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The college football cash grab: everyone feast while you can whether it is coaches, players, conferences, schools or anybody else involved in sport.
Investigation: Post-grad football lures unsigned high-school graduates with a second shot at college glory. They rarely get it. They rarely get it. The league was supposed to mitigate that problem.
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 ...
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 ...
The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) oversees rules related to student athletes who play in their athletics programs. These athletic programs are generally seen as revenue generation for the individual school, particularly for the popular college football and basketball programs which are widely televised and marketed.
Committee on Infractions head for the NCAA, Greg Sankey, stated "While student-athletes likely benefited from the so-called 'paper courses' offered by North Carolina, the information available in the record did not establish that the courses were solely created, offered and maintained as an orchestrated effort to benefit student-athletes."
An estimated $1.67 billion was spent in 2024 on student-athletes, according to a report from Opendorse, an NIL tech company. Nearly all of that was for men's sports, including $1.1 billion spent ...
If you attend a Division I university, chances are you are bankrolling your school’s athletics department. Search our scorecards to find out by how much. The Huffington Post & The Chronicle of Higher Education