NCAA, House
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Starting July 1, athletic departments will be able to compensate athletes directly from their revenues. Here's how the settlement of House v. NCAA will impact NCAA Division I schools.
Commissioner Teresa Gould said the conference is discussing how to allocate revenue across sports under the terms of the House antitrust lawsuit settlement.
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WCMH Columbus on MSNWhy the House v. NCAA settlement doesn’t settle everythingThe landscape of college sports will officially change forever on July 1 as schools start paying players through revenue sharing. This is a direct result of three lawsuit settlements between athletes who want to be paid and the NCAA.
The Crimson Tide's baseball program will be subject to changes along with the rest of the college sports world.
Clemson University athletes will be paid revenue directly by the school in addition to third-party NIL income. Here's how the new system works.
The Boilermakers' coach used a comparison to professional sports when explaining the difference between revenue-sharing and name, image and likeness.
In their first extensive comments since Judge Claudia Wilken approved the House v. NCAA settlement last week, the commissioners of the five listed defendants -- the ACC, Big 12, Big Ten, Pac-12 and SEC -- expressed hope that the new revenue-sharing world it created will bring stability to what has been a tremendous period of upheaval within college athletics.
The newly formed College Sports Commission features commissioners of the ACC, Big 12, Big Ten, Pac-12 and SEC.