Understanding the House Settlement, Revenue Sharing and NIL
- The College Sports Commission was created to oversee the implementation of the House settlement.
- As of July 1, institutions such as Florida, Florida State, and UCF were allowed to begin offering revenue sharing to athletes.
- A $20.5 million obligation to athletes will strain even the richest athletic programs.
- Athletes who transfer may risk losing a portion of their earnings.
41 Articles
41 Articles
Analysis: What to know about Mizzou as revenue sharing takes effect - The Examiner
By Eli Hoff St. Louis Post-Dispatch COLUMBIA, Mo. — College sports’ latest watershed moment is here. There’s been a growing flow of change related to… Login to continue reading Login Sign up for complimentary access Sign Up Now Close The post Analysis: What to know about Mizzou as revenue sharing takes effect appeared first on The Examiner.
USF’s Fowler Avenue ‘isn’t going anywhere’ despite NIL changes
Corey Staniscia didn’t need a court ruling to see where college sports were headed. Long before a federal judge approved the House v. NCAA settlement on June 6, Staniscia saw what was coming — a future where schools, not just collectives, could pay athletes directly. So, as the CEO and co-founder of the Fowler Avenue […] The post USF’s Fowler Avenue ‘isn’t going anywhere’ despite NIL changes appeared first on The Oracle.

Understanding the House settlement, revenue sharing and NIL
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