NCAA, College Sports
Digest more
Top News
Overview
Impacts
As colleges prepare for sweeping changes tied to the NCAA's $2.8 billion NIL settlement, proposed scholarship and roster limits will dampen college opportunities for high school athletes.
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.
Sam Webb and Steve Lorenz talk summer NIL and NCAA settlement in Michigan LB recruiting
Female athletes filed an appeal challenging the NCAA settlement and claiming it would unfairly distribute $2.7 billion to benefit football and men's basketball.
Administrators at Villanova, Temple, St. Joe's, La Salle, and Drexel expressed optimism about the new system. As an Ivy League school, Penn could not opt in to the House settlement.
Welcome to the end of amateurism—and the chaotic beginning of whatever comes next. In the wake of a landmark antitrust settlement, House v. NCAA, the college
The College Sports Commission is designed to regulate the NIL market but won’t have subpoena power to control rogue boosters.
The push from the NCAA and Power Five conferences to enact federal legislation regarding college sports is intensifying. House representatives Lisa McClain (R-Mich.)and Janelle Bynum (D-Ore.) introduced the “College Student-Athlete Protections and Opportunities through Rights,