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The $2.8 billion settlement of three athlete-compensation antitrust cases against the NCAA and Power Five conferences is set ...
President Donald Trump is considering an executive order that would require federal authorities to clarify whether college athletes can be considered employees of their schools.
It is unclear if or when such an executive order will be formalized, but Trump has considered executive action on college ...
Opinion: Segal McCambridge's Carla Varriale-Barker and Ryan Musleh write that a win for student-athletes created a ...
Now, power conference schools are allowed to directly pay their student-athletes following the settlement of the House vs. NCAA antitrust cases. The settlement, which was approved on June 13 by a ...
Under the settlement agreement, the NCAA and Power Five Conferences will pay college athletes more than $2.5 billion for use of their NIL going back to 2016, and the NCAA will allow schools to ...
The settlement, covering hundreds of thousands of current and former students since 2016, resolved three lawsuits that claimed NCAA rules barring payments to athletes violated U.S. antitrust law.
After months of delays and negotiations, a final agreement has been reached in the House v. NCAA antitrust settlement case. It is no exaggeration to say this settlement changes the entire ...
A bipartisan group from the U.S. House of Representatives announced they introduced a bill that would establish national ...
NCAA $2.8 billion antitrust settlement. “I think we’ve been coming to this point for quite some time now that Judge Claudia Wilken [on June 6] signed the settlement,” Christensen said.
The NCAA House settlement, which was approved on June 13 by a federal judge in California, sets the stage for a tidal wave of confusion.
The NCAA House settlement, which was approved on June 13 by a federal judge in California, sets the stage for a tidal wave of confusion. Search query. Search. News. Finance. Sports. More-1.