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NCAA asking Feds how to split $22M in direct compensation between Mens & Women's programs

Rags to Roses

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Smart to ask for help before getting sued. I suspect they will still get sued, but at least they won't have the U.S. government trying to take them down.

NCAA president seeks federal help for 'national standard' on Title IX as questions mount with House settlement

Charlie Baker is looking to the government for "guidance" over Title IX concerns


ATLANTA – NCAA president Charlie Baker is looking to the federal government for help in solving one of the most pressing questions surrounding the landmark $2.8 billion House antitrust settlement.

How Title IX fits into the House settlement, which will pave the way for a new collegiate revenue-share model if approved, has loomed over college athletics since agreed to in May. Title IX requires universities to provide equal opportunities for male and female athletes, which has typically been reflected in the number of scholarships offered to each.

With schools opting into a revenue-share model expected to cost approximately $22 million annually, how that number will be split up amongst the athletes has prompted great debate. In speaking to college athletes at the NIL Summit at the College Football Hall of Fame, Baker preferred a federal solution – likely from the Department of Education – rather than the NCAA telling its member institutions what to do.

"This is a really hard question for schools to answer on their own for a whole bunch of reasons. The biggest one most schools have said to us is ... the rules around equity when it comes to Title IX and around men's and women's sports ought to be relatively consistent from school to school and conference to conference," Baker said. "That's going to require a national standard. If we create a national standard at the NCAA, the problem with that would be if anybody doesn't like it one way or the other ... it would be challengeable in court.

"What we really need on this one, in particular," Baker continued, "is the feds to give us guidance that says this is what a national standard with respect to Title IX and rev share should look like."

To this point, the Department of Education has yet to weigh in on the Title IX implications of the deal. Without federal guidance, it could mirror how schools approached name, image and likeness, ultimately coming down to risk tolerance on what is permissible -- or, at least, legally defensible. In the early stages of figuring out what that'll look like (should it go into effect for the 2025-26 season), schools are already taking different paths.

"Some schools have already said they're going to assume the Title IX mandates they give are 50 (percent) to female, 50 (percent) to male based on their student body makeup," said Mit Winter, an NIL expert and sports lawyer at Kennyhertz Perry. "Other schools are not going to make that assumption and will probably decide football is generating most of this broadcast revenue, and they have a higher NIL value based on that, so we are going to give more to football players and basketball players and some other amount to men's sports and women's sports. It's really going to be up to each school based on legal advice from their general counsel and outside counsel on how they are going to approach Title IX."

A big issue, as Baker alluded to, is either path could come with legal challenges. If, for instance, a school splits the $22 million evenly amongst men and women athletes, it could prompt football players to sue if they aren't receiving enough compensation relative to the revenue they generate for the schools. Expect a conference-level push for uniformity among members if there isn't a federal answer. It's not difficult to envision the potential issues if one Big Ten school is spending 80% of that $22 million on football while another is only doing 50%.

Baker, who faced a series of questions from college athletes as part of a town hall format, said the House settlement "still has some steps," namely completing a longform agreement to be submitted to court, but it is expected to be approved "between now and the end of the year." The NCAA and the Power Five agreed to a settlement with the plaintiffs, but it will need to be approved by Judge Claudia Wilken before it goes into effect. Len Simon, who has worked on class-action suits since 1974, told CBS Sports' Dennis Dodd recently Wilken's approval "is not a foregone conclusion."

There has already been one legal challenge to the settlement from Houston Christian University, a FCS school, which filed a motion last week arguing its interests were not well represented in the House settlement. Last month, multiple Group of Five and FCS leaders voiced opposition to the settlement, believing they were saddled with an inequitable share of the settlement costs despite little input in the discussions.

https://www.cbssports.com/college-f...-ix-as-questions-mount-with-house-settlement/
 
Congress does need to set up guidelines but I don't know that I trust them to do the right thing. The fairest way would be to total up all athletes at each school and divided that into $22m. Each athlete would receive the same amount of dollars no matter what sport they are in.
 
I’m hoping the $22 million gets divided amongst the fans. Almost like a loyalty check. Or, damages awarded for pain and suffering.
To qualify, you have to have season tickets to both of the revenue earning sports. Next, those fans having bought season tickets for decades get a higher share of the distribution than, say, the guy or gal who is a newbie. If you just split it evenly between, for example, 15,000 fans who buy season packages, that’s $1,700+ per ticket holder.
Let the athletes rake in their dough with the NIL.
 
This comment from the Memphis AD on direct compensation illustrates the risks for athletic departments following the House settlement:

"I'm really concerned, honestly moving forward, about Title IX," Scott said. "If you split it up a certain way, you have a chance of getting sued for Title IX infractions, because we're a public institution that receives federal funding, but if you don't give enough for football and men's basketball, you could be sued that way too. So I think you're damned if you do, damned if you don't."

Lawsuits on the left, lawsuits on the right... The lawyers will be the big winners

https://www.commercialappeal.com/st...ent-american-athletic-conference/74248803007/
 
If you started your daughter off in youth sports around 10 years ago and worried about saving for her college education you possibly can breathe a huge sigh of relief.

She's a a good athlete now and on track to get that scholly and after 4 or 5 years can earn potentially a million bucks playing, along with that free education.

If that money sticks, there's going to be a rush on girls youth sports to grab every dollar their parents are willing to spend for advanced training, etc., travel ball style.
 
If you started your daughter off in youth sports around 10 years ago and worried about saving for her college education you possibly can breathe a huge sigh of relief.

She's a a good athlete now and on track to get that scholly and after 4 or 5 years can earn potentially a million bucks playing, along with that free education.

If that money sticks, there's going to be a rush on girls youth sports to grab every dollar their parents are willing to spend for advanced training, etc., travel ball style.
Wow, great point. I hadn't thought about the increased demand for female youth sports coaching, etc. Spot on.
 
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BTW, with last week's Supreme Court decision changing the Chevron Deference for Federal Agency policy making, I think the dynamics of the direct compensation split between men's and women's sports have changed. At least on the margin, the Feds have lost power to rule on/influence new issues while the courts are in a stronger position to make policy. As a result, I think there is an increasing likelihood that the allocation of direct compensation will mirror the share of money brought into the Athletic Departments...something closer to the distribution of the damages in the House Anti-Trust settlement.
 
BTW, with last week's Supreme Court decision changing the Chevron Deference for Federal Agency policy making, I think the dynamics of the direct compensation split between men's and women's sports have changed. At least on the margin, the Feds have lost power to rule on/influence new issues while the courts are in a stronger position to make policy. As a result, I think there is an increasing likelihood that the allocation of direct compensation will mirror the share of money brought into the Athletic Departments...something closer to the distribution of the damages in the House Anti-Trust settlement.
Makes sense. Would be a huge boost to football.
 
Bureaucracies have wrongly been setting policy. Legislatures are supposed to establish all policy decisions. Courts only make rulings on policy.
Absolutely true, I worded that very poorly. Thanks for correcting me.

I think if the judge in the House case goes along with the settlement, we could see that allocation being seen as a precedent for future court challenges.
 
This is one of the biggest piles of muck that has ever been created for college sports. Reading the interview with Bobinski, that $22 is more like a STARTING point, and is (and will be) a moving (translation; escalating) target. In this age of 33 trillion dollar deficits and $80 billion dollar Cali trains that go nowhere, 22 million may be spoken of as chump change, but it isn't. Only a handful of Universities will be able to absorb that kind of a annual hit to their bottom line, and even they will struggle. I see the post above about Adidas putting their logo on a football field; I think many Universities will scramble and offer naming rights for stadiums and arenas (ugh) but the problem is two fold, that's just extra income to go after and it has to be shared across ALL sports for both sexes. It will become a viscous circle of coming up with more ways to pay the bills only to have those solutions tossed in as additional student revenue streams.
 
Interesting article on ESPN as more details come out, see below. A few things that stuck out: still no clarity on how the revenue share will be distributed by sport (conferences may take the lead on this), they're trying to reduce pay for play with NIL (good luck), and lawyers want a lot of fees.

Answering the 10 biggest questions about the NCAA antitrust settlement

Dan Murphy, ESPN Staff Writer Jul 28, 2024

The future structure of major college sports is starting to come into sharper focus.
The proposed details for how college athletes will likely be paid in the future were published Friday evening in an extensive court filing in Northern California. The changes are part of a pending legal settlement that would resolve a trio of looming antitrust lawsuits filed against the NCAA and its five wealthiest conferences.
The proposed settlement has two main functions. First, former athletes (dating back to 2016) are eligible to receive part of a $2.78 billion pool of damages. Second, the terms lay out the framework for paying players directly, along with rules designed to try to keep the wealthiest schools from gaining an even larger competitive edge than they already have.
To help digest the 100-plus pages of legal filings, we've distilled what we know about the settlement into 10 questions covering what it could mean for athletes, schools and fans.

When will players start to be paid?​

If all goes according to plan, college athletes will be getting paid by their schools by this time next year.
The settlement still needs to be approved by a judge, and current college athletes will have several months to learn what it means for them and decide if they want to object to any of the terms.
The tentative schedule looks like this:
Early October: Athletes begin to receive details about how the settlement will impact them.
Mid-January: Deadline for athletes to submit any objections or opt out.
Mid-March: Judge Claudia Wilken makes final ruling on the settlement.
Summer 2025: Schools begin to sign deals with athletes.

How much will schools pay their players?​

At the start, schools will be able to spend a maximum of $23.1 million in additional money, according to projections shared in the settlement terms. That is in addition to the tuition, stipends and other benefits schools already provide players every year.

The new revenue sharing payments will come in the form of contracts in which schools purchase the rights to use their athletes' name, image and likeness (NIL). Schools won't be required to spend any money, but most athletic departments in the power conferences are expected to approach the limit to stay competitive in recruiting.
The cap will increase on a yearly basis during the 10-year-long settlement agreement. The number automatically grows 4% every year. It will also increase as the revenue generated by college sports grows. An economist hired by the plaintiffs' attorneys projected that the cap would increase roughly $1 million each year, ending at $32.9 million per school by the 2034-35 academic year.

How did the sides land on $23.1 million?​

The spending limit is based on a formula that gives athletes 22% of the money the average power conference school makes from media rights deals, ticket sales and sponsorships. The money athletic departments make by collecting fees from the general student body or from donations is not included in the formula.
Athletes in major American pro sports leagues get about half the revenue their sport generates. Lawyers for both the NCAA and the plaintiffs say that when combined with the money schools already spend on scholarships, medical care and other benefits, the 22% revenue share figure will give athletes at many power conference schools roughly half of what the athletic department makes on a yearly basis.
However, that formula treats all athletes the same despite football and basketball bringing in the overwhelming majority of an athletic department's earnings. There were a dozen football teams that reported more than $100 million in revenue on their own last season. Even if the players on those teams receive every dollar of the new revenue share money -- and they won't -- those athletes will still be getting considerably less than half of what they generate.

How will this money be split among athletes?​

Each school will be able to decide how to divide its pot of money among athletes.
It's not clear how Title IX laws will apply to the money, and the settlement terms provide no guidance in that area. TCU basketball player Sedona Prince -- one of the lead plaintiffs in the case and a prominent advocate for gender equity during her college career -- told ESPN she thinks any increase in scholarship or medical benefits should be split equally between men and women but that revenue share dollars should be distributed based on a sport's popularity.
"I think we should sport-by-sport," Prince said. "Title IX has closed the gap so much. It's a necessity in college sports and college life in general. But the facts are the facts. College football makes a massive amount of money compared to the rest of the sports."
Prince said she hopes athletes on each campus will be able to be part of a negotiation when their schools are deciding how much money they will spend and how to split it up among the athletes. She is working with a group called Athletes.org that is attempting to organize chapters of athletes on many college campuses to help them negotiate with their schools for many items, including a say in how the new revenue share money will be distributed.

Will NIL collectives still be able to pay athletes as well?​

During the past three years, most of the money college athletes make has come from NIL collectives -- groups of boosters who are ostensibly paying players for their NIL rights, but in practice are using that money to pay players for their performance. The most well-funded collectives are distributing between $15 million and $20 million annually, according to industry sources, and the vast majority goes to football players.
The NCAA negotiated to include several terms in the settlement with hopes of ending collective payments that aren't for actual endorsements. Along with a clause that says booster payments to athletes must be for "a valid business purpose," the settlement also gives the NCAA power to create future rules to close any unforeseen loopholes "designed to defeat or circumvent" the prohibition on booster payments.
Collectives will be able to provide NIL payments to players if the NCAA deems them to be legitimate endorsement compensation. The settlement states that the association will create a clearinghouse to collect data about all NIL deals to help them assess which are legitimate.
College sports attorneys who aren't involved in the settlement and NIL collective operators remain skeptical that the NCAA will be able to effectively (and legally) prevent boosters from spending money aimed at making their teams better.

How will these new rules be enforced?​

The settlement terms put the court in charge of making sure all parties adhere to the new rules. The court is also likely to appoint a special master to rule on any disputes. The settlement creates an appeals system for athletes or schools to ask an arbitrator to review any future decisions about these new rules. This would be a significant departure from the current enforcement system, administered by NCAA employees.
The plaintiffs' attorneys -- Steve Berman and Jeffrey Kessler -- will be responsible for making sure the schools are properly reporting their revenue throughout the 10-year agreement. They also will be responsible for staying in touch with college athletes throughout that time to make sure schools honor the agreement and that incoming athletes understand their rights. The settlement terms say the lawyers can rely on advocacy groups such as the National College Players Association and Athletes.org to represent the view of athletes.

What's happening with walk-ons and scholarships?​

In the interest of removing as many universal caps on compensation as possible, the NCAA and conferences also agreed to get rid of the current rules that limit the number of scholarships allowed for each team. To keep the richest teams from stockpiling players, the NCAA will instead make rules that limit roster size.
The settlement terms include specific roster limits for 45 different sports. Football teams will be limited to 105 players on a roster. Men's and women's basketball teams can have 15 players each.
Current NCAA rules limit football teams to 120 players during the season, and only 85 of them can receive a scholarship. In the future, all 105 players on the team would be able to receive a scholarship. While schools aren't required to give all of the players a scholarship, many coaches raised concerns this summer that the new rules would eliminate walk-ons. Each school will get to decide how many of its players it puts on scholarship.

What if athletes decide they don't like the terms of the settlement?​

All athletes will have an opportunity this fall to object to certain terms or opt out fully. If they opt out, they will retain the right to sue the NCAA in the future for other alleged antitrust violations. The terms state that if a certain number of athletes decide to opt out, the NCAA and conferences can back out of the settlement. The number of athletes needed to trigger that option was redacted in the public version of the documents.
Prince, who spoke to ESPN prior to viewing the details of the settlement, said she trusts Berman and Kessler to negotiate the best possible terms for athletes, but added that she would view the information critically and rely on other "checks and balances" to decide whether she thinks the result is a fair deal for athletes. Prince said the coming year is a crucial time for athletes to remain vigilant and make sure they have a say in how the framework laid out in this agreement is implemented moving forward.
"For athletes, it's time to wake up and become educated in this," she said. "It's going to be better for the NCAA too if all of us come together and for us to kind of work together. I hope that they understand that. I hope that athletes understand that. Right now is the time for us to join and to figure this out, or it's just going to be the same [legal battles] over and over again."
The settlement also states that the terms of the deal do not preclude athletes from collectively bargaining for more rights in the future if that opportunity arises.

Who gets a piece of the $2.78 billion in damages?​

Along with the future payments to athletes, the NCAA has agreed to compensate former athletes for the money they might have otherwise made during their career. All athletes who played Division I sports from 2016 through the present are eligible to receive some of that money. The 2016 cutoff date is due to the statute of limitations on antitrust claims.
Football and men's basketball players from power conference schools will be eligible to get an average of $135,000, Berman said. Women's basketball players from power conferences could receive an average of $35,000. The likely payout for athletes from other sports will depend on how many enter claims.
For some, payouts will also be based in part on the athlete's potential earning power had they been able to sign NIL deals while in school. Berman said the highest individual estimated payout for one athlete will be $1.8 million.
Berman and Kessler's law firms also requested to receive nearly $500 million (slightly less than 20 percent of the damages) for their fees and to cover their expenses. The lawyers also proposed receiving roughly 1 percent of the money schools pay players during the next 10 years. According to projections in the settlement, that would net the lawyers an estimated $12 million to $25 million per year as the spending increases.

Does this mark the end of the NCAA's legal problems?​

No. The NCAA is still involved in multiple court battles to try to prevent athletes from being deemed employees of their schools. NCAA leaders have been asking members of Congress to write a federal law saying that college athletes aren't employees and codifying some of the rulemaking ability included in the settlement.
NCAA president Charlie Baker said earlier this summer he hoped this settlement would provide momentum for a federal bill.

Link to Article
 
Interesting article on ESPN as more details come out, see below. A few things that stuck out: still no clarity on how the revenue share will be distributed by sport (conferences may take the lead on this), they're trying to reduce pay for play with NIL (good luck), and lawyers want a lot of fees.

Answering the 10 biggest questions about the NCAA antitrust settlement

Dan Murphy, ESPN Staff Writer Jul 28, 2024

The future structure of major college sports is starting to come into sharper focus.
The proposed details for how college athletes will likely be paid in the future were published Friday evening in an extensive court filing in Northern California. The changes are part of a pending legal settlement that would resolve a trio of looming antitrust lawsuits filed against the NCAA and its five wealthiest conferences.
The proposed settlement has two main functions. First, former athletes (dating back to 2016) are eligible to receive part of a $2.78 billion pool of damages. Second, the terms lay out the framework for paying players directly, along with rules designed to try to keep the wealthiest schools from gaining an even larger competitive edge than they already have.
To help digest the 100-plus pages of legal filings, we've distilled what we know about the settlement into 10 questions covering what it could mean for athletes, schools and fans.

When will players start to be paid?​

If all goes according to plan, college athletes will be getting paid by their schools by this time next year.
The settlement still needs to be approved by a judge, and current college athletes will have several months to learn what it means for them and decide if they want to object to any of the terms.
The tentative schedule looks like this:
Early October: Athletes begin to receive details about how the settlement will impact them.
Mid-January: Deadline for athletes to submit any objections or opt out.
Mid-March: Judge Claudia Wilken makes final ruling on the settlement.
Summer 2025: Schools begin to sign deals with athletes.

How much will schools pay their players?​

At the start, schools will be able to spend a maximum of $23.1 million in additional money, according to projections shared in the settlement terms. That is in addition to the tuition, stipends and other benefits schools already provide players every year.

The new revenue sharing payments will come in the form of contracts in which schools purchase the rights to use their athletes' name, image and likeness (NIL). Schools won't be required to spend any money, but most athletic departments in the power conferences are expected to approach the limit to stay competitive in recruiting.
The cap will increase on a yearly basis during the 10-year-long settlement agreement. The number automatically grows 4% every year. It will also increase as the revenue generated by college sports grows. An economist hired by the plaintiffs' attorneys projected that the cap would increase roughly $1 million each year, ending at $32.9 million per school by the 2034-35 academic year.

How did the sides land on $23.1 million?​

The spending limit is based on a formula that gives athletes 22% of the money the average power conference school makes from media rights deals, ticket sales and sponsorships. The money athletic departments make by collecting fees from the general student body or from donations is not included in the formula.
Athletes in major American pro sports leagues get about half the revenue their sport generates. Lawyers for both the NCAA and the plaintiffs say that when combined with the money schools already spend on scholarships, medical care and other benefits, the 22% revenue share figure will give athletes at many power conference schools roughly half of what the athletic department makes on a yearly basis.
However, that formula treats all athletes the same despite football and basketball bringing in the overwhelming majority of an athletic department's earnings. There were a dozen football teams that reported more than $100 million in revenue on their own last season. Even if the players on those teams receive every dollar of the new revenue share money -- and they won't -- those athletes will still be getting considerably less than half of what they generate.

How will this money be split among athletes?​

Each school will be able to decide how to divide its pot of money among athletes.
It's not clear how Title IX laws will apply to the money, and the settlement terms provide no guidance in that area. TCU basketball player Sedona Prince -- one of the lead plaintiffs in the case and a prominent advocate for gender equity during her college career -- told ESPN she thinks any increase in scholarship or medical benefits should be split equally between men and women but that revenue share dollars should be distributed based on a sport's popularity.
"I think we should sport-by-sport," Prince said. "Title IX has closed the gap so much. It's a necessity in college sports and college life in general. But the facts are the facts. College football makes a massive amount of money compared to the rest of the sports."
Prince said she hopes athletes on each campus will be able to be part of a negotiation when their schools are deciding how much money they will spend and how to split it up among the athletes. She is working with a group called Athletes.org that is attempting to organize chapters of athletes on many college campuses to help them negotiate with their schools for many items, including a say in how the new revenue share money will be distributed.

Will NIL collectives still be able to pay athletes as well?​

During the past three years, most of the money college athletes make has come from NIL collectives -- groups of boosters who are ostensibly paying players for their NIL rights, but in practice are using that money to pay players for their performance. The most well-funded collectives are distributing between $15 million and $20 million annually, according to industry sources, and the vast majority goes to football players.
The NCAA negotiated to include several terms in the settlement with hopes of ending collective payments that aren't for actual endorsements. Along with a clause that says booster payments to athletes must be for "a valid business purpose," the settlement also gives the NCAA power to create future rules to close any unforeseen loopholes "designed to defeat or circumvent" the prohibition on booster payments.
Collectives will be able to provide NIL payments to players if the NCAA deems them to be legitimate endorsement compensation. The settlement states that the association will create a clearinghouse to collect data about all NIL deals to help them assess which are legitimate.
College sports attorneys who aren't involved in the settlement and NIL collective operators remain skeptical that the NCAA will be able to effectively (and legally) prevent boosters from spending money aimed at making their teams better.

How will these new rules be enforced?​

The settlement terms put the court in charge of making sure all parties adhere to the new rules. The court is also likely to appoint a special master to rule on any disputes. The settlement creates an appeals system for athletes or schools to ask an arbitrator to review any future decisions about these new rules. This would be a significant departure from the current enforcement system, administered by NCAA employees.
The plaintiffs' attorneys -- Steve Berman and Jeffrey Kessler -- will be responsible for making sure the schools are properly reporting their revenue throughout the 10-year agreement. They also will be responsible for staying in touch with college athletes throughout that time to make sure schools honor the agreement and that incoming athletes understand their rights. The settlement terms say the lawyers can rely on advocacy groups such as the National College Players Association and Athletes.org to represent the view of athletes.

What's happening with walk-ons and scholarships?​

In the interest of removing as many universal caps on compensation as possible, the NCAA and conferences also agreed to get rid of the current rules that limit the number of scholarships allowed for each team. To keep the richest teams from stockpiling players, the NCAA will instead make rules that limit roster size.
The settlement terms include specific roster limits for 45 different sports. Football teams will be limited to 105 players on a roster. Men's and women's basketball teams can have 15 players each.
Current NCAA rules limit football teams to 120 players during the season, and only 85 of them can receive a scholarship. In the future, all 105 players on the team would be able to receive a scholarship. While schools aren't required to give all of the players a scholarship, many coaches raised concerns this summer that the new rules would eliminate walk-ons. Each school will get to decide how many of its players it puts on scholarship.

What if athletes decide they don't like the terms of the settlement?​

All athletes will have an opportunity this fall to object to certain terms or opt out fully. If they opt out, they will retain the right to sue the NCAA in the future for other alleged antitrust violations. The terms state that if a certain number of athletes decide to opt out, the NCAA and conferences can back out of the settlement. The number of athletes needed to trigger that option was redacted in the public version of the documents.
Prince, who spoke to ESPN prior to viewing the details of the settlement, said she trusts Berman and Kessler to negotiate the best possible terms for athletes, but added that she would view the information critically and rely on other "checks and balances" to decide whether she thinks the result is a fair deal for athletes. Prince said the coming year is a crucial time for athletes to remain vigilant and make sure they have a say in how the framework laid out in this agreement is implemented moving forward.
"For athletes, it's time to wake up and become educated in this," she said. "It's going to be better for the NCAA too if all of us come together and for us to kind of work together. I hope that they understand that. I hope that athletes understand that. Right now is the time for us to join and to figure this out, or it's just going to be the same [legal battles] over and over again."
The settlement also states that the terms of the deal do not preclude athletes from collectively bargaining for more rights in the future if that opportunity arises.

Who gets a piece of the $2.78 billion in damages?​

Along with the future payments to athletes, the NCAA has agreed to compensate former athletes for the money they might have otherwise made during their career. All athletes who played Division I sports from 2016 through the present are eligible to receive some of that money. The 2016 cutoff date is due to the statute of limitations on antitrust claims.
Football and men's basketball players from power conference schools will be eligible to get an average of $135,000, Berman said. Women's basketball players from power conferences could receive an average of $35,000. The likely payout for athletes from other sports will depend on how many enter claims.
For some, payouts will also be based in part on the athlete's potential earning power had they been able to sign NIL deals while in school. Berman said the highest individual estimated payout for one athlete will be $1.8 million.
Berman and Kessler's law firms also requested to receive nearly $500 million (slightly less than 20 percent of the damages) for their fees and to cover their expenses. The lawyers also proposed receiving roughly 1 percent of the money schools pay players during the next 10 years. According to projections in the settlement, that would net the lawyers an estimated $12 million to $25 million per year as the spending increases.

Does this mark the end of the NCAA's legal problems?​

No. The NCAA is still involved in multiple court battles to try to prevent athletes from being deemed employees of their schools. NCAA leaders have been asking members of Congress to write a federal law saying that college athletes aren't employees and codifying some of the rulemaking ability included in the settlement.
NCAA president Charlie Baker said earlier this summer he hoped this settlement would provide momentum for a federal bill.

Link to Article
Thanks for posting. As noted above, it's just creating a bigger pile of muck.
 
Regarding how the revenue share would be split between women's and men's sports, I asked a sports lawyer which opponent schools would want to face in court. He said colleges would rather face the Feds for a Title IX violation case than the lawyers for football players. If the football players sue it would be an anti-trust case so the cost of losing would be much greater than what they would face for Title IX violation. Assuming that is right, I expect the B1G will follow the SEC model of giving FB players ~75% of the money.
 
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Regarding how the revenue share would be split between women's and men's sports, I asked a sports lawyer which opponent would schools want to face in court. He said colleges would rather face the Feds for a Title IX case than the football players. If the football players sue it would be an anti-trust case so the cost of colleges losing much greater than what they would face for Title IX violation. Assuming that is right, I expect the B1G will follow the SEC model of giving FB players ~75% of the money.
This is supposed to start in 2025. I wonder what IU and other schools are communicating to recruits right now.

It really is incredible our $ available for player comp will go from around $4M now to approaching $20M. A whole new world.
 
Communication is a good question. There are so many policy questions to address...including how to distribute the $$ across the football team. I've heard it said that splitting it evenly across the team will cause a legal or tax issue (I don't remember which). If that is true, we will need to start thinking how we will allocate the money by position, by experience, etc.
 
If the football players sue it would be an anti-trust case so the cost of losing would be much greater than what they would face for Title IX violation. Assuming that is right, I expect the B1G will follow the SEC model of giving FB players ~75% of the money.
If that's the case, I think we're all about to find out who carries the bigger stick....the "optics" of gender discrimination or the Supremacy of "win at all costs" football. I have a feeling that decision has already been made by the SEC. Will be interesting to see how it plays out with the other Power 5 (4?) divisions.
 
Communication is a good question. There are so many policy questions to address...including how to distribute the $$ across the football team. I've heard it said that splitting it evenly across the team will cause a legal or tax issue (I don't remember which). If that is true, we will need to start thinking how we will allocate the money by position, by experience, etc.
I would think it will be allocated like NIL or any other comp -- generally according the the value of the player to the team.
 
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