NIL
Report: President Trump wading into NIL waters – Field Level Media – Professional sports content solutions
President Donald Trump has asked his aides to begin researching the creation of an executive order to better control the name, image and likeness landscape in college sports, The Wall Street Journal reported. His directive came after a meeting on Thursday with former Alabama football coach Nick Saban in Tuscaloosa, Ala., where Trump was the […]

President Donald Trump has asked his aides to begin researching the creation of an executive order to better control the name, image and likeness landscape in college sports, The Wall Street Journal reported.
His directive came after a meeting on Thursday with former Alabama football coach Nick Saban in Tuscaloosa, Ala., where Trump was the school’s commencement speaker.
Since 2021, and under pressure from states and the courts, the NCAA has allowed student-athletes to profit from their name, image or likeness. It is too early to know what a Trump executive order would entail.
Saban has been critical of the NIL funding in the past, largely because he was concerned about the effect on college football. The NIL era also has brought a rise to the transfer portal era, with thousands of students across all sports seeking to move schools — some of them for bigger paydays.
“Each year, it’s gotten a little worse,” Saban said last December on “The Pat McAfee Show” on ESPN. “The first year we had name, image and likeness four, five years ago, we had a $3 million [roster], and everybody was happy. Then the next year it was $7 million, then the next year it’s $10 million. Then this year it’s $13 million. Now they’re looking at $20 million. I mean, where does it end?”
A Houston Chronicle report earlier this week projected the Texas Longhorns would have a budget of $35 million to $40 million for its 2025 football roster.
Per The Wall Streeet Journal report, published Friday, Saban told the president that he wasn’t trying to put an end to NIL funding for players, but instead wanted to see the creation of a more level playing field between the schools with deep pockets and those that didn’t have as much money available.
Trump also has discussed NIL funding with Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.), the former head football coach at Auburn.
Saban has previously said the current model is unsustainable for college sports, and Trump apparently agreed.
The NCAA declined to comment to The Wall Street Journal on a potential executive order.
–Field Level Media
NIL
Zac Selmon addresses why Mississippi State invests NIL, resources in baseball
Mississippi State Athletic Director Zac Selmon made a splash earlier this month when he poached National Championship winning coach Brian O’Connor from Virginia to replace Chris Lemonis, who was fired mid-season. During O’Connor’s time with the Cavaliers, he led the program to an 885-370-2 (362-234-1) overall record. In that time, he was named ACC Coach […]

Mississippi State Athletic Director Zac Selmon made a splash earlier this month when he poached National Championship winning coach Brian O’Connor from Virginia to replace Chris Lemonis, who was fired mid-season.
During O’Connor’s time with the Cavaliers, he led the program to an 885-370-2 (362-234-1) overall record. In that time, he was named ACC Coach of the Year five times, helped the Cavaliers to two ACC titles, made seven total trips to the Men’s College World Series and won a National Championship in 2015.
After winning the National Championship in 2021, Mississippi State posted just a 129-102 (50-70) record over the next four seasons. In that span, the Bulldogs made two NCAA Tournaments but failed to advance to a Super Regional.
Selmon explained why this was unacceptable and why they’ve spent the resources to completely rebuild the Mississippi State baseball program (from the players to the staff) this offseason. Simply put, they want to get back to Omaha.
Selmon wants to dog-pile in Omaha
“It’s important because of the players we’ve had here,” Selmon said. “Throughout this process, I’ve heard from so many great players. It’s household names that you grew up listening to or knowing who they were. I’m blessed to have coach [Ron] Polk here everyday. To get to be around people like that, you start to know what the expectation is. You can’t do anything now unless you put resources behind it. So much of our business has changed and we’ve had some unbelievable supporters that have stepped up throughout this entire year and specifically throughout this week because they want to be a part of it.”
Dudy Noble Field, which opened in 1967, is often regarded as one of the best stadiums in all of college baseball. It set its record attendance of 16,423 fans back in 2023, showing how massive fan support for baseball is at the university.
“Our job is to make sure we put our programs in a position to be successful, and we can’t do it in this era without a lot of support,” Selmon said. “For us, we’re committed to making sure we put our coaching staff in a position to where we fast forward 20 years from now, we see letter-winners come back and say ‘man, do you remember that time we dog-piled in Omaha?”
“It starts with the investment we made today, and clearly it’s something we know it’s going to be so good for not only our athletics department, but our entire institution and the state of Mississippi. That’s something we’re really excited about.”
NIL
UofL vs Miami super regional schedule
Louisville baseball coach, players on super regional win vs. Miami Louisville baseball beat Miami 8-1 in the NCAA Super Regional Friday. The Cardinals are one win away from going to the College World Series in Omaha. The ACC will have at least one team in the 2025 College World Series bracket with Louisville baseball hosting […]

Louisville baseball coach, players on super regional win vs. Miami
Louisville baseball beat Miami 8-1 in the NCAA Super Regional Friday. The Cardinals are one win away from going to the College World Series in Omaha.
- The ACC will have at least one team in the 2025 College World Series bracket with Louisville baseball hosting Miami in NCAA Tournament super regionals.
- Louisville routed Miami 8-1 in Game 1 at Jim Patterson Stadium on Friday thanks to impressive pitching by righty Patrick Forbes and clutch hitting by Jake Munroe. The Hurricanes won Game 2.
Coverage from the game:
Louisville baseball still win away from College World Series after falling short vs. Miami
Coverage during the game:
The ACC will have at least one team in the 2025 College World Series bracket. Louisville baseball and Miami are set to play in Game 2 of the NCAA Tournament super regionals at 11 a.m. today. Both teams have experience playing in Omaha, though Louisville has been most recently.
The Cardinals routed Miami 8-1 Friday on a rainy evening at Jim Patterson Stadium thanks to impressive pitching by righty Patrick Forbes and clutch hitting by Jake Munroe.
Miami’s last trip to the CWS was in 2016, and U of L went three years later. So, which one will return to Omaha this year?
Stay tuned below for updates throughout the second game of the Louisville vs. Miami super regional series.
Stream Louisville baseball vs. Miami (free trial)
The Cards’ rally fell short, after bringing the tying run to the plate with no outs.
1 run, 2 hits, 0 errors, 2 LOB
Miami’s Daniel Cuvet hit his 18th homer on the season with a three-run shot off Starke.
3 runs, 3 hits, 0 errors, 0 LOB
The Canes brought their closer Brian Walters, who has 10 saves this season, and he got the Cards out in order.
0 runs, 0 hits, 0 errors, 0 LOB
Dorian Gonzalez hit a lead-off double and was brought home by a Renzo Gonzalez single.
1 run, 2 hits, 0 errors, 1 LOB
The Cards brought in left hander Ty Starke to relieve Jack Brown, who faced five batters in 1.1 innings. Starke will face Renzo Gonzalez with a runner on third and one out.
Just when it seemed the Cards bats had cooled off, Eddie King Jr., belted his second homer of the game to tie the score.
1 run, 1 hit, 0 errors, 0 LOB
The Cardinals turn a 5-4-3 double play to eliminate the Hurricanes’ scoring opportunity.
0 runs, 1 hit, 0 errors, 0 LOB
Jack Brown will start the sixth inning on the hill for the Cardinals. Wyatt Danilowicz ends his day with a strikeout and walk without giving up a hit over 1 1/3 innings.
The Hurricanes retire the side to preserve their one-run lead.
0 runs, 0 hits, 0 errors, 0 LOB
After walking one batter and hitting another, Wyatt Danilowicz made the final two plays to end the inning.
0 runs, 0 hits, 0 errors, 2 LOB
Eddie King, Jr. and Garret Pike are left stranded after Carson Fischer struck out the final two batters.
0 runs, 0 hits, 0 errors, 2 LOB
Jake Ogden’s two-out, three-run home run helped the Hurricanes regain the lead.
4 runs, 4 hits, 1 error, 2 LOB
Tucker Biven’s day ends with him allowing five runs, one earned, on seven hits with a strikeout and two walks in 3 2/3 innings. Wyatt Danilowicz will now enter the game for the Cardinals
With the bases loaded and two out, Kamau Neighbors got caught stealing to end the inning.
0 runs, 2 hits, 0 errors, 2 LOB
Evans threw 2/3 of an inning, allowing a hit while plunking a batter, and is replaced by Carson Fischer.
After giving up a leadoff home run to Jake Munroe and a single to Tague Davis in the top of the fourth inning, Griffin Hugus is replaced on the mound by Rob Evans. Hugus ended the day allowing four earned runs on five hits with one strikeout and two walks in three-plus innings on the mound.
The Cardinals preserve their lead with a 1-2-3 inning.
0 runs, 0 hits, 0 errors, 0 LOB
Eddie King, Jr.’s two-run home run to left-centerfield highlighted the Cardinals’ three-run inning.
3 runs, 2 hits, 0 errors, 0 LOB
The Hurricanes strike first with Michael Torres’ two-out RBI base hit.
1 run, 2 hits, 0 errors, 2 LOB
Eddie King, Jr. and Tague Davis were left stranded at the corners after Griffin Hugus struck out Kamau Neighbors.
0 runs, 1 hit, 0 errors, 2 LOB
Jake Ogden is left stranded after hitting a leadoff double as the Cardinals retired the next three batters.
0 runs, 0 hits, 0 errors, 0 LOB
Matt Klein reached base after getting hit with a pitch, but a Hurricanes double play ended the inning.
0 runs, 0 hits, 0 errors, 0 LOB
Tucker Biven will get the start for the Cardinals with a trip to Omaha on the line. The right-handed pitcher is 3-0 on the season with 31 strikeouts over 35 innings and 20 appearances with four starts.
- Date: Saturday, June 7
- Time: 11 a.m. ET
- Where: Jim Patterson Stadium
Louisville baseball’s Dan McDonnell on pitcher Patrick Forbes’ talent
Louisville baseball coach Dan McDonnell explains what makes pitcher Patrick Forbes a great athlete and Forbes’ future at the professional level.
Here is the latest college baseball schedule and NCAA Tournament bracket update.
Reach Louisville football, women’s basketball and baseball beat writer Alexis Cubit at acubit@gannett.com and follow her on X at @Alexis_Cubit.
NIL
5 former College Football stars deserve the most back pay from the NCAA settlement
On Friday Night, College Football changed forever as Judge Claudia Wilken signed off approving the settlement in the landmark House Vs NCAA case. The case brings about wholesale changes to College Athletics like we know it as revenue sharing, roster limits, NIL regulations, and a ton of new aspects are brought to the sport. As […]

On Friday Night, College Football changed forever as Judge Claudia Wilken signed off approving the settlement in the landmark House Vs NCAA case. The case brings about wholesale changes to College Athletics like we know it as revenue sharing, roster limits, NIL regulations, and a ton of new aspects are brought to the sport.
As part of the settlement, the NCAA also agreed to back pay former athletes $2.8 billion over the next ten years. The athletes that will receive the funds had to of played since 2016 through current day. It seems more fair that the players prior to 2020 who weren’t in this modern era should get the lions share of the funding.
Based on star power, potential earnings they missed out on, and their impact to the game, 5 former College Football stars deserve the backpay more than anyone else.
Part of the reason that many of the athletes feel they missed out on NIL is the fact that they emerged as stars as true freshmen before putting together great careers as a whole. DeVonta Smith perfectly fits the bill as he played sparingly as a Freshman before catching the National Championship game winner against Georgia.
From that moment on, DeVonta Smith and Tua Tagovailoa would’ve been NIL stars with their entire careers ahead of them. Instead, DeVonta Smith’s Sophomore and Junior seasons were among some of the best in the Country in a star-studded Alabama offense.
If Devonta Smith wasn’t earning a ton by his Senior season, it would’ve been more than enough for him to earn massive NIL deals. Winning the Heisman Trophy and a National Championship as a Senior would’ve made Smith one of the most sought after players in recent history.
Like DeVonta Smith, Tua Tagovailoa’s burst onto the scene in the National Championship Game would’ve been a great moment to launch him into superstardom. Over the next two seasons, Tagovailoa was the engine of the most explosive offenses of Nick Saban’s time in Tuscaloosa which would’ve made him an attractive option for companies spending NIL money. Luckily in Tua’s case an d for some others on this list, it’s tough to feel too bad seeing the NFL contracts for quarterbacks.
The NIL backpay dating back to 2016 puts Lamar Jackson solely in the conversation as one of the athletes that could’ve cashed in. After winning the Heisman Trophy in 2016, Lamar Jackson would’ve had a whole season to cash in on the fact that he had just won the Heisman Trophy. In a State where we’re seeing athletes cash in with big deals in basketball, Jackson would’ve gotten a massive NIL deal simply not to transfer elsewhere.
Joe Burrow’s case is a little more difficult to make just because of when in his career he became a superstar. When Joe Burrow fully became a household name he was in the midst of his Senior season which means he truly missed out on half of a season earning NIL deals. Based on how popular the team became that season, Joe Burrow likely would’ve made himself a ton of money after that Alabama game.
During his tenure in College Football, there wasn’t a more electric player to watch than Baker Mayfield. He first showed up on the scene as a walk on at Texas Tech starting the team’s season opener but, left after one season. When Mayfield arrived at Oklahoma he took over the College Football world, winning the Heisman Trophy in 2017 while finishing in the Final 4 every season at Oklahoma.
When Mayfield got to the NFL, he quickly became the pitch man for several companies with commercials during almost every commercial break. Given that Baker Mayfield was the most polarizing player in the sport, he would’ve gotten some massive NIL deals during his time.
More College Football News:
NIL
Roster limits, revenue sharing and new NIL rules are announced by NCAA
The NCAA makes changes to its roster limits, NIL guidelines and revenue sharing with players On Friday night, the NCAA got news that its hearing in the House vs. NCAA suit had been resolved, with a significant amount of changes heading across college sports as On3 reports. It detailed the biggest change was revenue sharing […]

The NCAA makes changes to its roster limits, NIL guidelines and revenue sharing with players
On Friday night, the NCAA got news that its hearing in the House vs. NCAA suit had been resolved, with a significant amount of changes heading across college sports as On3 reports.
It detailed the biggest change was revenue sharing with the players, sharing up to $20.5 million, with football most likely getting 75% of the cut, and men’s basketball next at 15%. Women’s basketball will get around 5% and the rest will be split with the other sports.
As for program spending, each major school will have around $14 million this coming season. It will be very interesting to see how this is handled across the nation. There is some backpay that the NCAA will have to make as well, a whopping $2.776 billion over the next 10-years as the report states.
As for Name, Image and Likeness, any deal worth more than $600 has to go through the clearinghouse, and if rejected that school and athlete could face ineligibility or the university a fine. On3 mentioned that “Deloitte officials reportedly shared that 70% of past deals from NIL collectives would have been denied,” so big changes are coming with how the players get compensated.
Not only that On3 says that roster limits will be imposed, with football being allowed 105 members, basketball rosters at 15, soccer having 28, softball at 25 and volleyball at 18. Notre Dame football head coach Marcus Freeman has prepared for this, as surely the rest of the program’s have done the same in South Bend.
It will definitely change the path of college sports, and we will see if this is the right decision.
NIL
House v. NCAA settlement quells issues in college sports? No, but be prepared for a whole …
Judge Claudia Wilken approved the House v. NCAA settlement late Friday, ending three federal lawsuits that alleged the NCAA was illegally limiting the earning power of student-athletes in college. CBS Sports’ John Talty has a nice piece on it. My favorite line is his last. “There’s never been a better time to be a lawyer […]

Judge Claudia Wilken approved the House v. NCAA settlement late Friday, ending three federal lawsuits that alleged the NCAA was illegally limiting the earning power of student-athletes in college. CBS Sports’ John Talty has a nice piece on it. My favorite line is his last.
“There’s never been a better time to be a lawyer with an interest in college sports.”
Yeah, that’s where this is headed.
What happened Friday in California is significant, no doubt. But anybody describing it as a solution to the issues ailing college athletics simply lacks an understanding of the history of NCAA sports and exactly what will and won’t be allowed moving forward.
The end of chaos?
Nah.
It’ll just be a different kind of chaos that leads to more legal threats and billable hours than you can wrap your mind around. Plus, high-level cheating will return. Oh, we’re back baby! Illegal cash-deals are on tap.
The biggest winners and losers from House v. NCAA settlement: Amateurism is dead and the class divide grows
John Talty
Before I explain why, let’s go over the basics.
This settlement will allow schools to start directly paying athletes — for the first time ever — next month with an expected salary cap of roughly $20.5 million. That’s $20.5 million for all sports to be distributed however each school sees fit. Additionally, all future NIL deals between boosters/collectives and athletes will be vetted by a new entity designed to ensure they’re for valid business purposes and not merely the kind of recruiting incentives that have been flying around the country in recent years.
That paragraph is littered with problems.
Let’s start with the salary cap. Simply put, it won’t work as intended.
As Matt Norlander and I have discussed many times on the Eye On College Basketball Podcast, the most obvious problem with a salary cap for entire athletic departments is that all athletic departments don’t have football rosters to purchase. In other words, at a place like Alabama, the school is expected to devote the majority of that $20.5 million to football, leaving relatively little for other sports, most notably men’s basketball. Meantime, at a place like St. John’s, where there is no football, most of that $20.5 million could be spent however Hall of Fame basketball coach Rick Pitino sees fit.
Now, let’s be real.
Do you actually think a SEC school with millions tied up in football is going to concede a recruiting battle in basketball to a Big East program sans football because, you know, the money just isn’t in the budget, according to the rules? LOL. When it comes to that, not all basketball staffs, but certainly lots, will simply do what they’ve always done, i.e., find a way to get the player even if it requires circumventing the rules.
Again, this weekend, cheating returned to college sports.
It’s inevitable.
Every Power Four conference features a coach who has violated one recruiting rule or another. If you think they won’t do it again, if required, you’re silly. And now every time a player picks a school with little known-money left in the budget over a school that’s reportedly offering much more, fans on the wrong end of the commitment will assume something happened in violation of the rules and scream for an investigation.
We lived that life for decades. Who really wanted that again?
And don’t even get me started on the document Power Four conferences are circulating that’s intended to force schools to play by the rules or face serious consequences. Among other things, schools are being asked to forfeit their right to legally challenge the new enforcement entity on any and all decisions. Reportedly, schools that refuse to sign the document could face expulsion from their conferences.
Please.
All it will take for this goofy idea to fail is one powerful school — like, say, Texas or Ohio State — declining to sign it, at which point other schools will say, “If they’re not signing it, we’re not signing it.”
Then what?
Do you really think the SEC is going to expel Texas? Do you really think the Big Ten is going to expel Ohio State? Do you really think the television networks paying billions to those conferences would allow it?
Please.
Now, to NIL.
According to the settlement, a new thing called the NIL Go clearinghouse will be charged with approving future NIL deals to ensure they are within a “reasonable range of compensation based on multiple factors.”
I look forward to the word “reasonable” appearing in court.
Don’t ever forget how we got here — specifically by the NCAA being sued repeatedly for illegally limiting the earning power of student-athletes. So what do you think is going to happen when a school with serious softball ambitions like Texas Tech offers a NIL deal worth more than a million dollars to the next NiJaree Canaday? Let me tell you. NIL Go will likely deem the deal “unreasonable” for obvious reasons and void it. Then everybody will be back in court based on the idea that, once again, a student-athlete’s earning power is being illegally limited.
Rinse and repeat.
Last month, NIL Go officials told ACC administrators that more than 70% of current NIL deals with booster collectives would have been denied according to the new rules. That suggests NIL Go will frequently be in the business of telling student-athletes they cannot take what somebody is willing to give them, and not every student-athlete will accept that decision without pursuing legal action.
The end of chaos?
Hahaha. No way!
Trust me when I tell you, this is only the beginning. Because when a solution to a problem just creates more problems, you’re not really fixing anything as much as you’re simply trading in one set of issues for a new set of issues that will have to be addressed again, sooner or later. Like Talty wrote, congrats to the attorneys. They’re the real winners here, as always.
NIL
5 House settlement changes college fans will notice immediately
NCAA Division I Board of Directors has taken action to approve rules changes that — if the proposed House-NCAA settlement is approved — will align the D-1 rule book with terms of the settlement. pic.twitter.com/5jHvVu1UVA — Steve Berkowitz (@ByBerkowitz) April 21, 2025 It’s a new dawn in the world of college athletics. On Friday night […]

It’s a new dawn in the world of college athletics. On Friday night the long-awaited $2.8 billion House settlement was approved, officially ushering in an era where schools can directly pay players.
Immediately after the landmark agreement, a number of new entities and executives emerged to lead college sports into the future. While this is all expected to play out in the coming months and years, there is already A LOT of moving pieces.
GAME THE SYSTEM: 5 petty ways fans can weaponize EA Sports usage payouts in College Football 26
You can read all about what’s included in the settlement here, but if you’re looking for a quick breakdown of some of the more immediate changes, we’ve got you covered.
Here are the people, terms and regulations you need to know about.
The College Sports Commission
Say goodbye to the NCAA’s wildly unpopular enforcement and penalty process, and say hello to its replacement: the newly-created College Sports Commission. You’re going to be hearing about it a lot when it officially begins operations on July 1, 2025.
Here’s what the new oversight authority will be in charge of policing, per USA TODAY’s Steve Berkowitz:
Rules-making.
Managing the NIL Go system, an electronic system that athletes will be required to use to report the details of their NIL deals with entities other than their schools.
Figuring out how to determine the legitimacy of those deals, and how to deal with appeals by athletes, who — under the settlement — can seek arbitration if they want to challenge a determination that a deal is not legitimate relative to having a “valid business purpose” and being within “a reasonable range of compensation.”
Forming a new regulatory and enforcement entity that will be led newly named chief executive officer Bryan Seeley. According to the announcement of his hiring on June 6, Seeley “will build out the organization’s investigative and enforcement teams and oversee all of its ongoing operations and stakeholder relationships. … Seeley and his team will also be responsible for enforcement of the new rules around revenue sharing, student-athlete third-party name image and likeness (NIL) deals, and roster limits. The Commission will investigate potential rules violations, make factual determinations, issue penalties where appropriate, and participate in the neutral arbitration process set forth in the settlement as necessary.”
Speaking of enforcement, the CSC is expected to resolve any investigations within 45 days — a major shift from the long, drawn out NCAA investigations fans have come to expect. The CSC’s CEO can be the judge, jury and executioner here with the ability to impose fines and penalties.
College Sports Commission CEO Bryan Seeley
For all intents and purposes, Seeley is the new top dog when it comes to college sports compliance. He was hired by the four power conference commissioners (ACC’s Jim Phillips, Big Ten’s Tony Petitti, Big 12’s Brett Yormark and SEC’s Greg Sankey).
So here’s the skinny, per ESPN’s Jeff Passan and Pete Thamel:
Seeley is MLB’s executive vice president, legal & operations, and he brings investigative experience, which will be key in this role. In the post-settlement era, the NCAA will no longer be in charge of the enforcement of most rules. (It will still maintain purview over things like academics, but it will not patrol benefits.)
The CSC is the new era’s enforcement arm that will have final say in doling out punishments and deciding when rules have been broken. It’s one of the most important roles in this new era, as the industry has been craving some type of guidance since the advent of name, imagine and likeness has made the descriptor “wild, wild west” a common one in regard to the generally unregulated college sports industry.
In a formal announcement, Seeley’s job is described as having to “build out the organization’s investigative and enforcement teams and oversee all of its ongoing operations and stakeholder relationships.” Per the release: “Seeley and his team will also be responsible for enforcement of the new rules around revenue sharing, student-athlete third-party name image and likeness (NIL) deals, and roster limits.”
Some more quick facts about Seeley:
- 42 years old
- Joined MLB as Vice President, Investigations & Deputy General Counsel in 2014
- Served as Assistant U.S. Attorney in Washington D.C. from 2006-2014, prosecuting white-collar crimes, fraud and corruption
- Attended Princeton University and Harvard Law School
NIL GO
No, this is not the latest streaming service. It’s a clearinghouse established by Deloitte to handle number-crunching and maintain compliance between schools, athletes and third parties. It will also fall under the CSC’s purview.
Per ESPN’s Pete Thamel and Jeff Passan:
LBi Software and accounting firm Deloitte have been lined up to handle salary cap management and to manage the clearinghouse for NIL. Those NIL deals will be outside of the revenue share directly from schools, and how they are approved has been the focus of much conversation around college sports.
The clearinghouse that Deloitte has established will be known as NIL Go, which will be used to verify whether deals between athletes and boosters or associated entities are for a valid business purpose rather than a recruiting incentive.
Whether or not a school opts in to provide NIL payments to athletes, any Division I athletes who signs an NIL deal worth $600 or more will have to go through NIL GO.
Salary Cap And Roster Limits
Yep, it’s happening in college sports.
Schools will start with a $20.5 million cap that’s set to increase by four percent annually, with a notable caveat, per Berkowitz:
In Years 4, 7 and 10, new baselines would be established based on the defined set of Power Five athletics department revenues. However, under certain circumstances connected to the timing and value of media rights contracts, the plaintiffs’ lawyers have two options during the 10-year settlement period to have new baselines set more quickly.
The settlement was temporarily help up in court by the issue of roster limits, as programs already began cutting walk-ons and other players in anticipation of the salary cap. That was resolved through a “grandfathering” agreement that will delay some roster limits if players were already promised a spot.
Per CBS Sports:
[U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken] asked attorneys to craft a plan to allow current players to be “grandfathered in” with the new roster limits. The NCAA, power conferences and the plaintiffs in the lawsuit instead offered a compromise: schools have the option to keep current players on their rosters and temporarily exceed new limits until their eligibility expires.
The new roster limits were expected to lead to the cutting of nearly 5,000 athletes from teams across the NCAA’s 43 sponsored sports. Some sports will increase roster limits compared to previous years, but many will be trimmed despite offering unlimited scholarships within those new thresholds. Football rosters will shrink to 105 players, resulting in schools cutting more than 20 players, though most schools are expected to exceed those limits by grandfathering in current athletes.
March 1 Deadline For Non-Power 5 Schools
The start of March has now become one of the most crucial days on the sports calendar as non-Power 5 schools will have to declare by then whether or not they are opting into revenue sharing for the following academic year.
Per the CSC:
All current members of the ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12 and SEC are participating in the new revenue sharing model overseen by the College Sports Commission. Division I schools from other conferences can choose to “opt in” to revenue sharing and must formally do so by June 15, 2025, at which point a full list of participating schools will be made public.
Each year, schools outside of the ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12 and SEC will have the option to opt in to or out of revenue sharing. These schools must notify the NCAA if they will opt in to (or opt out of) revenue sharing for the upcoming academic year by March 1 of each year. In order to opt out, an institution must have fulfilled any relevant obligations to student-athletes and all revenue sharing – or incremental increases in scholarship – must cease.
It is important to note that regardless of whether an institution opts in to revenue sharing, all Division I student-athletes will be subject to the new rules and requirements around third-party NIL deals.
This is a whole new world of college athletics and there’s a lot to process here. We’ll continue to break down all the developments over the coming months (and years).
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