What should’ve happened a long time ago is finally happening.
Colleges and universities, the ones benefitting from multi-billion dollar television contracts, will be allowed to directly pay athletes (in all sports), beginning on July 1.
There are limitations and an enforcement body will be formed, but the people who actually play games that earn conferences (and by extension its schools) billions of dollars through TV contracts alone will finally get a piece of that pie.
This is a historic moment in college sports, but don’t rest easy. This is only the beginning.
Here are the main highlights of the settlement approval:
Some of those points will lead to legal challenges, including some federal antitrust lawsuits which the NCAA is hoping the federal government will bail them out of.
Then there’s a question of are athletes school employees? Could there be a Title IX lawsuit if women’s sports hardly receive any money? Do student-athletes need to form a union (which can’t be done unless they’re employees)? Will the CSC actually be able to enforce rules?
Finally, the biggest question of them all, how will people attempt to cheat the system?
We know it’s going to happen. Right now, it’s too murky to guess how, but someone will try and, more than likely, succeed. The CSC will be the entity responsible and stopping that all of that, but good luck.
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