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Kansas State University

MANHATTAN, Kan. – Kansas State bolstered its offensive line unit this week by signing transfers JB Nelson (Penn State) and Terrence Enos Jr. (Pittsburgh).   Both players have one year of eligibility remaining and are the first two transfers to sign with K-State during the spring window. They join a list of 12 other NCAA […]

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MANHATTAN, Kan. – Kansas State bolstered its offensive line unit this week by signing transfers JB Nelson (Penn State) and Terrence Enos Jr. (Pittsburgh).
 
Both players have one year of eligibility remaining and are the first two transfers to sign with K-State during the spring window. They join a list of 12 other NCAA Division I or II transfers who will play for the Wildcats this coming fall.
 
A product of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Nelson played in 31 games over three the last three season for the Nittany Lions, which included eight starts during the 2023 campaign in which he was an All-Big Ten Honorable Mention pick by both the league’s coaches and media. He saw time at both guard and tackle positions, totaling 776 offensive snaps during his time in Happy Valley and helping Penn State accumulate a 23-6 record the last two seasons. Last year, Nelson played in three College Football Playoff contests, a first-round victory over SMU, a win over Boise State in the Fiesta Bowl and against Notre Dame in the Orange Bowl.
 
As a starter in 2023, Nelson helped the Nittany Lions earn a No. 28 national ranking in rushing offense (184.8), while they ranked 19th in fewest sacks allowed per game (1.23) and 10th in fewest tackle for loss per game (3.92). Penn State also ranked in the top 20 in all three categories a year ago.
 
Nelson began his collegiate career by starting all 10 games of his freshman season at Lackawanna College in Scranton, Pennsylvania. He was the top-rated overall community-college prospect for the Class of 2022 by On3, while he ranked No. 2 by 247Sports and ESPN.
 
Enos Jr., who hails from Redford, Michigan, saw time in 27 games with five starts during the last three years at Pittsburgh. As a junior in 2024, Enos Jr. played in all 13 games with four starts at various positions as he earned starts at left tackle against Syracuse and SMU, left guard against Virginia and right tackle against Toledo in the GameAbove Sports Bowl. He totaled 383 total offensive snaps a year ago. In 2023, Enos Jr. saw action in nine games with a start at right tackle against Notre Dame.
 
Kansas State is coming off a 2024 season in which it went 9-4 and capped its season with a 17-point comeback victory over Rutgers in the Rate Bowl. The Wildcats have won at least nine games each of the last three seasons, one of only 10 Power 4 teams – and the only Big 12 program – to win at least nine games each of the last three seasons. They are also one of only five programs to accomplish that feat and claim a conference championship during that timeframe, joining Alabama, Clemson, Georgia and Oregon.
 
The Wildcats kick off the 2025 season by taking on Iowa State in the Aer Lingus College Football Classic, August 23, at Avivia Stadium in Dublin, Ireland.

 

– k-statesports.com –

 

How to follow the Cats: For complete information on K-State Football, visit www.kstatesports.com and follow the team’s social media channels on X (formerly Twitter), Instagram and Facebook.





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Tony Petitti releases statement on House v. NCAA settlement approval

On Friday, Judge Claudia Wilken approved the House v. NCAA settlement, which will allow colleges to directly pay athletes and usher in the era of revenue sharing. Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti released a statement regarding the monumental settlement. “We look forward to implementing this historic settlement designed to bring stability, integrity and competitive balance to […]

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On Friday, Judge Claudia Wilken approved the House v. NCAA settlement, which will allow colleges to directly pay athletes and usher in the era of revenue sharing. Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti released a statement regarding the monumental settlement.

“We look forward to implementing this historic settlement designed to bring stability, integrity and competitive balance to college athletics while increasing both scholarship and revenue opportunities for student athletes in all sports,” Petitti wrote.

Wilken’s approval finally came almost 59 months after the initial suit was filed. The long waiting period has given Power Four conferences such as the Big Ten to prepare for the paradigm shift.

Beginning July 1, schools will allowed to share $20.5 million with athletes, with football expected to receive 75%, followed by men’s basketball (15%), women’s basketball (5%) and the remainder of sports (5%). The amount shared in revenue will increase annually.

Power Four football programs will have roughly $13 to $16 million to spend on rosters for the 2025 season. Many schools have front-loaded contracts ahead of the settlement’s approval, taking advantage of contracts not being vetted by the newly formed NIL clearinghouse.

“Despite some compromises, the settlement agreement nevertheless will result in extraordinary relief for members of the settlement classes,” Wilken wrote in her 76-page final opinion. “If approved, it would permit levels and types of student-athlete compensation that have never been permitted in the history of college sports, while also very generously compensating Division I student-athletes who suffered past harms.”

To enforce this new era, the NCAA is creating the College Sports Commission. Major League Baseball executive Bryan Seeley will serve as the commission’s CEO, the commission announced late Friday.

“I am honored to serve as the first CEO of the College Sports Commission at this pivotal moment in the history of collegiate athletics,” Seeley said in a statement. “I look forward to implementing a system that prioritizes fairness, integrity, and opportunity, while preserving the values that make college sports unique. I am energized by the work ahead and excited to begin building out our team.”

While the near five-year waiting period from the time the lawsuit was filed to Wilken’s final approval gave institutions time to prepare for the changes ahead, there are still many unknowns. Notably, many have questioned how the NCAA will prevent teams from seeking state legislature that circumvents the new rules.

The College Sports Commission will address issues such as these. Only time will tell how Wilken’s historic ruling will ultimately affect college athletics.

On3’s Pete Nakos and Nick Schultz also contributed to this report.



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Judge Approves Landmark NCAA Settlement, Paving Way for Revenue Sharing

Judge Approves Landmark NCAA Settlement, Paving Way for Revenue Sharing originally appeared on Athlon Sports. A federal judge on Friday approved a historic settlement that will allow colleges to begin directly paying student-athletes, signaling the most significant shift in the history of college sports and effectively dismantling the amateurism model that defined the NCAA for […]

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Judge Approves Landmark NCAA Settlement, Paving Way for Revenue Sharing originally appeared on Athlon Sports.

A federal judge on Friday approved a historic settlement that will allow colleges to begin directly paying student-athletes, signaling the most significant shift in the history of college sports and effectively dismantling the amateurism model that defined the NCAA for more than a century.

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U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken, who has long presided over high-profile NCAA cases, gave final approval to the House v. NCAA settlement, nearly five years after Arizona State swimmer Grant House and others filed suit seeking to end restrictions on athlete compensation. Under the agreement, schools can distribute up to $20.5 million annually to athletes, beginning as soon as July 1. Additionally, $2.7 billion will be paid out over 10 years to thousands of former athletes.

The ruling completes the transition that began with Wilken’s earlier decisions, including her 2014 ruling in favor of Ed O’Bannon, and the NCAA’s 2021 decision to allow athletes to profit from their name, image and likeness. The new revenue-sharing model pushes even further, professionalizing college athletics and placing much of the power in the hands of the four major conferences.

While athletes in high-revenue sports like football and men’s basketball stand to benefit significantly with some reportedly landing NIL deals worth more than $10 million, the settlement could reduce opportunities for walk-ons and Olympic sport athletes. In response, Wilken mandated a process to allow athletes cut during early implementation to be reinstated.

Related: Kentucky Basketball Beats Cap Proposal With NIL Power Play

Key dates include the June 11 launch of the NIL Go portal, a June 15 opt-in deadline for non-defendant schools, and the start of revenue sharing on July 1. Schools must also comply with new roster limits by their sport’s season start or by Dec. 1 for winter and spring sports.

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Related: Michigan Running Back’s Groundbreaking NIL Deal Redefines College Football

Despite the sweeping changes, legal uncertainty remains. Varying state laws and the absence of a federal NIL framework leave room for future litigation. NCAA President Charlie Baker continues to push for national legislation and antitrust protection to stabilize the rapidly evolving landscape.

Still, attorneys behind the settlement argue it delivers what athletes have long deserved, which is a share of the billions their efforts generate from TV deals, merchandise, and championships. As the 2025–26 academic year begins, the college sports model will look unlike anything seen before.

This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 7, 2025, where it first appeared.



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How the new House settlement will impact Tennessee athletics with more NIL changes

College athletics continues to change in the NIL era. On Friday evening, Judge Claudia Wilken approved the House v. NCAA settlement. This decision will lead to revenue sharing and roster limits throughout college athletics.  College athletics will now have a salary cap of around $20 million. Football programs could have anywhere between $13 and $16 […]

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College athletics continues to change in the NIL era. On Friday evening, Judge Claudia Wilken approved the House v. NCAA settlement. This decision will lead to revenue sharing and roster limits throughout college athletics. 

College athletics will now have a salary cap of around $20 million. Football programs could have anywhere between $13 and $16 million to spend on their teams for the 2025 season. 

“Despite some compromises, the settlement agreement nevertheless will result in extraordinary relief for members of the settlement classes,” Judge Wilken shared. “If approved, it would permit levels and types of student-athlete compensation that have never been permitted in the history of college sports while also very generously compensating Division I student-athletes who suffered past harms.”

The settlement will also create a new NIL clearinghouse for third-party NIL deals of $600 or more. The new clearinghouse, “NIL Go,” must approve all contracts meeting that restriction.

If the NIL deal is not approved, the school could be fined, or the athlete could be ineligible for the upcoming season, creating massive implications for NIL contracts. 

It was reported that 70% of past NIL deals would have been denied under the new settlement and NIL guidelines, but 90% of deals with public companies would have been approved. 

Under the new settlement, roster limits will also be phased into college athletics. The proposed roster changes include 105 for football, 15 for men’s and women’s basketball, 34 for baseball, 28 for men’s and women’s soccer, 25 for softball, and 18 for volleyball. 

Paul Finebaum did not hold back from calling out the NCAA and its inability to govern college athletics, belittling the organization to just “tournament directors,” and he’s not wrong. 

“We’re still having tournaments, such as the Women’s World Series and the Men’s Baseball Tournament, but the NCAA, as we know it, is gone,” Finebaum said on Sportscenter. “They literally have no jurisdiction whatsoever other than to be tournament directors.”

The NCAA has lost virtually all control over member schools, allowing them to do almost anything they want. The NIL era is often referred to as the “Wild West,” and that is because the NCAA’s controlling power is diminishing more and more every day. 

How could the settlement affect Tennessee athletics?

The settlement and future outcomes could impact Tennessee athletics’ approach moving forward, including the possibility of being kicked out of the SEC if they comply with state law, which contradicts the NCAA. 

Membership contracts are currently being introduced throughout Power Four conferences, challenging Tennessee’s new state law stating that state institutions and their NIL collectives can continue to pay above the proposed salary cap. 

It also states that schools cannot sue the College Sports Commission, which will be the group enforcing the new rules under the House settlement. 

If Tennessee, or any other Power Four school, chooses not to sign the agreement, it could be kicked out of its conference and blackballed from joining other conferences. 

Tennessee Athletic Director Danny White seemed to be optimistic about the House settlement and its effectiveness in college athletics moving forward, but believes collective bargaining is the key to leveling the playing field across all sports.

“There’s been a lot of speculation around collective bargaining,” White shared. “Every sports organization in our country has collective bargaining for a reason. It’s very complicated. These are students. We don’t have just one sport. We have twenty and only two of which are profitable. It’s a really complicated situation that we have been deep in for 3-4 years. I think everyone is search for answers.

“There’s a lot to transpire to see how that plays out. But as you and I have discussed, I think collective bargaining is maybe where we land down the road. But in a competitive space like this, everyone’s trying to win.”

The House settlement decision isn’t the only major decision courts have to make regarding college athletics. There are also decisions waiting to be made regarding athletes’ eligibility, with the possibility of changing the original four years of eligibility to five years of eligibility. 

That could drastically change what college athletics looks like moving forward and could even help Tennessee, as Jordan Gainey and Zakai Zeigler have both expressed interest in returning to play one more season for Rick Barnes if it is passed. 

Tennessee could benefit from multiple sports from the results of the house settlement and potentially add a fifth year of eligibility for college athletes. 

The Vols want to continue being championship contenders across various sports, and the revenue sharing and NIL caps could help Tennessee compete with the blue bloods of college athletics moving forward.



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A $2.8 billion settlement will change college sports forever. Here’s how

Associated Press A federal judge has approved terms of a sprawling $2.8 billion antitrust settlement that will upend the way college sports have been run for more than a century. In short, schools can now directly pay players through licensing deals — a concept that goes against the foundation of amateurism that college sports was […]

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Associated Press

A federal judge has approved terms of a sprawling $2.8 billion antitrust settlement that will upend the way college sports have been run for more than a century. In short, schools can now directly pay players through licensing deals — a concept that goes against the foundation of amateurism that college sports was built upon.

Some questions and answers about this monumental change for college athletics:

Q: What is the House settlement and why does it matter?

A: Grant House is a former Arizona State swimmer who sued the defendants (the NCAA and the five biggest athletic conferences in the nation). His lawsuit and two others were combined and over several years the dispute wound up with the settlement that ends a decades-old prohibition on schools cutting checks directly to athletes. Now, each school will be able to make payments to athletes for use of their name, image and likeness (NIL). For reference, there are nearly 200,000 athletes and 350 schools in Division I alone and 500,000 and 1,100 schools across the entire NCAA.

Q: How much will the schools pay the athletes and where will the money come from?

A: In Year 1, each school can share up to about $20.5 million with their athletes, a number that represents 22% of their revenue from things like media rights, ticket sales and sponsorships. Alabama athletic director Greg Byrne famously told Congress “those are resources and revenues that don’t exist.” Some of the money will come via ever-growing TV rights packages, especially for the College Football Playoff. But some schools are increasing costs to fans through “talent fees,” concession price hikes and “athletic fees” added to tuition costs.

Q: What about scholarships? Wasn’t that like paying the athletes?

A: Scholarships and “cost of attendance” have always been part of the deal for many Division I athletes and there is certainly value to that, especially if athletes get their degree. The NCAA says its member schools hand out nearly $4 billion in athletic scholarships every year. But athletes have long argued that it was hardly enough to compensate them for the millions in revenue they helped produce for the schools, which went to a lot of places, including multimillion-dollar coaches’ salaries. They took those arguments to court and won.

Q: Haven’t players been getting paid for a while now?

A: Yes, since 2021. Facing losses in court and a growing number of state laws targeting its amateurism policies, the NCAA cleared the way for athletes to receive NIL money from third parties, including so-called donor-backed collectives that support various schools. Under House, the school can pay that money directly to athletes and the collectives are still in the game.

Q: But will $20.5 million cover all the costs for the athletes?

A: Probably not. But under terms of the settlement, third parties are still allowed to cut deals with the players. Some call it a workaround, but most simply view this as the new reality in college sports as schools fight to land top talent and then keep them on campus. Top quarterbacks are reportedly getting paid around $2 million a year, which would eat up about 10% of a typical school’s NIL budget for all its athletes.

Q: Are there any rules or is it a free-for-all?

A: The defendant conferences (ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, SEC and Pac-12) are creating an enforcement arm that is essentially taking over for the NCAA, which used to police recruiting violations and the like. Among this new entity’s biggest functions is to analyze third-party deals worth $600 or more to make sure they are paying players an appropriate “market value” for the services being provided. The so-called College Sports Commission promises to be quicker and more efficient than the NCAA. Schools are being asked to sign a contract saying they will abide by the rules of this new structure, even if it means going against laws passed in their individual states.

Q: What about players who played before NIL was allowed?

A: A key component of the settlement is the $2.7 billion in back pay going to athletes who competed between 2016-24 and were either fully or partially shut out from those payments under previous NCAA rules. That money will come from the NCAA and its conferences (but really from the schools, who will receive lower-than-normal payouts from things like March Madness).

Q: Who will get most of the money?

A: Because football and men’s basketball are the primary revenue drivers at most schools, and that money helps fund all the other sports, it stands to reason that the football and basketball players will get most of the money. But that is one of the most difficult calculations for the schools to make. There could be Title IX equity concerns as well.

Q: What about all the swimmers, gymnasts and other Olympic sports athletes?

A: The settlement calls for roster limits that will reduce the number of players on all teams while making all of those players — not just a portion — eligible for full scholarships. This figures to have an outsize impact on Olympic-sport athletes, whose scholarships cost as much as that of a football player but whose sports don’t produce revenue. There are concerns that the pipeline of college talent for Team USA will take a hit.

Q: So, once this is finished, all of college sports’ problems are solved, right?

A: The new enforcement arm seems ripe for litigation. There are also the issues of collective bargaining and whether athletes should flat-out be considered employees, a notion the NCAA and schools are generally not interested in, despite Tennessee athletic director Danny White’s suggestion that collective bargaining is a potential solution to a lot of headaches. NCAA President Charlie Baker has been pushing Congress for a limited antitrust exemption that would protect college sports from another series of lawsuits, but so far nothing has emerged from Capitol Hill.

___

AP college sports: https://apnews.com/hub/college-sports




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Texas Gov. Greg Abbott Signs New NIL Bill Into Law

Gov. Greg Abbott signed a bill into law on Thursday morning that will dramatically alter NIL regulations in the Lone Star State, and the Texas A&M Aggies best take notice. According to Nick Schultz of On3, HB126 will allow colleges to directly pay athletes, putting Texas in line with the recent House v. NCAA settlement. […]

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Texas Gov. Greg Abbott Signs New NIL Bill Into Law

Gov. Greg Abbott signed a bill into law on Thursday morning that will dramatically alter NIL regulations in the Lone Star State, and the Texas A&M Aggies best take notice.

According to Nick Schultz of On3, HB126 will allow colleges to directly pay athletes, putting Texas in line with the recent House v. NCAA settlement. It will also allow high school athletes age 17 or over to sign NIL deals, whereas only collegiate athletes could previously.

State Rep. Brandon Creighton sponsored the bill, with the state House and Senate both signing it on Sunday. The law is effective immediately following Abbott’s signing.

Texas A&M Aggies athletic director Trev Alberts looks on in the first half against the Houston Cougars.

Texas A&M Aggies athletic director Trev Alberts looks on in the first half against the Houston Cougars. / John David Mercer-Imagn Images

“Unless a prospective student-athlete younger than 17 years of age is enrolled at an institution of higher education, an individual, corporate entity, or other organization, including an institution to which this section applies, may not enter into an arrangement relating to the athlete’s name, image, or likeness with the athlete or with an individual related to the athlete by consanguinity or affinity,” the law states.

Under the House v. NCAA settlement, schools will be able to pay athletes up to $20.5 million starting in 2025-26, the first school year of a 10-year agreement. Schools will also be able to participate in revenue sharing.

Recently, Aggies head football coach Mike Elko shared his criticism of the House v. NCAA settlement, though he mostly took issue with the timing of the whole ordeal.

I couldn’t imagine an NFL team getting halfway through the offseason and deciding to change their salary cap rules,” Elko said. “That’s what I guess we’re doing.”

“What are the professional models, and what do they seem to look like? It certainly seems as though free agency happens once, not twice, and it happens right after the season before you start practicing. That seems to be the landscape for every single professional league across the world. So why we believe that that should not be how this works, it is hard to get your head wrapped around.”

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What the House vs NCAA settlement approval means for Michigan Athletics

The National College Athletic Association (NCAA) has been around since 1906. In its 119-year history, institutions have never directly paid athletes (legally). That has all now changed, as Judge Claudia Wilken approved the House settlement on Friday in the U.S. Northern District of California, 59 months after the initial class-action House vs NCAA suit was […]

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The National College Athletic Association (NCAA) has been around since 1906. In its 119-year history, institutions have never directly paid athletes (legally). That has all now changed, as Judge Claudia Wilken approved the House settlement on Friday in the U.S. Northern District of California, 59 months after the initial class-action House vs NCAA suit was filed.

The settlement arose out of three different lawsuits over the issue of compensation for collegiate athletes. More than 390,000 current and former college athletes acted as the plaintiffs in the suit, and the defendants were the NCAA and five athletic conferences.

After more than a year of negotiating, the saga finally comes to a close.

What exactly does the settlement do

Beginning July 1, schools will be able to share $20.5 million with athletes, with football expected to receive 75 percent of the share, followed by men’s basketball (15 percent), women’s basketball (five percent) and the remainder of sports (five percent). The amount shared in revenue will increase annually. This number will act as base pay for the athletes competing in Division I programs, earning money at the school’s discretion of how they want to split up the funds.

The second main thing regards back-pay for athletes who competed in collegiate sports dating back to 2016, but were unable to capitalize on their Name, Image and Likeness (NIL). Instead of facing $20 billion in back damages, “the NCAA and Power Five conferences signed off on a 10-year settlement agreement that includes $2.776 billion in back damages.”

The NCAA is responsible for paying $277 million annually over the next decade. It has been estimated that 60 percent will come from a reduction in distribution to institutions, and the NCAA is expected to come up with the other 40 percent, which will come through reducing operating expenses, according to On3.

The third issue was oversight. The NCAA is a self-disciplined machine. All suspensions, investigations of wrongdoing and eligibility hearings were done in-house. Judge Wilkins wanted to ensure the beast of revenue sharing had enough checks and balances, so she approved of an “NIL clearinghouse.”

Titled “NIL Go” and run through Deloitte, “all third-party NIL deals of $600 or more must be approved by the clearinghouse.” If not approved, the settlement says a new third-party arbiter could deem athletes ineligible or result in fines to the school. This could even the playing field by cutting out the fake deals or forcing college coaches to be more transparent, but it also could be the most controversial if that information is made public.

The final topic heavily debated surrounded roster limits. At the preliminary approval hearing on Oct. 7, 2024, the two sides agreed to increasing the number of scholarships each football team can distribute to 105 by next fall, but it would not allow for any walk-on spots or other non-scholarship players over the 105 limit. It worked similarly for other non-revenue sports increasing the number of scholarships given out, but reducing the overall roster size.

When Wilkens met with the attorneys from both sides to approve the settlement in April, she made them go back to the drawing board, pushing back strongly against roster limits and asking that roster spots be grandfathered in.

Under the new agreement, athletes who had their positions cut will be eligible for reinstatement at schools’ discretion. It also permits athletes who leave or are not kept by their current school to keep their grandfathered status at a new school. Proposed rosters include 105 spots for football, 15 for men’s and women’s basketball, 34 for baseball, 28 for men’s and women’s soccer, 25 for softball and 18 for volleyball. This will is effective at the start of the 2025-26 academic year.

“Despite some compromises, the settlement agreement nevertheless will result in extraordinary relief for members of the settlement classes,” Wilken wrote in her 76-page final opinion. “If approved, it would permit levels and types of student-athlete compensation that have never been permitted in the history of college sports, while also very generously compensating Division I student-athletes who suffered past harms.”

How does this impact Michigan

This is a massive win for University of Michigan athletes, but it is also a difference-maker in staying competitive for years to come. The university already has one of the largest budgets in college athletics and the second-largest alumni network in the country, and it has already generated more than $30 million in NIL funds, putting it in the top tier of college athletics.

Between flipping Bryce Underwood, landing the No. 1 ranked basketball transfer in Yaxel Landeborg, and having banner-hanging seasons in softball, men’s gymnastics and men’s basketball, the Wolverines are already at the top of the college athletics totem pole, and that should not change given the investments already made.

Michigan also has untapped areas of revenue it hopes to cash in this next academic year. Athletic Director Warde Manuel announced last fall that Michigan was looking into putting sponsorships and advertisements in the Big House, something Michigan has never done since Michigan Stadium was built in the 1920s. What was originally a survey has since been put into practice, and fans saw advertisements and videos played throughout the 2025 spring game. This untapped revenue space could generate $15-20 million next year alone, making up for the $20.5 million in revenue sharing the athletic department is expected to dish out.

Manuel also introduced alcohol sales to sporting events in 2024. After the Wolverines’ first full season since the state legalized in-stadium sales in 2023, the university reported a profit of $5 million in alcohol sales, including $4.6 million at football games alone. With such a successful year, you can expect even more of this moving forward.

Finally, Michigan’s Athletic Department has publicly supported revenue sharing for a while, and Manuel has even said they will not be cutting any varsity sports. That may not be the case at every school, and we could see major shake ups across college sports outside of Ann Arbor.

The bottom line is Michigan is prepared and equipped for the settlement. As previously stated, it creates a base pay for athletes in revenue-generating sports, but the NIL collectives will still serve as the sprinkles and whipped cream on top of the sundae for all college athletes. Champion Circle, Hail Impact, and Stadium and Main will not be going away, and neither will Michigan football general manager Sean Magee.

If you thought the introduction of NIL was a big change, just wait. This is the beginning of one of the biggest changes in American sports history, and we are witnessing it in real time.



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