA sports set to change forever with innovative model after $20.5M decision

The NCAA and its five power conference leagues have come to a nearly $2.7-billion settlement in a pair of federal antitrust lawsuits, with college athletes set to be paid for the first time

NCAA
The recent NCAA settlement has brought an end to college sports’ foundation of amateurism(Image: Getty Images)

The NCAA’s monumental settlement with its five power conference leagues has forever altered the landscape of college sports, marking the first time student-athletes will receive payment from their institutions.

Despite its roots in amateurism, college sports are now set to become part of an innovative revenue-sharing model where schools can pay athletes up to $20.5 million annually starting in 2025-26. Following U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken’s resolution of three separate antitrust lawsuits last week, colleges will also retroactively compensate athletes $2.8 billion for those who competed from 2016 to 2025.

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This development comes on the heels of the University of Oklahoma’s announcement that it would be downsizing its athletic department staff due to revenue sharing with student-athletes, resulting in a five percent job loss. In other news, Notre Dame head coach Marcus Freeman has urged the NCAA to have just one transfer portal window instead of two.

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Beginning in the fall of 2025, athletes will start receiving direct payments from their schools through revenue-sharing, which is expected to account for roughly $20 million per year. However, this figure could potentially increase annually depending on more profitable television deals.

The decision on how each school allocates their $20 million budget each year, including how much is used to pay players, which players are paid, and how much they receive, is left to the discretion of the individual institutions.

The new revenue-sharing model won’t impact current name, image, and likeness (NIL) deals, which have revolutionized college sports since they were introduced a few years ago.

Arch Manning
Texas quarterback Arch Manning has the highest NIL valuation ($6.8 million) out of all college athletes(Image: Getty Images)

NIL deals enable players to earn money through endorsements, social media, and other business ventures. Some of these deals have even transformed young teenagers into millionaires before they’ve entered the professional game.

Fortunately for students, NIL deals are here to stay. However, the NCAA settlement includes a reporting requirement where athletes must disclose third-party NIL deals that aren’t part of the revenue-sharing allotment they receive.

NIL deals could potentially allow schools to pay more than the $20 million they can distribute to players, although it’s been reported that the NCAA plans to monitor this in the future.

Some of the funds schools will use to compensate their student athletes will come from ever-increasing TV rights packages, particularly for events like the College Football Playoff and March Madness.

March Madness
TV rights packages for events such as March Madness will help institutions pay their athletes(Image: Getty Images)

Some schools are also raising costs to fans through “talent fees”, “concession price hikes”, and “athletic fees” added to tuition costs, providing another income source for them to distribute.

College football and college basketball are the two highest-earning sports, with top quarterbacks reportedly earning around $2m a year, which would consume about 10 per cent of a typical school’s NIL budget for all its athletes.

Regarding the NCAA payout to former athletes who competed between 2016-2024, this will only be accessible to those who were either fully or partially excluded from those payments under previous NCAA regulations.

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NCAA
The recent NCAA settlement has brought an end to college sports’ foundation of amateurism(Image: Getty Images)
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Top 2026 NHL prospect Gavin McKenna trades major juniors for Penn State

Yukoner Gavin McKenna, a top prospect in the 2026 NHL draft, is opting out of the major junior pathway and has instead committed to play National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) hockey at Penn State University next season. McKenna, 17, made the announcement during a June 8 appearance on ESPN’s SportsCentre. “It was a super tough decision. […]

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Yukoner Gavin McKenna, a top prospect in the 2026 NHL draft, is opting out of the major junior pathway and has instead committed to play National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) hockey at Penn State University next season.

McKenna, 17, made the announcement during a June 8 appearance on ESPN’s SportsCentre.

“It was a super tough decision. Obviously there’s a lot of great options out there. But me, my family and everyone that’s part of my circle, we all decided the best spot for me next year would be Penn State University,” McKenna said on ESPN. 

Last season, McKenna put up 129 points with 41 goals and 88 assists in 56 games for the Western Hockey League’s (WHL) Medicine Hat Tigers. His campaign included a 40-game point streak.

In November 2024, the NCAA lifted a decades-old ban, granting Canadian Hockey League players eligibility to compete at U.S. colleges. The rule change opened new doors for junior athletes balancing professional aspirations with academic opportunity.

Penn State, a Division I program since 2012, has emerged as a top NCAA hockey destination, according ESPN. The Penn State Nittany Lions recently landed Jackson Smith, their first-ever first-round NHL draft pick, selected 14th overall by the Columbus Blue Jackets.

ESPN reported that McKenna received a six-figure offer from Penn State, reportedly the largest in college hockey history. 

“Penn State is a great spot for me. I got a kind of a taste of what it’s like there and got to bring along my dad, and we both thought it was a great spot for me,” McKenna said.

McKenna swept nearly every major WHL honour during the 2024/25 season before earning the CHL’s top player award and a spot on its first-team all-star squad, cementing his status as junior hockey’s dominating force.

The NCAA provides an environment for McKenna to train and compete against older and stronger athletes outside the major junior pathway. The move is a physical step forward as he prepares for another season and what may potentially be his NHL rookie season after his time with Penn State.

Leaving the CHL system gives McKenna a taste of college life. Instead of billet homes and a 68-game structure, an NCAA environment offers a campus culture, academic balance and a development model.

Contact Jake Howarth at jake.howarth@yukon-news.com



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Warroad’s Payton Rolli finds right fit, familial connections with commitment to Minnesota – Grand Forks Herald

WARROAD, Minn. — Payton Rolli was already considering a commitment to Minnesota before she visited campus on Tuesday to meet with the coaching staff. Both of Rolli’s parents attended the university. Growing up, she made multiple trips from her hometown of Minot to catch sporting events on campus. She’s watched Gophers women’s hockey games, more […]

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WARROAD, Minn. — Payton Rolli was already considering a commitment to Minnesota before she visited campus on Tuesday to meet with the coaching staff.

Both of Rolli’s parents attended the university. Growing up, she made multiple trips from her hometown of Minot to catch sporting events on campus. She’s watched Gophers women’s hockey games, more recently enthralled by one of the more electrifying players in college hockey, Abbey Murphy.

“I was kind of thinking about it, but going to the campus kind of made me want to go there even more,” the Warroad High standout goaltender said. “It’s crazy. Some of the people I met yesterday, it was just shocking to see them in person.”

Rolli verbally committed to the Gophers on Tuesday, wrapping up the recruiting process ahead of her senior season with the Warriors.

“It’s a dream,” said Rolli, who also made unofficial visits to Boston-area schools. “(My parents) were also really happy for me to go there. … I can’t wait. It’s a great school to be going to.”

The coaching staff, players and facilities made a strong impression on Rolli during her visit.

“The girls and the coaches (stood out),” Rolli said. “The coaches are great people. They’re the nicest to everyone, and the facilities are also really nice there. It’s just a great school.”

Rolli is coming off a

stellar junior campaign with the Warriors

. She finished the year with a 1.15 goals-against average, a .943 save percentage and nine shutouts. Rolli posted an overall record of 26-4.

It was a clear improvement from her already impressive sophomore season (1.57 goals-against average, .923 save percentage and four shutouts).

Rolli also has a strong track record in the postseason. She racked up 61 saves in this year’s Class A State Tournament semifinal tilt against Orono, propelling Warroad to its fourth-straight state championship appearance and its eventual runner-up finish.

In 2024, she backstopped the Warriors en route to their third-straight state title win, recording 26 saves in the championship game against Holy Angels.

With her commitment out of the way, Rolli is ready to pour her focus into her final season of prep hockey.

“I think it’s going to make my last year more great,” Rolli said. “(It’s) a little more relaxing not having to worry about that and being able to focus only on high school.”

Though last year’s stats won’t be easy to top, Rolli intends to continue her trend of year-by-year improvement while preparing for the next step in her athletic career.

“(I want) to do better than I did last year,” Rolli said. “I would say that, just getting more comfortable with my playing, working hard over the summer to make myself better.”

Alex Faber

Alex Faber is a sports reporter for the Grand Forks Herald. A Michigan transplant, he graduated from Michigan State University in 2024 with a degree in journalism and minors in history and environmental studies.





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House attorneys slam NCAA and power conferences over denied NIL deals, issue legal warning about settlement

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. In a terse, two-page letter sent to NCAA and power conference officials Friday, Jeffrey Kessler, […]

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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.

In a terse, two-page letter sent to NCAA and power conference officials Friday, Jeffrey Kessler, a co-lead House plaintiff attorney along with Steve Berman, requested that the NCAA and conferences “retract” a statement of guidance released Thursday from the College Sports Commission and, presumably, reinstate name, image and likeness deals that the CSC has denied — many of them from booster-backed NIL collectives.

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In his letter, Kessler describes the guidance as “not consistent” and “undermining” settlement terms, according to a copy of the document Yahoo Sports obtained. The CSC, the new revenue-share enforcement arm policing NIL deals, notified schools Thursday that it was denying dozens of NIL deals for not meeting what it terms a “valid business purpose.” The guidance specifically targeted collectives, entities that for years now have paid millions to athletes through booster donations.

In the letter, attorneys write that collectives should not be treated differently as other businesses.

“There is nothing in the Settlement Agreement to permit (NCAA and conference) or the CSC, acting on their behalf, to decide that it would not be a valid business purpose for a school’s collective to engage in for-profit promotions of goods or services using paid-for student-athlete NIL,” the letter reads. “To the extent the NIL payment is for the promotion of a valid business purpose, it is irrelevant whether that payment comes from a NIL collective or any other third party.”

Attorneys are planning to bring the issue before Judge Nathanael Cousins, the appointed magistrate in the settlement who has been appointed to resolve such disputes.

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“We urge the CSC to retract the July CSC Memorandum and clarify that the valid business purpose requirement applies to NIL collectives in the same manner as any other entity,” the letter reads.

The letter was addressed specifically to the NCAA’s outside counsel, Rakesh Kilaru, the organization’s lead attorney and one of the key designers of the settlement. Copied on the letter were the general counsels of the Big Ten, Big 12, SEC, ACC and Pac-12 — all named defendants in the case.

In a statement to Yahoo Sports, an NCAA spokesperson said the association has “no role in these decisions” and to seek comment from the CSC.

A CSC spokesperson provided this statement to Yahoo Sports: “The guidance issued by the College Sports Commission yesterday is entirely consistent with the House settlement and the rules that have been agreed upon with class counsel. The defendants have been in close coordination with class counsel on the key provisions in the memo and will continue to work with them to resolve any concerns they may have.”

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In the letter, Kessler notes that the “valid business purpose” rule in the settlement “was meant to prohibit NIL collectives from simply receiving donations and paying athletes for play,” it reads. “It does not, however, prohibit a NIL collective from paying athletes itself — not as a marketing agent for others — if the payment is ‘for a valid business purpose’ related to the promotion or endorsement of goods or services provided to the general public for profit.”

Some of the collective deals paid athletes to attend autograph signings or make event appearances for payment — all of which should be deemed legal, according to the letter.

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This issue is not insignificant. In fact, prohibiting collective pay is at the center of the House settlement, a multi-billion dollar agreement the NCAA and power leagues struck to settle three antitrust cases.

The goal of the agreement, in part, is to shift athlete pay from booster-run collectives to schools that are now permitted to directly share revenue with athletes under a capped system that began July 1. However, many schools are still operating their collectives as a way to provide third-party compensation to athletes that does not count against a program’s cap — a way to, perhaps, legally circumvent the system.

The College Sports Commission, an entity created and currently administered by the power conferences, is charged with enforcing prohibitions around collective pay. Athletes must submit any third-party deal of $600 or more to an NIL clearinghouse, NIL Go, that uses a Deloitte-created algorithm to determine if the deal meets certain standards, including a “compensation range” and a “valid business purpose” definition.

Those deals flagged by NIL Go are sent to the CSC and its new leader, Bryan Seeley, to determine an enforcement decision. As of Thursday, about 80 of more than 2,000 submitted deals have not been cleared, with several more denials expected this week based on the commission’s latest guidance. More than 1,500 deals have been approved.



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House attorneys argue plan to vet NIL collective deals violates settlement

The attorneys who negotiated a $2.8 billion lawsuit settlement with the NCAA and four power conferences took issue Friday with the way college sports’ new enforcement body plans to vet name, image and likeness payments to athletes from school-affiliated collectives. In a letter to the power conferences and NCAA, obtained by The Athletic, attorneys Jeffrey […]

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The attorneys who negotiated a $2.8 billion lawsuit settlement with the NCAA and four power conferences took issue Friday with the way college sports’ new enforcement body plans to vet name, image and likeness payments to athletes from school-affiliated collectives.

In a letter to the power conferences and NCAA, obtained by The Athletic, attorneys Jeffrey Kessler and Steve Berman stated that the guidance the College Sports Commission (CSC) issued Thursday violates the terms of the settlement and that it should treat collectives the same as any other third-party business.

“While we want to continue to work together to implement the Settlement Agreement in a cooperative fashion, this process is undermined when the CSC goes off the reservation and issues directions to the schools that are not consistent with the Settlement agreement terms,” the letter said.

Yahoo! Sports first reported the plaintiffs’ attorneys’ letter.

“We urge the CSC to retract the July CSC Memorandum and clarify that the valid business purpose requirement applies to NIL collectives in the same manner as any other entity,” the letter said. “If the CSC does not retract the statement, Class Counsel will have no choice but to pursue relief from the Special Master as the July CSC Memorandum is already causing injury to class members.”

Kessler declined to comment when The Athletic contacted him.

Earlier Friday, the judge overseeing the settlement approved about $750 million in fees for the NCAA and conferences to pay the plaintiffs’ attorneys.

The recently approved House settlement, which took effect on July 1, established a clearinghouse, called NIL Go, that must approve all third-party deals over $600. The two main requirements for those deals are that they’re for a “valid business purpose” and fit within a fair-market “range of compensation.”

Officials created those rules to prevent schools from utilizing booster-driven entities to funnel payments to recruits and transfers as a way to work around the $20.5 million revenue-sharing cap.

“The guidance issued by the College Sports Commission yesterday is entirely consistent with the House settlement and the rules that have been agreed upon with Class Counsel. The defendants have been in close coordination with Class Counsel on the key provisions in the memo and will continue to work with them to resolve any concerns they may have,” the CSC said in a statement.

Officials for the Southeastern Conference, Big Ten, Big 12 and Atlantic Coast Conference established the CSC to oversee the revenue-sharing system the settlement created. Schools will be able to directly pay their athletes up to $20.5 million this year.

The NCAA has no involvement with the CSC, enforcement of rules related to the revenue-sharing system or the approval of NIL deals.

Guidance the CSC issued Thursday said “an entity with a business purpose of providing payments or benefits to student-athletes or institutions, rather than providing goods or services to the general public for profit, does not satisfy the valid business purpose requirement set forth in NCAA Rule 22.1.3.”

It then cited an example of a collective that “reach(es) a deal with a student-athlete to make an appearance on behalf of the collective at an event, even if that event is open to the general public, and the collective charges an admission fee (e.g., a golf tournament). … The same collective’s deal with a student-athlete to promote the collective’s sale of merchandise to the public would not satisfy the valid business purpose requirement for the same reason.”

“Today’s commentary from the College Sports Commission regarding ‘true NIL’ and ‘valid business purposes’ is not only misguided but deeply dismissive of the collective organizations and the tens of thousands of fans and donors who fuel them,” The Collective Association, a trade group of prominent collectives from around the country, said in a statement. “Any attempt to delegitimize the role collectives play in today’s collegiate athletics landscape ignores both legal precedent and economic reality.”

In the four years since NIL payments began in 2021, collectives affiliated with specific schools have made hundreds of millions in deals with athletes just like those the CSC described in its examples. They pool funds from donors and boosters and use them to license the NIL rights of specific athletes in exchange for appearances and social media posts.

“There is nothing in the Settlement Agreement to permit Defendants or the CSC, acting on their behalf, to decide that it would not be a valid business purpose for a school’s collective to engage in for-profit promotions of goods or services using paid-for student-athlete NIL,” the letter said.

(Photo: Isaiah Vazquez / Getty Images)



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Charles Barkley mum on Auburn football’s 2025 season at the American Century Championship

Stateline, NV — With TV cameras and an overzealous TV reporter swarming, I got a quick interaction with Charles Barkley at the 2025 American Century Championship Celeb Am on Thursday. I gave him a “War Eagle” and asked him his prediction for Auburn football’s 2025 slate, to which he shrugged and said he didn’t know […]

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Stateline, NV — With TV cameras and an overzealous TV reporter swarming, I got a quick interaction with Charles Barkley at the 2025 American Century Championship Celeb Am on Thursday.

I gave him a “War Eagle” and asked him his prediction for Auburn football’s 2025 slate, to which he shrugged and said he didn’t know before trying to escape me and the other media members in pursuit.

Sporting a backwards hat and smoking a cigar, Barkley likely wasn’t thinking about his alma mater’s upcoming campaign on the gridiron.

Not after a disastrous June sent the Tigers’ 2026 recruiting class spiraling down into the bottom third of the entire FBS.

Besides, Barkley is a 7,500-to-1 underdog to win the tournament. His results are the most popular prop bet. He needs practice swings, not to give soundbites to everyone who wants one. Unfortunately for Barkley, he didn’t get any real ones at the driving range before the 90+ celebrities in the tournament headed out in their Celeb Am pairings.

Every July, with the Sierra Mountains hugging the horizon, the spotlight will always be on Barkley’s golf swing.

Auburn football is the least of his worries out on Lake Tahoe. Not to mention the scenery and casinos around the Edgewood Tahoe Resort, where the American Century Championship — which is airing today through Sunday on NBC, Peacock, and the GOLF Channel — is annually held.

And to be fair, Hugh Freeze doesn’t sound overly confident about what the season will look like.

NIL making Auburn’s future murky, like the rest of college football

Freeze admitted to David Pollack he doesn’t know how things will go come August 1, when NIL will have a more definitive set of guidelines.

“There are just a lot of dynamics into it right now,” Freeze prefaced before saying, “I’m confident that our staff–we have not changed a single approach with our recruiting, people love it when they come to Auburn. But, there are just a lot of dynamics that go into their decisions currently. Come August 1, everybody has to put this in writing now and we will see where everything shakes out after that. How in the world are you going to convince a third 5-star quarterback to come to you when you have Jackson Arnold and Deuce Knight? If we’re really operating under a true salary cap where we have no idea what an NIL value is until they decide that, which is our interpretation of the new rules, how do you do that?”

If Freeze sounds so unsure of the future, why would Sir Charles be any different?



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Recruiting, FSU golf shining, Basketball, and more

Florida State news continues to change daily as multiple sports shift through the news cycle. This offseason might have been the worst I can remember with this fan base. However, it feels like the recruiting momentum the staff captured over the past few weeks has brought new life to the program. I’m sure it’s that, […]

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Florida State news continues to change daily as multiple sports shift through the news cycle. This offseason might have been the worst I can remember with this fan base. However, it feels like the recruiting momentum the staff captured over the past few weeks has brought new life to the program.

I’m sure it’s that, and we’ll have FSU football next month. FSU had some big recruiting news last week and has several prospects that expect to make announcements this weekend. Will the Noles miss on two tight-end targets? Will they land their first defensive end in this recruiting cycle?

Another trusted advanced metric option says the Noles will likely exceed expectations in 2025.

A former Heisman Winner’s younger brother says his recruitment is wide open. Will he land with the Noles? The FSU/Alabama game is already sold out?

FSU Hoops

RIP.

Are we close to fixing college football for the better?

I have been saying that college football needed some major guardrails since the inception of the transfer portal and the NIL era. It finally looks like some action towards making that happen might be taken in the near future. I’m all for players getting paid, but guys going in and out of the transfer portal non-stop is a bit much.

I’ve always been a proponent of the one-time transfer rule(unless a player graduates or the head coach leaves for another job).

Now this looks too good to be true so it probably won’t happen. However, it would bring back some balance to college rosters and would make it closer to old times when you could watch a player develop within a program over 2-3 years. Hopefully, they can get the votes to pass this amendment.





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