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Is college football undervalued? America's second

Imagn Images There is no argument: College football is the nation’s second-most popular sport when factoring in ratings, attendance, hype and, of course, the billions generated. Only the NFL is bigger, but even in that space, there is a discussion to be had about passion and how to measure it. For example, there is no […]

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Is college football undervalued? America's second

NCAA Football: CFP National Championship-Ohio State at Notre Dame
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There is no argument: College football is the nation’s second-most popular sport when factoring in ratings, attendance, hype and, of course, the billions generated. Only the NFL is bigger, but even in that space, there is a discussion to be had about passion and how to measure it. For example, there is no NFL comparison to the profound, solemn debate over whether to get married on an SEC football weekend. 

Some things are just too important to interrupt, even for wedding vows. 

In a parallel universe, though, there is also little argument the game is undervalued, perhaps even tremendously so. In fact, as we enjoy this offseason before Season No. 156, there is a crossroads looming. 

To that point, there is so much money being left on the table in major college football that something has to give. 

“We are at the fork in the road no matter what anybody says,” said Casey Wasserman, one of the most powerful entertainment and sports executives in the world as head of the Wasserman Group. “College football is either leaving [the current structure] and keeping all the money or they’re staying … It’s not that complicated.”

Those with Wasserman’s view are talking about a $4 billion-$5 billion valuation shortfall in college football. The Power Four media rights deals are currently worth a combined $17 billion — and that’s not counting the $1.3 billion College Football Playoff deal with ESPN. That’s mainly because conferences negotiate individual media rights that suit them but doesn’t necessarily maximize revenue. 

The sides on either end of the discussion have separated like political parties. One side is ready to tap into that valuation like it’s a new vein of crude discovered in the North Dakota oil reserve. The other is a formidable blockade with a desire to keep the status quo — and power.

That reckoning Wasserman is referring to is upon us. The revelation of the Super League and Project Rudy last year reflected at least proposals to gather the game’s top powers in one league and bundle their rights. (The Super League is proposing 72 teams, while Project Rudy would feature 70 teams. There are currently 134 FBS programs.)

Both proposals would be a further reflection of what the Power Four commissioners have done with conference realignment: more consolidation. Just in a different way. 

“If your story says that there’s far greater selling power with the conferences rolling all their rights [together] at the same time, in a unified way …,” said one Group of Five commissioner, “then you’re literally not missing a thing.”

For this discussion, it’s all about the media rights Benjamins. That’s where the majority of revenue comes for major college sports. Ticket and sponsorship revenue lag behind that revenue stream. The relationship between schools, their brand and major networks has been ingrained since the Supreme Court deregulated college football television in 1984. 

Unraveling that relationship for a single-entity College Football LLC is like trying to untie a Gordian Knot. 

But the signs are there that a new economy is emerging. AAC commissioner Tim Pernetti summed up that economy recently during an appearance at the Sports Business Journal Intercollegiate Athletic Forum, an annual college athletics summit. 

“[Non-Power four schools] don’t care any less about their experience and access to compete at the highest level than anyone in any other conference,” he said. “So we’re at a very dangerous tipping point. So, if we don’t organize and protect the product, we could be headed for rough waters in the future.

“Whatever your opinion is on change, you need to park it because we need to have these conversations. Having a conversation doesn’t mean you’re going to do it,” he continued. “But why are we so hung up that we know better than everyone else? This is a different business than it was five years ago, 10 years ago.”

The fact the game is trending away from the traditional financial model cannot be denied. CBS Sports has learned at least one venture capital entity had interest in buying into a Power Four athletic department

Former Milwaukee Bucks co-owner Marc Lasry has become an industry leader in investing in undervalued sports. He was questioned by CNBC recently why he went hard into pro bull riding. 

“What we’re trying to do is find sports that are undervalued and invest in those, so that five years from now, as they get their new media deals, that’s when you’ll capture the upside,” he told the network.

That perfectly describes the financial college football structure at the moment. For now, realignment has largely been muted because media rights contracts are more or less aligned. But those deals will expire on or around 2030 at an intersection of streaming and venture capital looking to make giant investments in the sport. 

For those media rights contracts that expire in 2030 and 2031 (Big Ten, Big 12, CFP), those discussions will have to start as early as three years from now. For the other deals, such as the ACC (expiring in 2036) and SEC (2034), let’s just say if the ground begins to shift they won’t be bystanders waiting around until those expiration dates. 

SMU billionaire donor David Miller recently hinted that more realignment is coming sooner than later. 

If there is an über investor/sugar daddy in this space, it might be Lasry. The 65-year old, Moroccan-born venture capitalist has produced a modern-day blueprint for investing in those undervalued/distressed properties. 

College football might qualify as both. The financial climate is at least unstable. Endless lawsuits and the looming House v. NCAA settlement are expenses that could be minimized — if not eliminated — with outside investment, corporate management and a collective bargaining agreement. 

Walk-on players are invaluable to college football, but House v. NCAA settlement provides uncertain future

Dennis Dodd

Walk-on players are invaluable to college football, but House v. NCAA settlement provides uncertain future

Only a handful of athletic departments turn a profit. The stressors on the balance sheet have never been greater. That House settlement alone is forcing schools to opt into a pay-for-play model that will total at least $200 million per school over the next decade. 

But the fact that number is capped invites even more lawsuits, which are sure to come. 

Bull riding in the same orbit as college football? Absolutely. Try this fact on for incongruent math: College football was twice the viewership of the NBA, but the NBA generates twice the revenue as college football.

That doesn’t add up in the places where it should the most — those dozens of athletic departments facing financial strain. Those departments are labeled as non-profits but operate at the highest levels as Fortune 500 companies. That is, seeking bottom-line profit.

The venture capitalists are storming the gate because there is potentially so much new money to be made. Global giant CVC was involved for a time with the Big 12 last year. In late 2023, RedBird Capital founder Gerry Cardinale laid out in detail the full potential of college football in this era. Florida State has long been involved with Weatherford Capital, headed by former FSU quarterback Drew Weatherford. 

Sources tell CBS Sports to keep an eye on Otro Capital, an emerging firm run by former RedBird partners who specialize in sports, media, gaming and entertainment. Travis Kelce, Patrick Mahomes, Rory McIlroy and actor Ryan Reynolds are among the investors. 

The college targets of the venture capitalists are obvious; the Wall Street Journal recently estimated six of the top 10 college football programs are worth at least $1 billion. 

Imagine this meeting, which has already happened at one Power Four school: A venture capitalist meeting with a university CEO offering to buy a half stake in the athletic department. The deal was never consummated, but that will not end venture capital’s interest in what amounts to a growth stock. 

So the basic question becomes: Can the outdated financial model, overseen by commissioners and TV, survive when there is so much money to be made? The outside interest almost hints of the business world’s version of a hostile takeover.

However, any change in this discussion has to be blessed by the SEC and Big Ten, the de facto “owners” of major college sports at the moment. 

“I don’t think it’s an accident that the Big Ten and the SEC look a whole lot like the AFC and NFC,” Wasserman said. “They’re partners. They’re not competitors.”

To this point, stereotypical aging, gray-haired fiscally conservative college presidents who oversee multi-billion dollar balance sheets have been reluctant. Partnering with venture capital means ceding at least some measure of power and perhaps taking on debt.

But it doesn’t have to be that way. CBS Sports has already reported on other avenues of maximizing revenue. 

There are campus reserves, reallocation of existing funds, endowments, state subsidies as well as borrowing from the university. Even flat-out bank loans.

“Universities, because they’re big enterprises, actually have access to really cheap debt,” said Tony Altimore, a strategy consultant with Altimore Collins & Company. “Universities are zero risk [for lenders]. The University of Michigan isn’t going anywhere.”


It’s the little things that add up to a bigger deal in this discussion of undervaluation on this week of the Final Four. Duke, Houston, Florida and Auburn do not get paid for actually playing in the Final Four. The so-called “units” that teams play for end after the regional championship, and they go into a pot that is distributed to conference members. 

Each of the Final Four teams get five of those units — one for making the tournament and one for each of their four victories. Generally, those units are worth at least $1 million per victory. 

“You’re paying a [NCAA Tournament] play-in team and they get a unit,” Big East commissioner Val Ackerman pointed out, “and the national champion gets a trophy.”

Meanwhile, the championship teams in the College Football Playoff each get $20 million. That’s the difference between the more egalitarian basketball tournament and the LLC for-profit CFP.

Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark made news earlier this month when he supported expansion of the NCAA Tournament to 76 teams. The next question is: Should the membership trust the NCAA to negotiate for rights fees to expand the bracket?

The San Jose Mercury News Jon Wilner suggested that could be a precursor to the power conferences staging their own basketball tournament someday. Keep an eye on the debut this week of the College Basketball Crown event.

Sedona Prince’s revelation of inequities in the women’s game in 2021 literally changed the investment in the women’s tournament. A groundbreaking 2022 report concluded the women’s media rights had not been up for “competitive bid” in 20 years. 

The men’s tournament alone produces $1.1 billion annually. The women’s tournament is bundled on TV with scores of other NCAA championships. The question is being asked with more frequency: Are both tournaments undervalued?

“That’s who we’ve entrusted right now to do the [men’s] deal, is the national office,” Ackerman said. “I think there probably will be more pressure this time around on the topic of membership participation in the process given the stakes.”

That Super League model would be similar to what the NFL did in the 1960s. Then-commissioner Pete Rozelle convinced owners that combining to be a single-entity business and sharing revenue would be more profitable — and competitive.

The proposed Super League (and Project Rudy) would do the same thing. One source told CBS Sports the projected annual revenue of such an arrangement would be at a minimum of $3 billion and as much as $10 billion. 

There are Super League types who believe collective bargaining could be embraced with revenues shared within a players union, whether they were employees or not. 

Sounds like a pro league? You’re way behind. Look around. We’re already there. 

“The question is not whether our plan is dead,” said one Super League official. “The question is whether college sports is dead.”

The majority of Power Four conferences and their media rights holders are dead set against such radical change for the moment. The likes of ESPN, Fox, CBS and others remain all in on top-shelf content. For as much money as those networks are paying, they also assure cost certainty for those networks.

CEOs from the Big 12 and a portion of the ACC did meet with representatives of the Super League and Project Rudy late last year. 

“The fact that people have interest in throwing ideas out, that’s up to them,” SEC commissioner Greg Sankey told reporters last year when word broke of the Super League. “I spend my time on what I have to do.”

So, it comes down to a faceoff between powerful players with disparate goals. Commissioners protecting their fiefdoms vs. the Super Leaguers who would believe a single entity would unlock billions. 

Marcello’s Mailbag: Is Bobby Petrino waiting in the wings to take over at Arkansas?

Brandon Marcello

Marcello's Mailbag: Is Bobby Petrino waiting in the wings to take over at Arkansas?

Think of Super League/Project Rudy as concepts, not necessarily the only options. To date, Sankey and Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti have not met with Super League officials. It would be fair to say both commissioners continue to dismiss the idea.

Yahoo Sports was the first to report the Big 12 is looking at a “capital partner” again after considering private equity last year. CBS Sports can report that a partnership — different from the CVC venture — has been a possibility since at least September.  

All this is being played out with streaming giants looming in the background.  Apple, Netlifx, Google and Amazon are all assumed ready to spend big on sports in the next decade. Their combined worth is in the trillions. 

Long-time media consultant Chris Bevilacqua said for colleges and conferences not to take advantage, “doesn’t make sense to me.” 

That college sports needs financial help is undisputed. Rutgers must wait until 2027 to get a full share of media rights revenue from the Big Ten. The school borrowed against future earnings when it joined the league beginning in 2014. 

UCLA joined the Big Ten last year for much the same reasons of financial distress. 

“Right now, the reason the UCLA left the Pac-12 to go to the Big Ten is that we have $50 million more this year than we did last year,” said Wasserman, an influential Bruins booster whose name adorns the football facility. “Without that $50 million, UCLA is bankrupt.”

For this discussion, it should be noted that Bevilacqua is a Super League advisor. Among those on the board include Texas Tech AD Kirby Hocutt, North Carolina AD Bubba Cunningham, Tennessee AD Danny White, West Virginia president Gordon Gee and Cleveland Browns owner Jimmy Haslam. 

While being against the Super League, the Big Ten is also reportedly considering a private equity investment. Since at least last summer, Pernetti has been bullish publicly on considering outside investment in his conference. 

“The important point everybody needs to get their arms around. Things need to change,” Pernetti said. “The structure needs to change. Instead of looking at college football and saying, ‘There’s Big Ten football and ACC football and American football.’ College football is a product.”

The NBA, NFL and MLB all have lines of credit available to them. Last August, the NFL changed its rules to allow private equity firms to buy stakes in its teams. In December it was reported the Buffalo Bills and Miami Dolphins had sold minority shares of their teams to private equity houses. 

CBS Sports first broke the story last June that the Big 12 was considering a private equity deal with CVC that would have netted the league up to $1 billion. League presidents eventually decided not to proceed.

Both the Super League and NCAA have lobbyists in Washington, D.C., pushing their agendas. The NCAA continues to seek an anti-trust exemption from Congress that would, in part, continue to cap athletes’ ability to earn money. 

Of course, the association’s view is that it needs an exemption to effectively conduct business. The House settlement will codify things a bit, but several industry sources predict chaos with a multitude of resulting lawsuits.

Wasserman has one unique vision of how the NCAA could get its way: If President Donald Trump applies pressure in Congress, he could be a factor in this valuation discussion.

Wasserman called Sen. Ted Cruz — chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee overseeing possible exemption legislation — Trump’s “weapon of change.” 

“Honestly, if [Trump] could save college sports, he would love that position. I know it sounds crazy, but it’s not as crazy as you think,” said Wasserman, also chairman of the 2028 LA Olympics organizing committee. “If he could say, ‘Hey, look, I can save amateur sports.’ That’s a pretty powerful place for him to sit.”


It continues to be argued the athletes themselves are underpaid. Consider in House that every athlete transaction worth more than $600 has to be approved. Now consider the coaches who lead those athletes. Several have uncapped eight-figure salaries. 

Complicating matters is the pass-through nature of almost all the parties involved. They aren’t around that long. The athletes themselves are around only four or five years. The average college president lasts six years. The average AD stays around five years at one school. The average FBS coach lasts four to five years. 

Until recently, being an FBS conference commissioner was somewhat of a lifetime appointment. There was a time not too long ago when the average Power Five commissioner stayed more than 21 years on the job. 

Those commissioners continue to hold vast amounts of power, being in charge of the modern financial landscape.

Will that change?

“Our [venture capital] relationship could be as short as five years, it could be 50,” Weatherford said.

Weatherford Capital has been making giant strides into the college market. Like everything in this emerging market, specifics have yet to be revealed. 

“I believe a private capital provider that is aligned … can actually create a stabilizing force,” Weatherford added, “when there is turnover at the presidential level, when there is turnover at the athletic department level, when there is coaching changes to have financial, organizational controls.”

With that type of arrangement, some power must be given up. These venture capital firms would have to go out of their way to assure schools as to the scope of their involvement. In the business world, private equity investors sometimes sit on boards of directors. 

How long until those big investors in college sports start to flex on hiring a new coach?

Or is the corporate-college relationship simply inevitable? In the corporate world, businesses don’t stifle growth because the opposing argument is that’s the way it’s always been.

“What it speaks to is athletic departments have been businesses for 20 years,” TCU AD Mike Buddie said. “We’ve tried to pretend that they’re not. Now that they actually are, there are going to be business decisions that are counterintuitive to higher education.

“It’s not going to be good for Olympic sports. It’s not going to be good for United States Olympics. In 20 years are we going to have gold medals in anything?”

The role of those minor college sports in college football’s financial model cannot be ignored. In fact, they are accounted for in Super League economics. Part of the increased revenue earned from a single-entity model would be spent on supporting those sports. 

College football supports minor sports now, but to varying degrees at different schools. In fact, powerful Ohio State was considering slicing sports last year in the wake of the economic drag caused by the House settlement. AD Ross Bjork subsequently announced Ohio State would continue to sponsor all 36 sports. 

Such consternations have led to much oxygen being wasted addressing competitive balance in the current structure. But the only way that balance happens these days is, really, by chance. 

Is the fact all four No. 1 seeds made the Final Four for only the second time a product of NIL dollars consolidating at the top? To be determined.

A couple of years ago, TCU played for a national championship for the second time in its history. Vanderbilt beat Alabama for the first time in 40 years last October, but the result revealed more about the system than the Frogs or the Commodores. 

TCU is 13-10 since that championship game loss. The bigger issue for Vanderbilt may be the moment Alabama realizes the Commodores are making the same in media rights revenue as the Crimson Tide. 

Yes, something has to give. 

It begins with asking the central question raised by this story: Will either TCU or Vanderbilt make the cut if — or when — college football consolidates further?

To get the answer, think of college football as a long-term investment. 

Who’s in?  

College Sports

Flashback 100: Scane’s Record-Setting Lacrosse Run Began at Cranbrook Kingswood

A four-year varsity standout at Bloomfield Hills Cranbrook Kingswood, Izzy Scane rewrote the MHSAA record book for her sport while leading the Cranes to four MHSAA Finals appearances and two championships from 2015-18. She scored at least three goals in all four of those title-deciding games, with seven goals in a thrilling 17-16 double-overtime win […]

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A four-year varsity standout at Bloomfield Hills Cranbrook Kingswood, Izzy Scane rewrote the MHSAA record book for her sport while leading the Cranes to four MHSAA Finals appearances and two championships from 2015-18.

She scored at least three goals in all four of those title-deciding games, with seven goals in a thrilling 17-16 double-overtime win over East Grand Rapids in the 2017 Division 2 Final and five goals with an assist in an 18-6 championship win over Okemos as a senior in 2018.

Her 461 career goals stood as the state record until 2024, and she still holds the record for career points with 577, combining 461 goals and 116 assists over 93 games. In total, she is listed 14 times in the MHSAA record book.

After high school, Scane starred at Northwestern University. She helped the Wildcats reach five NCAA Tournaments, with the Wildcats winning the Division I national title in 2023 and finishing runners-up in 2024. She played in national semifinals her other three seasons.

Scane’s college career also was record-setting. In 2021, she led the nation with 6.12 goals per game, scoring 98 in just 16 games — still the best goals-per-game average in NCAA history. In 2024, she broke the NCAA Division I career goals record, finishing with 376 and 483 points over 84 games. She surpassed the previous goals record of 358 set by Charlotte North and ended as the second-highest point scorer in NCAA history. She also holds multiple NCAA championship tournament records, including most career goals with 63 and most career points with 86.

Scane was named winner of the Tewaaraton Award — the top honor in college lacrosse — in both 2023 and 2024. She also earned Big Ten Attacker of the Year three times and was recognized with numerous All-America honors.

After college, she was selected first overall in the 2024 Athletes Unlimited Lacrosse college draft and played in that league until it ended after her first season. She now plays in the Women’s Lacrosse League.

Previous “Flashback 100” Features

May 8: Duckett’s High School Domination Extended to Shot Put Circle – Read 
May 6: 
MHSAA Titles Just Start for NCAA Champion, Olympian Stark – Read
May 1: 
Legendary Actor Played Multiple Sports Roles at Country Day – Read
April 23: 
Legacy Program Provided Start for Pioneering NBA Official Schroeder – Read
April 11: 
Rice’s Championship-Winning Ways Started at Flint Northwestern – Read
March 28:
 Youngquist’s Times Still Among MHSAA’s Fastest – Read
March 18: After 40 Years, Coles’ Shot Remains Among Century’s Most Famous – Read
March 7: 
Walled Lake Northern’s Hellebuyck Reigns as NHL’s Elite Netminder – Read
Feb. 27: Zeerip’s Mat Stats Remain Rarely-Challenged Chart Toppers – Read
Feb. 21: Before TV Stardom, Kerwin Excelled as All-State Skier – Read
Feb. 14: Detroit Central Star Voted into Pro Football Hall of Fame – Read
Feb. 6: Multi-Sport Star Look Becomes Super Bowl Officiating Legend – Read
Jan. 31: Johnson Family Put Magical Stamp on Michigan High School Hoops – Read
Jan. 24: Future Hall of Famers Face Off First in MHSAA Class A Final – Read
Jan. 17: First-Ever WNBA Draft Pick Rocked at Salem, Won Titles at Tennessee – Read
Jan. 10: Despite Launching Before 3-Point Line, Smith Still Tops Scoring List – Read
Jan. 3: Edison’s Jackson Earns Place Among State’s All-Time Elite – Read
Dec. 20: Future Olympian Piper Leads Grosse Pointe North to Historic Heights – Read
Dec. 13: 
The Other Mr. Forsythe in Michigan School Sports – Read
Dec. 6: 
Coleman’s Legendary Heroics Carry Harrison Through Repeat – Read
Nov. 29: Harbaugh Brothers’ Football Roots Planted in Part at Pioneer – Read
Nov. 22: 8-Player Football Finals Right at Home at Superior Dome – Read
Nov. 15: 
Leland Career Helps Set Stage for Glass’ International Stardom – Read
Nov. 8: Future Baseball Pro Led Escanaba’s Legendary Football Title Run – Read
Nov. 1: Michigan High School Baseball Trio Provide World Series Voices – Read
Oct. 25: Before Leading Free World, Ford Starred for Champion GR South – Read
Oct. 18: Mercy Links Legend Becomes World Golf Hall of Famer – Read
Oct. 11: Fisher Races to Finals Stardom on Way to U.S. Olympic First – Read
Oct. 4: Lalas Leaves High School Legacies on Ice & Pitch – Read
Sept. 27: Tamer’s History-Making Run Starts in Dexter, Continues to Paris – Read
Sept. 20: 
Todd Martin’s Road to Greatness Starts at East Lansing – Read
Sept. 13: 
James Earl Jones, Dickson High Hoops to Hollywood Legend – Read
Sept. 6: 
Pioneers’ Unstoppable Streak Stretches 9 Seasons – Read
Aug. 30: Detroit dePorres Rushes to 1995 Class CC Football Championship – Read 

(Football photo courtesy of Michigan State University.)



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Fried ’25 finishes men’s lacrosse career with all-America team honor

Story Links 2025 USILA Division III Men’s All-America Team Hamilton College goalie Jack Fried ’25 (Larchmont, N.Y./Mamaroneck HS) was selected for the 2025 U.S. Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association (USILA) Division III Men’s All-America Team on Thursday, May 22 when the organization announced their award […]

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Hamilton College goalie Jack Fried ’25 (Larchmont, N.Y./Mamaroneck HS) was selected for the 2025 U.S. Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association (USILA) Division III Men’s All-America Team on Thursday, May 22 when the organization announced their award winners.

Fried, who made the second team in 2024, was one of 15 goalies who received honorable mention recognition. Players selected for all-American were nominated by their coach and then received votes from the All-American Committee.

Fried played in the USILA Division III Men’s Senior All-Star Game for the North team on Friday, May 23. He finished the season with a 10.98 goals against average, a .543 save percentage and 175 saves in 14 starts. Fried ended up with exactly 500 career saves — just the fifth goalie in Hamilton men’s lacrosse history to reach the milestone.

Fried registered 16 stops twice in back-to-back conference wins against Trinity College and Williams College. He turned away 13 shots, including one with 4.5 seconds left in the fourth quarter, in a 12-11 victory against conference opponent Connecticut College. Fried made 15 saves in an overtime setback at Bowdoin College in a 2025 New England Small College Athletic Conference championship quarterfinal.

 



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Tennessee’s AD just dropped a bombshell and It could change college sports forever

SEC AD says the only way forward for college athletics is collective bargaining If you’re a fan of college athletics—especially here in the heart of Big Blue Nation—you’ve probably felt the ground shifting under your feet. And now, Tennessee athletic director Danny White just confirmed what many feared and others suspected: “Collective bargaining… is the […]

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SEC AD says the only way forward for college athletics is collective bargaining

If you’re a fan of college athletics—especially here in the heart of Big Blue Nation—you’ve probably felt the ground shifting under your feet. And now, Tennessee athletic director Danny White just confirmed what many feared and others suspected:

“Collective bargaining… is the only solution.”

Charlie Baker

Senate Judiciary Committee Holds Hearing On Sports Gambling In U.S. | Kevin Dietsch/GettyImages

That’s not just a hot take. That’s a full-on detonation of the NCAA’s traditional model.

White, alongside University of Tennessee Chancellor Donde Plowman, is sounding the alarm as the House v. NCAA settlement barrels toward final approval. And if their words prove prophetic, college sports could be on the verge of becoming something unrecognizable.

Let’s break down what’s going on—and why it could matter as much to Kentucky basketball fans as the Final Four itself.

What is collective bargaining, anyway?

Think labor union.

Collective bargaining is when a group of workers—usually through a union—negotiate with their employer as a group. The goal? Better pay, better benefits, and better treatment.

Instead of every athlete trying to secure their own NIL deal or fight for medical care alone, they’d have unified representation. It’s how teachers, factory workers, and professional athletes hammer out contracts.

So what White is really saying is this:

Let’s make the NCAA the employer. Let’s make athletes employees. Let’s negotiate a binding contract for everyone.

That’s a seismic shift.

Why now? House v. NCAA and the $2.8 Billion ticking time bomb

Donald Trump

President Trump Welcomes 2025 NCAA Basketball Champion Florida Gators To The White House | Alex Wong/GettyImages

The call for collective bargaining comes just as the NCAA prepares to settle three landmark lawsuits—House, Hubbard, and Carter v. NCAA—in a deal worth $2.8 billion over 10 years. That deal would compensate past athletes denied NIL revenue and let schools share up to 22% of their annual revenue—around $20-22 million per school—with current players.

That sounds like a win, right?

Well, not exactly.

Critics say the deal:

  • Imposes a salary cap that could be illegal.
  • Fails to protect women’s sports or non-revenue athletes.
  • Limits fair-market NIL deals via a new regulatory clearinghouse.
  • Reduces scholarship opportunities, replacing them with “roster limits.”
  • Was negotiated without direct athlete input.
  • Favors big schools.

Even if U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken signs off—which appears likely—the lawsuits won’t stop. Lawyers are lining up for more already before it even becomes official. The Department of Justice is watching. And no one knows where the new rules will land.

White’s message is clear: This patchwork system is broken. Let’s build a new one.

But collective bargaining isn’t simple folks.

Turning college sports into a unionized labor force brings its own massive complications, including:

  • Who’s in the union? Just football and basketball players? Or every athlete, from gymnastics to golf?
  • Are athletes now employees? If so, what about their scholarships, taxes, and transfer freedom?
  • Title IX nightmares. Equal pay under employment laws could spark lawsuits from every corner.
  • School-by-school chaos. Will Kentucky negotiate a different deal than Florida or Alabama?
  • Who represents the athletes? NIL collectives? New unions? The NCAA’s not exactly trusted here.
  • And what happens if an athlete goes on strike before the NCAA Tournament?

The potential for chaos is real—but so is the potential for progress.

What it means for Kentucky and the SEC

Kentucky has always operated like a blue-blood NBA franchise in March and a southern football school in October. But with revenue-sharing, NIL regulations, and employment classifications in play, schools like UK may have to rethink everything about how they build rosters, fund Olympic sports even more, and even recruit.

Mitch Barnhart

Kentucky’s Big Blue Madness | Andy Lyons/GettyImages

Mark Pope’s Wildcats may benefit from a clearer, more structured compensation model—especially as ticket sales and TV money continue to grow. But it could also limit flexibility and bring unexpected legal challenges to Rupp Arena’s doorstep.

So what say you, BBN?

Do you want college sports to work like the pros?
Do you trust the NCAA, or anyone, to enforce a fair system for everyone?
Or is collective bargaining—the kind Danny White is calling for—the only real path forward?

We’re entering a new era of college athletics. The question is no longer if change is coming—but how much, and how fast.

And for once, Kentucky might not be able to dribble past the politics after all. Interesting times indeed.



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Cowboys Wrap Up Day One Of NCAA Action

Round 1 Results CARLSBAD, Calif. – Oklahoma State’s men’s golf team posted a 5-over 293 during the first day of play at the NCAA Championship on Friday to stand in a tie for 14th place at the Omni La Costa Resort and Spa. The second-ranked Cowboys finished the day in a five-way tie for their positioning […]

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Round 1 Results

CARLSBAD, Calif. –

Oklahoma State’s men’s golf team posted a 5-over 293 during the first day of play at the NCAA Championship on Friday to stand in a tie for 14th place at the Omni La Costa Resort and Spa.

The second-ranked Cowboys finished the day in a five-way tie for their positioning at the par-72, 7,480-yard layout. OSU will begin its second round four shots outside of the top 10.

Sophomore Preston Stout led the way for OSU individually, posting a 1-under 71 to come in tied for 25th place. Starting on the back nine, Stout bogeyed two of his first five holes before carding birdies at the 15th and 18th to get back to even for the day. He would sandwich a bogey at the third with birdies at the second and fourth to stand at 1-under for the day with five to play.

Stout posted his fifth birdie of the day at the sixth before carding a bogey at the seventh on his way to a 1-under 35 on his second nine of the day.

Sophomore Ethan Fang also posted five birdies during his round before ultimately signing for a 1-over 73 to share 47th place.

Sophomore Eric Lee’s 74 tied him for 63rd place.

Freshman Filip Fahlberg-Johnsson and sophomore Gaven Lane each signed for 3-over 75s to finish the day tied for 79th place.

OSU will begin its second round tomorrow at 8:30 a.m. (CST) and will be grouped with Auburn and Ole Miss. Live scoring is available at scoreboard.clippd.com.

 



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Technology Exhibits Preview, Part 2

SVG College Summit 2025 is fast approaching and attendees will enjoy the opportunity to browse an exhibit hall loaded with the latest sports-specific production gear aimed directly at the needs of collegiate athletics video content creators. In the days leading up to the Summit, SVG is highlighting the Technology Exhibits on display at the Hyatt Regency […]

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SVG College Summit 2025 is fast approaching and attendees will enjoy the opportunity to browse an exhibit hall loaded with the latest sports-specific production gear aimed directly at the needs of collegiate athletics video content creators.

In the days leading up to the Summit, SVG is highlighting the Technology Exhibits on display at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Atlanta on May 28-29. Support our sponsors and visit the SVG College Summit Technology Showcases on Wednesday, May 28 from 2:00 – 7:00 p.m. and Thursday, May 29 from 8:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m.

CLICK HERE TO SEE THE FULL EXHIBITOR LIST

Kokusai Denki

BOOTH #304

KOKUSAI DENKI has been manufacturing Broadcast Cameras under the Hitachi Brand for 60+ years. We are very excited to have rebranded our division back to our original name of KOKUSAI DENKI. Offering the “Best Price to Performance” in broadcast camera technology remains the same for many years to come.

Lawo

BOOTH #112

Lawo is a global technology partner with a long history of delivering innovative solutions for live media production workflows. Visit us at Stand 112 to discover how the agility of HOME Apps can benefit your facility. And don’t miss our case study about the University of Nebraska’s road to IP!

LiveU

BOOTH #204

Take your athletics coverage to the next level and stream every sport. LiveU revolutionizes how athletics departments in schools of any size produce and distribute live content. No more cabling cameras, dealing with small press boxes, fibering venues or worrying about bandwidth limitations. Start offering your coaches and athletics departments the ability to stream every sport, wherever it is using our Lightweight Sports Production solution.

Lumen

BOOTH #314

Lumen Vyvx Broadcast Solutions power the world’s top media companies with seamless video services. From live sports to nonstop news, our comprehensive video transport solutions ensure flawless delivery, leveraging our cutting-edge fiber backbone and global edge network. Experience the future of broadcasting with Lumen Vyvx!

Mobile TV Group

BOOTH #316

Mobile TV Group is the most innovative live production facility designer, builder, and provider in the U.S., with a strong focus on technology and engineering. We now offer the Edge series, a turnkey software and cloud based production solution to fulfill all of your production needs and requirements.

MyCaseBuilder

BOOTH #221

MyCaseBuilder creates high-quality custom foam inserts for hard cases and hundreds of other needs, with exceptional customer service at every step. You can design your foam with our easy online desktop app or rely on our ProDesign team. From single cases to large orders, we’re here to deliver precision and care. Custom foam perfected.

Riedel Communications

BOOTH #210

Riedel Communications designs, manufactures, and distributes pioneering real-time video, audio, data, and communications networks for broadcast, pro audio, event, sports, theater, and security applications. The company also provides rental services for radio and intercom systems, event IT solutions, fiber backbones, and wireless signal transmission systems that scale easily for events of any size, anywhere in the world. Riedel is headquartered in Wuppertal, Germany and employs over 1000 people in 30 locations throughout Europe, Australia, Asia, and the Americas.

Sony

BOOTH #214

About Sony Electronics’ Imaging Products and Solutions – Americas Sony offers legendary imaging tools ranging from Alpha full-frame to their award-winning Cinema Line, PTZ and Super 35mm System Cameras with global shutter, giving creators the ultimate in versatility and flexibility to help them create their storytelling through new and creative ways and from unique vantage points.

Tata Communications Media

BOOTH #110

Tata Communications Media are demonstrating our college ecosystem based live production, fan engagement, MAM and playout solutions to save money, create better workflows and generate more revenue.

Telestream

BOOTH #211

For nearly thirty years, Telestream has been at the forefront of innovation in the digital video industry. The company develops products for media processing and workflow orchestration, live capture, production, live streaming, video quality assurance, virtual events and video hosting, content management and video and audio test solutions.

Teradek

BOOTH #320

Teradek, a Videndum plc brand, designs and manufactures high-performance, award-winning video solutions for live situational awareness and broadcast production. From wireless video transmission and live video contribution, to SaaS solutions for interagency collaboration, Teradek technology is used around the world to securely capture and distribute ultra-low latency video for mission-critical applications.

The Studio – B&H

BOOTH #216

Explore The Studio B&H’s hybrid ST 2110 workflow for college sports production. Featuring broadcast and robotic cameras plus baseband to ST 2110 converters, these scalable IP solutions support live streaming, in-venue production, and remote workflows. Deliver professional-grade results from the field to the control room with seamless IP integration.

Vislink

BOOTH #218

Vislink is a global leader in live video and data communication technology – delivering reliable, secure transmissions. Specializing in premium RF and 5G transmitters and receivers, wireless live video broadcast encoders and decoders, and AI technology to provide cutting-edge solutions for seamless video transmission and reception. Trusted by defense, public safety, and broadcasters worldwide, Vislink technology is relied upon to provide business and mission critical live video at the point of need.

Vizrt

BOOTH #208

Vizrt is the leader in real-time graphics and live production solutions for content creators. With 25 years of innovation across news, sports, entertainment, and beyond, Vizrt has reshaped how video is created and shared. Enabling more stories, better told—with craft, vision, and powerful tools trusted by the world’s top media brands.

VOGO

BOOTH #306

VOGO NA is pleased to sponsor and exhibit at the SVG College Summit. Visit Booth 306 to see VOKKERO’s trusted officiating audio systems and VOGO’s innovative, cost-effective video review solutions used by NCAA and FIFA. Together, they deliver reliable, conference-ready communication and replay technology. For more info, visit www.vogo-group.com or contact Bob D’Ostilio at [email protected] or 203-271-2885.

Wave Central

BOOTH #217

Wave Central delivers dependable wireless video solutions built for live sports. From campus productions to championship broadcasts, our gear ensures reliable, low-latency performance. Stop by to explore tools that simplify setup, enhance mobility, and elevate your broadcast—from the field to the control room.

For more on the SVG College Summit, visit the event’s website.



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Fried ’25 selected to play in men’s lacrosse senior all-star game

Story Links 2025 USILA Division III Senior All-Star Game Roster Watch Live Hamilton College goalie Jack Fried ’25 (Larchmont, N.Y./Mamaroneck HS) was selected for the 2025 U.S. Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association (USILA) Division III Men’s Senior All-Star Game North roster […]

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Hamilton College goalie Jack Fried ’25 (Larchmont, N.Y./Mamaroneck HS) was selected for the 2025 U.S. Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association (USILA) Division III Men’s Senior All-Star Game North roster on Thursday, May 22 when the USILA announced the game’s rosters.

The game is scheduled for Friday, May 23 at Roger Williams University in Bristol, R.I., and starts at 4 p.m.

Fried was one of two goalies on the North roster. He was a USILA honorable mention all-American and all-NESCAC first team honoree in 2025. Fried finished the season with a 10.98 goals against average, a .543 save percentage and 175 saves in 14 starts. He ended up with exactly 500 career saves — just the fifth goalie in Hamilton men’s lacrosse history to reach the milestone.

 



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