Nick Saban to co-chair President Trump’s planned commission on college athletics: Sources
Former Alabama head coach Nick Saban and Texas Tech board of regents chairman Cody Campbell would co-chair the commission President Donald Trump is interested in forming to examine the long list of issues facing college sports, a source briefed on the plans told The Athletic. The source said Trump is expected to be “very engaged” with […]
Former Alabama head coach Nick Saban and Texas Tech board of regents chairman Cody Campbell would co-chair the commission President Donald Trump is interested in forming to examine the long list of issues facing college sports, a source briefed on the plans told The Athletic.
The source said Trump is expected to be “very engaged” with the commission because he sees the current state of college sports as an issue of national importance.
The New York Times and Wall Street Journal reported Trump was interested in weighing in with an executive order after the president spoke last week with Saban, who has expressed concern that college sports is being harmed by the big money pouring into it to compensate athletes with little regulation. Yahoo Sports first reported Wednesday that Trump is planning to create a presidential commission to examine a long list of issues facing college sports, from booster-funded payments and transfer rules to conference alignment and Title IX.
Campbell, who was elected chairman of the Texas Tech board of regents last month, is a former Red Raiders football player and one of the university’s most prominent donors. He is the co-founder and co-executive of Double Eagle Energy Holdings, an upstream oil and gas company based out of Fort Worth, Texas, which operates extensively in the Permian Basin region of West Texas. Campbell is also the co-founder of the Matador Club, an NIL collective that supports Texas Tech athletics, and he recently spearheaded the new $242 million south endzone project at Tech’s Jones AT&T Stadium, which overlooks Cody Campbell Field.
In February, Double Eagle sold a development for $4.1 billion, and in 2021, the company sold a previous development for $6.4 billion. Last month, Double Eagle announced a continued and expanded partnership with EnCap Investments, a prominent private equity company that specializes in the oil and gas industry. Campbell is a board member of Texas Public Policy Foundation and a distinguished fellow at the America First Policy Institute, the latter which has been integral to President Trump’s second-term policy agenda.
A presidential commission would typically dig into various aspects of an issue or enterprise and deliver a report suggesting possible solutions that could involve executive and legislative action. Earlier this month, Trump signed an executive order creating the Religious Liberty Commission.
A spokeswoman for Rep. Michael Baumgartner, a freshman Republican from Washington who recently put forth an expansive bill to reform college sports, said he welcomed Trump’s involvement.
“College sports is a highly subsidized public good and should be regulated like the public good it is. A presidential commission offers the chance to bring fiscal sanity; restore regional conferences and competitive balance; and protect the future of non-revenue and Olympic sports,” the spokeswoman said in a statement to The Athletic.
It’s unclear how a commission would impact the current developments in college sports, including a potential landmark agreement to settle a trio of antitrust lawsuits facing the NCAA and major conferences and establish for the first time a system of direct payments from schools to athletes.
The settlement awaits final approval from a federal judge, who ordered the defendants to tweak part of the agreement that sets new roster limits for NCAA Division I schools that opt into the deal.
The latest revised filing has been made in the House v. NCAA settlement, regarding roster limits.
Any athlete who has been or would have been cut as a result of the settlement can be “grandfathered in,” meaning they will not count against the new roster limits for the duration… pic.twitter.com/Wco5hLoVyt
College sports leaders and attorneys for the defendants remain confident the judge will sign off on the deal.
Even if the settlement is approved, college sports leaders have acknowledged that it will need the backing of federal legislation, which they have been, for years, lobbying Congress for.
Tom McMillen, the former Democratic congressman who for several years led an association of athletic directors whose schools compete at the highest level of Division I, praised Trump for getting involved.
“I give President Trump a lot of credit. This is a time to bring the best minds in college sports together, in higher education, and figure a model out,” said McMillen, who has known Trump for more than 50 years.
“He’s always had a big interest in sports. It really fits his kind of whole M.O.”
Applauding @POTUS Trump for considering a presidential commission on college sports—something I first called for 11 years ago. The conversation is long overdue. https://t.co/7W7ZyFdpFE https://t.co/EsKuyM0Ssy
McMillen first called for a presidential commission on college sports more than a decade ago. He said that while there has been some progress toward a bipartisan bill in Congress, with Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) leading the efforts, presidential leadership could help prioritize the issue for Congress.
“I’ve always said you’re going to need a presidential push to get something done,” said McMillen, who was a star basketball player at Maryland, a longtime NBA player and member of the 1972 Olympic team.
He also recalled how a commission on Olympic Sports that was formed by President Gerald Ford in 1975 led to the Amateur Sports Act of 1978 and substantive reform that boosted the United States’ performance in subsequent games.
A commission on college sports could help lead to long-term reform without interrupting what is already in motion, McMillen said.
“Not gonna be overnight, but it could be very, very symbolic and very significant for higher ed and college sports, and for America,” McMillen said.
— Chris Vannini, Justin Williams and Sam Khan Jr. contributed to this story.
How Big 12, other local administrators reacted to Friday’s House settlement approval
SALT LAKE CITY — Count Brett Yormark in favor of the settlement approval of the House v. NCAA lawsuit that U.S. Judge Claudia Wilken issued late Friday night. He’s not alone, either. The court filing that approved the $2.8 billion settlement of a number of lawsuits — all coalesced into the one led by former […]
SALT LAKE CITY — Count Brett Yormark in favor of the settlement approval of the House v. NCAA lawsuit that U.S. Judge Claudia Wilken issued late Friday night.
He’s not alone, either.
The court filing that approved the $2.8 billion settlement of a number of lawsuits — all coalesced into the one led by former Arizona State swimmer Grant House five years ago — was approved late Friday night as word of the filing came down shortly after 7 p.m.
The decision, which was not unexpected in many ways except for its timing, paves the way for universities to share up to $20.5 million in revenue with athletes over the next year and provides backpay of $2.7 billion paid to former players over the next decade who have were barred from taking advantage of current name, image and likeness legislation.
It didn’t take long for NCAA lawmakers and officials to laud the effort, with NCAA President Charlie Baker immediately saying the deal “opens a pathway to begin stabilizing college sports.”
Count Brett Yormark among the believers, as well.
The Big 12 commissioner released a statement Friday evening on the league’s social media calling the settlement the start of a “new era of college athletics.”
“As we enter the new era of college athletics, it is crucial we do so with structure, transparency, and the success of student-athletes in mind — this settlement and new model will ensure that happens,” he said. “I look forward to working alongside my colleagues to implement t his new system that prioritizes fairness and opportunity for all student-athletes and institutions.”
The NCAA launched a website with some of its lauded changes as a result of the settlement, including:
Up to $20 million in direct financial benefits from schools annually (in addition to what it calls $4 billion in scholarships each year)
Guaranteed scholarships at the Division I level
Elevated heath and well-being services, including medical insurance for injuries and out-of-pocket copayments and deductibles not covered by insurance
Access to funds to finish a college degree for up to 10 years after leaving the university
Post-collegiate eligibility insurance
The settlement will create the new College Sports Commission under the direction of the power conferences to oversee the terms and enforce new rules, with former Major League Baseball executive Bryan Seeley named first CEO.
That includes setting up a clearinghouse for to approve all NIL deals worth over $600. The clearinghouse, called “NIL Go,” will be run by Deloitte — though it’s expect to face legal challenges, according to multiple reports.
The NIL Go portal will launch Wednesday, and schools have until June 15 to fully commit to revenue sharing that goes into effect July 1.
Defendant schools in the lawsuit were automatically designated to opt in under terms of the settlement, but most conferences and schools — including many at the mid-major level — have already said they would opt-in to the settlement when it was passed.
That includes the Big West, one of the smaller conferences in the country by geography that added Utah Valley beginning July 1, 2026. In a teleconference with reporters Friday morning (before the settlement was reached), commissioner Dan Butterly told reporters that each of his member schools planned to opt in to the settlement terms.
The settlement was also a longstanding conversation with Utah Valley as the two sides negotiated to come together.
“Our institutions are as prepared as they can be at the moment, understanding that the full terms of the settlement have not been outlined,” said Butterly, speaking Friday morning before the final approval. “The NCAA and the implementation committee have not provided much detail yet of what it means to opt in. But the implementation work has been aggressive, and I’m hopeful … that they give us a bit of time with the implementation outcomes and what it means for our schools to opt in.”
From Utah Valley’s perspective, implementation of the House settlement may look a bit different for mid-major schools compared to their power conference counterparts.
“The changing landscape of being able to fully scholarship an athletic program is a different deal for us,” admitted Utah Valley athletic director Jared Sumsion, adding that the university is prepared for scholarship limits that will come with it. “There are schools across the country that are ready to do that right now, and other schools who might use it as a possibility to decrease their scholarships in certain sports.
“For us, it’s really about going to find more resources to be ready for this. That’s what we do pretty much every day, and I’m grateful to our administration who has rolled with the punches with us. We’re eventually going to punch back, and I think we’re in a place that’s positive. We’re an attractive university, and part of that is being prepared for the future look of the NCAA.”
The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.
This former UCLA coach’s class provides a unique learning environment – Daily News
Valorie Kondos Field, retired UCLA women’s gymnastics team head coach and author of “Don’t Wait to Dance,” teaches a graduate level class on leadership on Monday, Mar. 10, 2025, at UCLA in Westwood. (Photo by Howard Freshman, Contributing Photographer) Valorie Kondos Field, retired UCLA women’s gymnastics team head coach and author of “Don’t Wait to […]
Valorie Kondos Field, retired UCLA women’s gymnastics team head coach and author of “Don’t Wait to Dance,” teaches a graduate level class on leadership on Monday, Mar. 10, 2025, at UCLA in Westwood. (Photo by Howard Freshman, Contributing Photographer)
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Life and death. Senior citizen sex. Alex Rodriguez and performance-enhancing drugs.
This is Education 472: Introduction to Philosophies of Coaching. Valorie Kondos-Field is in charge – and it’s a learning environment unlike any other.
“She’s just so … herself,” UCLA women’s basketball player Charlisse Leger-Walker said. “The very first class, I thought she was crazy.”
Kondos-Field, known affectionately as Miss Val, won seven NCAA championships and collected more than 800 victories in her 29 years as head coach of the UCLA gymnastics team. She’s returned to the school as an educator in the School of Education and Information Studies’ Transformative Coaching and Leadership graduate program.
A team of educators has developed a curriculum to give Bruins the tools they need to transition from student – or student-athlete – to coach. EDUC472 is a small but influential piece.
“The main point of the class is to get these young adults to start thinking about what their values are and instructing their leadership values, moral foundation, cultural foundation and style,” Kondos-Field said.
“You have to be authentic, otherwise you will never be a leader worth following.”
Bringing the outside in
On the last day of class, Kondos-Field stands with poise at the front of a classroom in Moore Hall as students and guests funnel in. Balenciaga pumps are on her feet, graffitied with fluorescent, inspirational words and the year “2019.”
A wedding ring is on her left hand and a 2010 national championship ring is on the other. Not a hair is out of place.
There are two main objectives for today’s three-hour class: discussion of Kondos-Field’s first book, “Life Is Short, Don’t Wait to Dance” – she has a second in the works – and final presentations. Each student has prepared a 2-minute speech explaining their coaching philosophy.
It feels more like a gathering than a class. Former UCLA gymnast and NCAA champion Katelyn Ohashi leans on a table while Kondos-Field’s 90-year-old roommate, Beverly, is seated on the other side of the room and looking refined in a turquoise sweater and sepia-tinted sunglasses.
“She has made me reframe my thoughts of what getting older is,” Kondos-Field tells the class, referring to Beverly.
Guests are critical to the course’s effectiveness. Students read a book per week about a particular coach, then guests are invited to discuss the subject matter with the group.
Dodgers manager Dave Roberts has made an appearance. Former Bruin and NBA star Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Michigan State basketball coach Tom Izzo and baseball icon Alex Rodriguez have stopped by.
“If we’re studying say, Pete Carroll, that week,” Kondos-Field said, “Alex doesn’t speak to Pete, but Alex Rodriguez comes in and talks about how to move from being a player, a student, to choreographing your life. Crafting your life.”
There is one regular face in the class – Director of New Initiatives Arif Amlani, who has a background in philosophy and philosophy of education. Amlani has co-taught the class for six years, although at this point he sees himself as playing more of a supportive role.
He teams up with Kondos-Field to connect leadership techniques with ancient philosophy passed down through centuries. The unexamined life is not worth living, as Socrates said.
“I have full confidence in her and the wisdom that she imparts,” Amlani said. “I am perfectly OK letting her do her thing.
“And conversely, there might be times when I do my thing. I have a very different style and I’ll talk about very different kinds of things. I might go more into philosophical issues. We have that understanding and, really, it’s by design. We have full confidence in each other.”
A strength space
UCLA running back Anthony Frias II is laughing and holding his phone in front of him, the screen facing the class.
Instagram’s algorithm showed him a postgame interview of classmate and former Bruins softball player Sharlize Palacios. Her teammates stacked bats in her arms and topped them with a Squishmallow before placing a box of Reese’s Puffs cereal on her head.
Palacios shakes her head as wide smiles spread to everyone who sees the clip.
Before class had even started, the group was applauding Leger-Walker and Angela Dugalić as they walked into the room. The women’s basketball players were returning to campus fresh off a Big Ten Conference Tournament victory over USC.
“Being in the grad classes, everybody is so curious about the other sports,” said Leger-Walker, who sat out this past season recovering from a torn ACL. “They’ve come out to our games and then the next day, they were all congratulating us. It just builds that sense of community at UCLA, and it’s pretty special. Everyone’s genuine about supporting each other.”
The dialogue flows freely in Education 472 but Kondos-Field is always at the forefront. She requires that all students stand up when they speak and if there are guests in the room, they introduce themselves and name the sport that they play.
Even in the Zoom-based first class of the semester, Kondos-Field asked the students to unmute themselves as she called on each of them. Leger-Walker recalls being good-naturedly pestered by her instructor until she turned her camera on during that class, a purpose she now understands.
“It’s very interactive, very discussion-based, very opinion-based and because it’s a graduate class, people aren’t afraid to speak up and share their opinion and share their perspective,” Leger-Walker said.
“Honestly, it’s probably one of the top three classes I’ve had in my entire college career so far. And that’s five years, so that’s a lot of classes.”
Athletes of the same sport sit together in the U-shaped seating arrangement but intermingle with each other during group work, asking questions about others’ sports or what their future might hold.
Casual conversations swirl into silly ones and juxtapose themselves with words of emotional depth, revealing to students that vulnerability doesn’t have to be a weakness.
An in-class anecdote from Kondos-Field: She once declined a dinner invitation from a group of gymnastics friends because she thought gymnastics gossip might end up dominating the conversation.
Instead, she planted herself on the couch beside Beverly. They worked on knitting projects in their pajamas, watched tennis and “talked about older people having sex,” she recalled.
Later in the class, Beverly reflects on her experience with cancer and Kondos-Field adds details about her own challenges while going through breast cancer.
Dugalić shares that she and her brother didn’t always have a basketball to play with while growing up. In another class, Joshua Swift delved into the hurt of being cut from the football team two days after the season had ended.
“It was riveting,” Kondos-Field said. “It was one heartbeat in that class, listening to Joshua Swift stand up and share his pain with everyone.”
Even Alex Rodriguez lets down his defenses when he enters Moore Hall.
“He always knows I’m going to throw him hardballs,” Kondos-Field said. “I start every time he’s in class – I go, ‘Why did you do it? Let’s talk about the performance-enhancing drugs. Why did you do it?’ And he gets really vulnerable, he gets really humble.”
Gray areas brighten and blurred lines in communication snap into focus. Tough conversations aren’t just unavoidable – they’re welcomed. But don’t call it a safe space. In the words of Kondos-Field, it’s a strength space.
Not just a degree
Colleges and universities across the country offer many coaching-related degrees, but none are as intensive as the Transformative Coaching and Leadership program at UCLA.
It was launched in fall 2019 and built on former UCLA men’s basketball coach John Wooden’s adage that coaching is teaching, creating a win-win situation for the university.
The master’s program was a perfect match for graduate student-athletes who wanted to pursue coaching or leadership positions. On the other side, it allowed UCLA to attract and retain student-athletes.
“After hearing about that program, it was definitely another check box that I could put for UCLA,” said Leger-Walker, who transferred from Oregon State a year ago.
Jessica Clements, the leadoff hitter on the Bruins’ softball team, had a similar experience. The 2024 Big West Player of the Year at Cal Poly had her pick of schools, but Coach Kelly Inouye-Perez said the Transformative Coaching and Leadership experience made UCLA a top choice.
Clements will finish playing this season, then be a graduate manager next season before beginning her search for a coaching job.
“It’s everything she could possibly want,” Inouye-Perez said. “Academics, athletics, the experience as an athlete, the experience as a grad manager, transformative coaching, a leadership master’s program.
“And then she wants to be able to fly it out there and figure out where she could land a coaching position, which I believe is going to be very, very easy for her.”
There are two UCLA gymnasts in the program who are taking Kondos-Field’s class: Carissa Clay and Chae Campbell – or “Chae girl” as Kondos-Field affectionately calls her during class.
“I’ve seen them both grow in the way that they communicate and the confidence that they hold themselves with and also how they show up as a leader,” Bruins gymnastics coach Janelle McDonald said.
“It’s a great opportunity for people to be able to continue their education and their sport, but also just learn a lot about life.”
Transactional vs. transformative
Sue Enquist was a transactional head coach when she helmed the UCLA softball team for 18 seasons. She was tough on her players but empowered them, and won 10 NCAA championships between 1982 and 2004 as a result.
“I loved it,” said Inouye-Perez, who won three national championships as a player under Enquist.
“She’s, like, man, if I were to coach the way I did back then versus understanding what’s needed today, I’d be a whole different coach today than I was back then,” Inouye-Perez recalled.
Enquist, along with Kondos-Field, is now embracing transformative coaching, which emphasizes athlete growth while still putting emphasis on success.
Transformative – sometimes called transformational – coaching sees sports beyond winning and losing, supporting athletes as they undergo difficult situations in order to create personal growth.
“Everybody coaching today should definitely understand what transformative means,” Inouye-Perez said, “because if you’re not, you put yourself at risk of not only not succeeding, but also being fired for not getting the fact that you no longer can be transactional. Everyone’s looking for everyone to have a quality experience, to learn and grow and be better people.”
The current generation of college students has likely experienced a mix of the transactional, do-as-I-say coaching style and transformative coaching. The future, as Inouye-Perez and those in the Transformative Coaching and Leadership Program believe, is the latter due to its ability to meet the mental and physical needs of this generation’s student-athletes.
“If we were teaching this class in the ’80s, a lot of people in the class would not have experienced what transformational leadership feels like,” Kondos-Field said.
“But this generation has experienced both. And now, guess what? Since you’ve experienced both, you get to choose. You don’t get to just say ‘because that’s how I was coached.’ Or ‘that’s how I was parented.’ It’s a choice.”
Philosophies built to last
It’s time for the grand finale of Education 472. The last task of the last class is for each student to present their personal coaching philosophy in 2 minutes.
Kondos-Field proudly tells the class that Cam Brown, a former student and women’s basketball player, had secured a job offer by reciting her philosophy during an interview. Dugliać, equally proud, films her instructor retelling the story on her phone to send to Brown.
“The interesting part is I tend to overcoach,” Kondos-Field said. “I tend to give them too much information. And Dr. Amlani, he’s like, let them figure it out.”
The ways in which this group of students figured out the coaching philosophy assignment are myriad.
Swift has a central theme – “Keep it G” – and involves pillars that all begin with the letter G. Beach volleyball player Natalie Myszkowski talks about the importance of preparation and how “the dumbest you can look in the rain is wet.”
Swimmer Joanie Cash shows a graphic of a blue-and-yellow bridge that she had created to demonstrate the pillars of her philosophy. Leger-Walker gives an energetic and clear presentation, but not before she discloses that she struggled to decide which leadership style they learned about was her favorite.
“I don’t think that I’ve ever sat down to this extent and thought about leadership the way I have this quarter,” Leger-Walker said. “It can be such a general term thrown out there. Like, what is a leader? Everybody has a different perspective on it, but I didn’t realize how complex it truly was.”
Each student’s face is the future of leadership, and its powerful ideals are felt in the presence of and passed down from the instructor.
Kondos-Field tells them in a brief, spirited lecture that she was never afraid of getting fired while she was coaching at UCLA and that she would still hold true to her own coaching philosophy today – which includes no chewing gum and no hair ties on wrists, of course.
And she is steadfast in that as an educator, which will forever resonate with her students.
“Everyone is different 100%,” Leger-Walker said, “but there are so many different ways and different skills and different experiences that you can draw from to really have your own philosophy so that you stay true to that.
Judge Claudia Wilken approves House v. NCAA settlement | Penn State Sports News
After nearly a year of deliberation, a new era of college sports is here. Judge Claudia Wilken approved a deal between the NCAA and Division I athletes, giving schools the ability to pay their athletes directly. Schools are now free to begin paying their athletes directly, marking the dawn of a new era in college […]
After nearly a year of deliberation, a new era of college sports is here.
Judge Claudia Wilken approved a deal between the NCAA and Division I athletes, giving schools the ability to pay their athletes directly.
Schools are now free to begin paying their athletes directly, marking the dawn of a new era in college sports brought about by a multibillion-dollar legal settlement that was formally approved Friday. https://t.co/uMDMfcIXnP
The $2.8 billion settlement allows for athletes who competed in college between 2016 and present day to receive damages, along with establishing an annual cap for colleges to pay its current athletes.
The annual cap for the 2025-26 school year is expected to start around $20.5 million and athletes can start receiving payments on July 1.
While colleges will have more money dedicated to scholarships and athlete payments compared to prior years, the settlement implements hard roster caps for all Division I teams, limiting the number of athletes on each team’s roster. Football teams are limited to 105 athletes, men’s and women’s basketball to 15 and baseball to 34 athletes.
A grandfather clause was introduced into the proposal that will allow for any athlete who would be cut or whose offer would be rescinded to be grandfathered into the roster.
Limiting the roster size will likely decrease the number of walk-ons for each team, as the smaller teams will prioritize spots for athletes with scholarships and less for those without.
However, the settlement also brings the removal of scholarship caps, allowing for more flexibility in scholarship disbursement. Starting in the 2025-26 school year, sport-specific caps will be eliminated.
While legal battles will likely still occur in the future, NCAA president Charlie Baker believes Friday’s settlement is a start in the right direction to control third parties’ involvements with paying college athletes.
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Florida State’s Ting Named National Golfer Of The Year By Golfweek
TALLAHASSEE – Florida State’s Mirabel Ting, who set the national record for lowest stroke average in a single-season, has been named the 2024-25 women’s college Golf Player of the Year by Golfweek. She earned a national record 68.77 stroke average with five individual victories, nine top-six finishes in nine collegiate events, and was an incredible […]
TALLAHASSEE – Florida State’s Mirabel Ting, who set the national record for lowest stroke average in a single-season, has been named the 2024-25 women’s college Golf Player of the Year by Golfweek. She earned a national record 68.77 stroke average with five individual victories, nine top-six finishes in nine collegiate events, and was an incredible 80 strokes under par in leading the Seminoles to a program-best third place in the NCAA Championship Finals at the Omni La Costa Resort in Carlsbad, Calif.
Ting has now earned National Golfer of the Year recognitions as awarded by the Women’s Golf Coaches Association, the ANNIKA Award presented by Stifel, and Golfweek, while earning First-Team All-American honors selected by the WGCA and Golfweek.
Ting is the second Florida State player to win the National Golfer of the Year Award as presented by Golfweek. All-American Frida Kinhult earned the award in 2019.
Ting completed her season as the runner-up in the individual standings at the NCAA Championships. She finished the 2025 season as the No. 1 collegiate golfer as ranked by Scoreboard by Clippd and has been ranked as the No. 2 golfer in the world as chosen by the World Amateur Golf Ranking (WAGR) since April 2, 2025.
Ting finished her junior season with her school record stroke average of 68.77 for the 2024-25 season with five wins, including at the Florida State Match Up and the Seminole Legacy Golf Club in March.
While at the NCAA Championships, she was awarded the prestigious ANNIKA Award from the Haskins Foundation.
She participated in the Augusta National Women’s Amateur for the second time in 2025.
Ting was named as the 2025 ACC Golfer of the Year becoming the fourth Seminole to win the award, joining Florida State All-Americans Beatrice Wallin (2021) and Frida Kinhult (2019) and teammate Lottie Woad (2024).
Ting totaled five individual wins, nine top-six finishes, tallied 25 rounds on or below par, and led the Seminoles to a program record seven team victories this year. The Seminoles won the first ACC Championship in school history, won the championship of the NCAA Lexington Regional, and finished in a program-best third place at the NCAA Championships in 2025.
The native of Miri, Malaysia, has won seven times during her career including six times in her two seasons as a Seminole.
Logan Walsh makes adjustments to his cap and gown in the parking lot using the reflection on the side window of his car. Fred Adams | For Times Leader
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Jonathan Sassi and Sage Morgan look at photos as they wait for the ceremonies to start. Fred […]
What I’m hearing about NCAA revenue sharing: $40M football rosters, unintended consequences
The House v. NCAA settlement, granted final approval Friday, has been touted as a means of restoring order to this Big Money Era of college sports. Starting this summer, Power 4 and other Division I schools can begin directly paying their athletes via an annual revenue sharing pool capped at roughly $20.5 million per school […]
The House v. NCAA settlement, granted final approval Friday, has been touted as a means of restoring order to this Big Money Era of college sports. Starting this summer, Power 4 and other Division I schools can begin directly paying their athletes via an annual revenue sharing pool capped at roughly $20.5 million per school in year one.
But because schools have been preparing to navigate this new world order — and how to gain a competitive edge under it — many in the industry expect the budding NIL arms race to continue at the top of the sport, and at a price point much higher than the cap.
“The top (football) teams are going to cost $40-50 million a year,” said one power conference personnel director. “That’s where this is going. Anyone who thinks different is nuts.”
That projected “budget” includes additional NIL (name, image and likeness) payments from collectives and outside organizations to athletes on top of the capped revenue sharing from the school. It would be a steep increase from the market-setting $20 million in NIL money Ohio State funded its roster with last season on the way to a national championship. But most significantly, a number of industry sources believe that $40 million-$50 million rate will continue beyond this upcoming season, where a number of top-end rosters have been uniquely built with front-loaded, pre-settlement NIL deals.
This cuts directly against the intent of the settlement, which is designed to stamp out the unspoken pay-for-play deals that have hijacked the NIL marketplace and keep ballooning roster budgets in check.
“No chance,” the personnel director said.
It’s one of the many changes, intended and unintended, coming to college sports under the House settlement.
Schools opting in have spent the past year bracing for the financial reckoning this settlement will bring, including where the revenue share money will come from and how it will be distributed. College athletics have been trending in this direction, and to the benefit of most athletes, particularly those in revenue sports who will receive a bigger cut of the billions in television, sponsorship and ticket revenues that pour into power conference athletic departments.
Many of those same departments, however, are already struggling with the challenges of this transition.
“We’re all just trying to figure it out as we go through it,” said one power conference head football coach. “The whole deal is to make it a level playing field, but I don’t think that will ever be realistic.”
The Athletic spoke with more than a dozen sources across each of the Power 4 conferences about how they plan to approach this new revenue sharing model and all that will come with it — including in-fighting between coaches at the same school, why “tanking” could factor into college sports and how programs will continue to bend rules and find competitive advantages in a post-settlement era.
The sources include athletic directors and administrators; coaches, general managers and personnel staffers in football and men’s basketball; and others involved in NIL and collectives. All were granted anonymity in exchange for their candor.
‘F— Deloitte. This is going to get even crazier’
The $20.5 million revenue sharing cap goes into effect July 1 and covers every sport under a school’s athletic department. The most prominent football programs expect to have about $15 million of that pool at their disposal, with top programs supplementing that budget with third-party, “over-the-cap” NIL deals.
But not so fast, my friends. The settlement includes a new oversight and enforcement arm — named the College Sports Commission — that requires outside deals from collectives and other associated companies and organizations to reflect a valid business purpose and fall within an approved range of compensation. The settlement establishes a clearinghouse, dubbed NIL Go and managed by the accounting firm Deloitte, which instructs athletes to self-report any third-party NIL deals worth $600 or more for review. The idea is that any of those deals that fail to meet a valid business purpose and/or fall within an approved range will be flagged, and must be adjusted or taken to arbitration.
From the perspective of the NCAA and power conference leadership, this new enforcement is meant to bring competitive balance and transparency to a lawless, untenable NIL marketplace. But among those who have witnessed the NCAA’s inability to police that marketplace in the past, there’s a lot of skepticism that the settlement will change things.
“It all sounds great in theory, but how will it actually work?” asked one power conference athletic director.
Industry sources familiar with the clearinghouse and enforcement plan insist it will have more (and swifter) latitude and punitive power than the NCAA wielded in the NIL era. Until it actually drops that hammer, it’s done little to scare off coaches and recruiting staffs with passionate, deep-pocketed donors.
A number of sources questioned whether athletes will even report their third-party deals, or do so accurately. Others suggested that deals getting challenged by the clearinghouse — or the fact that they have to be disclosed at all — could spark more antitrust legal action from collectives. Other sources were outright dismissive.
“If you tell a booster or business owner they can’t give a star player $2 million, there will be lawsuits,” said the personnel director. “There’s no enforcing this. Fair market value? F— Deloitte. This is going to get even crazier.”
A legit enforcement arm with some teeth — perhaps in the form of suspensions or ineligibility — might change that sentiment, and multiple athletic directors suggest that if the clearinghouse merely serves as a minor deterrent to egregious pay-for-play payments, it will be better than pre-settlement circumstances. But others think the undertow of NIL and collectives is too strong to turn back now.
“There are a lot of rich people that can’t buy a professional sports franchise, but they can give a ton of money to their alma mater,” said a power conference administrator. “And if you’re telling millionaires and billionaires what they can and can’t do with their money, you’re probably going to lose that battle.”
Finding the money
The over-the-cap arms race is for high rollers only. It will attract the premier programs that expect to win national championships, but for most schools, even in the power conferences, their focus is on how they will fund a new $20 million budget item.
Power conference athletic departments operate as self-sustaining organizations with $100 million budgets, where expenses more or less line up with revenues. Operating this way, even as millions upon millions in annual television revenue flowed in, is how the conferences and NCAA became ensnared in so much legal trouble to begin with. Untangling those norms is an admittedly first-class problem, but will require significant budgetary adjustments, including new revenue growth and cost cutting.
Most schools are leaning on fundraising and seeking new or increased assistance from campus subsidies or student fees. Virginia Tech, for example, recently announced it will increase student fees and direct a larger portion to athletics to help fund revenue sharing, a path plenty of other schools are considering. Iowa State athletic director Jaime Pollard referenced as much in a recent interview, while noting that Cyclones athletics receive no financial subsidies from the university.
“Iowa State does not have that (additional) $20 million, but if we don’t pay it for this coming year, we have big problems, right? So we’re going to pay it,” said Pollard. “Would you pay a bigger fee (as a student) … to go to school here so that a member of our men’s basketball team could get paid $1.5 million in addition to their scholarship, their room and board, and all the services they get for being a student on campus? That’s the fundamental question we’re going to have to ask ourselves. Because if we don’t do that, then what we’re saying is that we’re not going to have the athletics program that we’re having.”
Even with increased fees and fundraising, there will also be widespread belt-tightening on things like administrative staffing and athlete benefits within athletic departments, such as eliminating Alston payments and reevaluating meal offerings in the facility.
“If a player is making $500,000 a year, why am I still paying for three meals a day?” said another power conference administrator.
There could be new revenue streams from things like on-field logos or naming rights. Long term, departments might get creative, whether that’s an in-stadium restaurant that’s open year-round, purchasing its own housing complexes for athletes or inviting private equity. Last December, Oklahoma State coach Mike Gundy and Florida State coach Mike Norvell each restructured lucrative contracts, returning a portion of their salary to the school after disappointing seasons. Kentucky recently announced it is transitioning its athletic department to a nonprofit LLC.
Fans will feel it too. Schools such as Tennessee and Arkansas have already increased ticket or concession prices to fund revenue sharing. Some may pass processing fees onto customers, or explore local restaurant and hotel taxes. And the fundraising calls won’t stop.
Fully eliminating non-revenue varsity sports is another last-resort option for most athletic directors, but it’s already begun, at least outside the power conferences. UTEP discontinued women’s tennis. Cal Poly did the same with men’s and women’s swimming and diving. Saint Francis (Pa.) announced plans to reclassify all athletics from Division I to Division III, just one week after its men’s basketball team played in the NCAA Tournament. Utah shuttered its women’s beach volleyball program, though it did not mention the House settlement and rather cited conference realignment.
“I know for a fact schools are definitely talking about it,” said an administrator.
By any route, the ability for schools to spend the full amount of that annual revenue sharing cap — which will be essential to staying competitive, particularly at the highest levels — is a significant financial undertaking, and one few athletic departments can cobble together without upending their standard operating procedure.
“Right now it feels like Monopoly. We’re planning to spend to the cap, but we have to figure out how we’re getting there,” said the power conference athletic director. “If you cut a million somewhere, sure that helps, but if you cut $5 (million) or $10 million, you’re really hurting your department.”
Everyone wants their share
Generating the money is the first hurdle. Then schools have to decide how to distribute it among their sports. Most FBS athletic departments plan to use the settlement’s backpay formula as a blueprint, with roughly 75 percent earmarked to football ($15 million), 15-20 percent to men’s basketball, 5-10 percent to women’s basketball and whatever is left to the non-revenue sports.
Certain universities, like Texas Tech, have been transparent with the percentage of funds going to each sport and how those are calculated. But because there are no stipulations for how the pool must be allocated, it will vary between schools. And could create some dicey internal dynamics.
“There is absolutely in-fighting (between coaches),” said an administrator.
Head coaches at the same school are essentially vying with one another for a bigger chunk of revenue share. One power conference administrator said their school plans to direct as much as 25 percent to men’s basketball, which means less for football. There have also been rumblings about how this could benefit the best-resourced basketball programs in the Big East or WCC that don’t have to share with football.
“There are going to be some challenging and difficult conversations,” said another power conference AD. “Coaches will be paying more attention to the revenue figures of their program than ever before. Everybody wants to make a case why their rev share should increase.”
Agreements and innovative approaches
Once a school allocates its revenue share dollars, it’s up to teams to build out the roster accordingly. “Rev cap management,” as one AD phrased it.
Many schools have already signed athletes to preliminary revenue share agreements — whether through collectives or the actual university — specifying that payments will transfer to the athletic department on July 1. In addition to the wave of frontloaded NIL deals in recent months, as collectives emptied the coffers ahead of the settlement, schools are inserting notable caveats into these agreements. Some have buyout clauses, where athletes would have to pay money back to a school if they leave before the end of the agreement, similar to coaching contracts. Some suggest that because compensation is based on NIL, it can be adjusted up or down based on performance and/or playing time. Others have strict injury clauses.
“With some negotiations, we were very direct that if you’re not healthy, you’re not getting the money,” said another power conference personnel director.
Whether any of these stipulations hold up in a legal sense remains to be seen, but it’s clear that after years of schools and coaches feeling they were on the short end of the NIL power dynamic, they are attempting to wrest back that control. Still, numerous people consulted for this story said the vast majority of initial revenue share agreements will be for one season until there’s clarity on how legally binding these agreements truly are. Repeats of the Nico Iamaleava holdout saga might be less likely for the time being, but there could be standoffs over payment disputes.
Unlike in the NFL, where there is a rookie salary scale and fairly transparent free agency, college football teams are still navigating best roster-building practices. How much money do you set aside for high school recruits? For transfers? Which positions do you value most in your particular system? How should you structure a player’s payments? This could lead to more GM hires in the mold of Andrew Luck or pro-style executives who have administrative power over head coaches and can maintain philosophies across coaching changes.
Further complicating matters is the fact that the settlement and revenue share calendars operate on the academic fiscal calendar, which runs July to June. This means each football season is split across two separate rev share budgets.
“If you spend all $15 million on players for the 2025 season, then you aren’t going to be able to pay anyone for the 2026 season until July 1, 2026,” explained the personnel director.
This will require thoughtful budgeting, and could spark some innovative approaches — some more palatable than others. “Tanking” has been an issue unique to professional sports, but revenue sharing could usher it into the college ranks. If a team has glaring roster holes at quarterback or other key positions, it could elect to save its revenue share money and go all-in on the transfer portal when the season ends, with a bigger war chest than most of its competitors.
“I do think you will see teams try to manipulate the cap in different ways,” said another power conference personnel director.
Ongoing issues
From a legal perspective, the lawsuits and court battles won’t stop in the wake of the House settlement. A number of states already have NIL laws that contradict the settlement, and the Johnson v. NCAA case regarding athlete employment is still ongoing.
From a competitive perspective, the dollars going up means the competitive imbalance will too. This isn’t a new problem in college sports, but a settlement negotiated with heavy input from the power conferences isn’t going to change that, regardless of how well the clearinghouse works.
“It’s going to separate, even more, the haves and the have-nots,” said an administrator.
Big picture, athletic departments will be forced to adapt, financially and operationally, as college sports lean further away from amateurism and toward a more professional model.
“For the longest time, these athletic departments acted like nonprofits,” said another administrator. “Now they have to act like businesses.”
In the meantime, power and non-power programs alike are hoping for some degree of stability in an industry that has had very little in recent years.
“At some point,” said a personnel director, “maybe we’ll get two years in a row where we know what’s going on.”
(Photo of Ohio State football: Carmen Mandato / Getty Images)