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As athletes begin sharing in the revenue, the next decade will determine whether they gain real negotiating power. Part 1 of ...
One Pack is no longer in charge of paying players or brokering deals. Here's how it still plays a part in N.C. State's NIL ...
The House settlement that was supposed to have calmed the college sports waters has done nothing but churn them. Here are four bullet points to know.
Now finalized, the much-anticipated antitrust settlement in House v. NCAA will introduce a new era of college athletics with ...
Booster collectives will be able to continue paying college athletes, but with restrictions, after an agreement between the plaintiff’s attorneys in the House vs. NCAA settlement and the new ...
Deal on 'valid business purpose' avoids threat of college NIL settlement heading back to court Texas quarterback Arch Manning (16) reacts during an NCAA college football practice in Austin, Texas ...
All NIL transactions with a total value of $600 or more must be reported to the newly created College Sports Commission. The commission was set up to oversee the new system under the settlement.
A House subcommittee advanced legislation that seeks to address recent seismic changes in how college athletes are compensated.
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! According to the terms of the House settlement, each school can now share up to about $20.5 million with their athletes. "Financially, with revenue ...
The $20.5 million expense via the House vs. NCAA settlement is affecting the U and other major college programs.