Congress, college sports
Digest more
3h
SB Nation on MSNColorado Buffaloes prepare to enter revenue-sharing era of college athleticsCollege athletics have officially entered uncharted territory. After the landmark decision by Judge Claudia Wilken in the House vs. NCAA Settlement case, colleges will be able to share up to $20.5 million of earned revenue with their student-athletes per year.
The House settlement has set the stage for revenue-sharing between universities and their athletes. Here's a look at what the settlement means moving forward.
As the future of college athletics goes through a dramatic change, the University of Colorado is prepared to go all-in.
On the latest Wolverine Confidential podcasts, we discuss how the House vs. NCAA settlement could affect Michigan athletics.
Conference commissioners lauded a judge's approval of a $2.8 billion antitrust lawsuit settlement as a means for bringing stability and fairness to an out-of-control college athletics industry.
The multi-billion dollar settlement will create revenue sharing and NIL enforcement, but it won’t stop legal challenges to the NCAA system.
Commissioners of the Power Five conferences pledged to follow the rules set down in the House settlement that is reshaping college athletics.
Seeley has a decade of experience in compliance, enforcement, investigations and policy-making at MLB, along with eight years at the DOJ.
The specter of private equity money has loomed as a possibility for funding college athletics programs for a while now. Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark floated the possibility of private equity entering the college sports world last summer and he was only one of multiple conference commissioners to do.