Deion Sanders slams current NIL deals
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A new college sports agency has rejected certain NIL deals involving donor-backed collectives. These collectives, formed to funnel money to athletes or schools, fail to meet NCAA rules requiring deals to serve a valid business purpose.
New CSC memo rejects donor-funded NIL contracts, leaving recruits in limbo and raising fresh antitrust questions.
College sports entered an entirely new, and entirely unprecedented, era on July 1 when the House v. NCAA settlement finally took effect. For the first time ever, schools can directly pay players for performance via revenue sharing contracts.
Mohajir spoke at the Big 12 Media Days to discuss revenue-sharing, NIL deals, uniforms, a Space Game trophy and international game.
College Football Has a New NIL Powerhouse and Coaches Are Calling it 'Ridiculous' originally appeared on Athlon Sports. As of July 1, schools are now able to pay their athletes directly, thanks to the June 6 House v. NCAA settlement.
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It officially ends any administrative restrictions to athletes’ NIL compensation within limits, but it allows schools and conferences to establish what is — and isn’t — permissible. Should the federal legislation pass, it would override current state NIL laws, which vary from border to border.
The bipartisan SCORE Act aims to establish a national standard for Name, Image, and Likeness in college sports.
Big 12 coaches sat in a roundtable setting, nodding in agreement that college athletics' NIL system is not just flawed, it's impossibly screwed up. FOX Sports' RJ Young details their proposed solution.
Third-party NIL rules were detailed in a memo to various athletics directors as deals have been rejected in new era of collegiate sports.
The bill would federally protect and recognize the ability of student-athletes to profit from their name, image and likeness.
The goal is to prevent schools from utilizing booster-driven entities to funnel payments to recruits and transfers.
Mike Gundy is finally coming around on NIL and revenue-sharing after years of hesitation, but the longtime Oklahoma State football coach didn't have much choice. Schools are now forced to adapt to the rapidly evolving college football landscape or risk being left behind.