Historic House v. NCAA settlement gets final approval, allowing schools to pay college athletes

Date:

By Ralph D. Russo, Stewart Mandel and Justin Williams

A federal judge Friday granted final approval of the House v. NCAA settlement, a watershed agreement in college sports that permits schools to directly pay college athletes for the first time.

The settlement, which resolves a trio of antitrust cases against the NCAA and its most powerful conferences, establishes a new 10-year revenue sharing model in college sports, with athletic departments able to distribute roughly $20.5 million in name, image and likeness (NIL) revenue to athletes over the 2025-26 season. Previously, athletes could earn NIL compensation only with outside parties, including school-affiliated donor collectives that have become instrumental in teams’ recruiting.

The NCAA and the power conferences (ACC, Big 12, Big Ten, Pac-12 and SEC), as defendants in the settlement, also agree to pay nearly $2.8 billion in damages to Division I athletes who were not allowed to sign NIL deals, dating back to 2016. The damages will be paid out over 10 years, with most of the money expected to go to former power-conference football and men’s basketball players.

Universities can begin directly sharing revenue with college athletes starting July 1.

A public letter from NCAA president Charlie Baker described the settlement’s…

Read more…

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Share post:

Latest News

More like this
Related

Fantasy women’s basketball: Courtney Vandersloot shining, Skylar Diggins slowing down

Eric MoodyJun 6, 2025, 11:30 AM ETCloseEric Moody is...

WNBA: When will the Sun, Wings finally get another win?

Another double dose of Commissioner’s Cup games...