House V. NCAA settlement doesn't settle everything
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Commissioners of the Power Five conferences pledged to follow the rules set down in the House settlement that is reshaping college athletics.
As colleges prepare for sweeping changes tied to the NCAA's $2.8 billion NIL settlement, proposed scholarship and roster limits will dampen college opportunities for high school athletes.
Administrators at Villanova, Temple, St. Joe's, La Salle, and Drexel expressed optimism about the new system. As an Ivy League school, Penn could not opt in to the House settlement.
Sam Webb and Steve Lorenz talk summer NIL and NCAA settlement in Michigan LB recruiting
Name, image and likeness will have a new look at Ohio State. Just days after the landmark House v. NCAA court settlement was approved, allowing colleges to share revenue directly with athletes, Ohio State’s department of athletics and its partner,
Appeal would not challenge the going-forward aspects of the settlement, including schools being allowed to pay athletes directly for NIL.
A federal judge’s final approval of the NCAA’s $2.8 billion settlement with student-athletes won’t quell all the antitrust threats for the sports organization as it seeks to provide stability in college sports.
A new general manager, varied and unique funding sources, and a focus on punching above their weight.
Welcome to the end of amateurism—and the chaotic beginning of whatever comes next. In the wake of a landmark antitrust settlement, House v. NCAA, the college