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A common refrain exists in most discussions regarding the potential right for NCAA college athletes to be paid for their services: the argument that college are already paid by virtue of their receipt of in-kind benefits including room and board, daily meals, and a full athletic scholarship. According to these commentators, college athletes do ...
Jason Stahl, executive director of the College Football Players Association advocacy group, says lawmakers should create a special status for college athletes that would give them the right to ...
If athletes are deemed employees, Phillips believes universities can pay athletes in sports that make revenue (football and basketball) and then, to satisfy Title IX, would pay an “equivalent ...
The newest arms race in major college athletics is name, image and likeness or NIL compensation. In practice, NIL policy rests on the hyphen of the phrase “student-athlete,” a compromise of ...
Over the past five years, students have paid nearly $90 million in mandatory athletic fees to support football and other intercollegiate athletics — one of the highest contributions in the country. A river of cash is flowing into college sports, financing a spending spree among elite universities that has sent coaches’ salaries soaring and ...
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Since the turn of the 21st century, a debate has arisen over whether college athletes should be paid. [55] Although the earliest of star athletes were known to have received a variety of types of compensation (including endorsement fees), benefits to college athletes outside of academic scholarships have largely been prohibited under NCAA ...
The legal landscape seems increasingly receptive to the idea that college athletes should be compensated for the profits they produce for schools.