Current:Home > NewsDamages to college athletes to range from a few dollars to more than a million under settlement -Aspire Money Growth
Damages to college athletes to range from a few dollars to more than a million under settlement
View
Date:2025-04-18 04:15:32
Thousands of former college athletes will be eligible for payments ranging from a few dollars to more than a million under the $2.78 billion antitrust settlement agreed to by the NCAA and five power conferences, a deal that also paves the way for schools to directly compensate athletes while attempting regulate payments from boosters.
Details of the sprawling plan were filed Friday in federal court in the Northern District of California, a little more than two months after the framework of an agreement was announced. The deal must still be approved by a judge.
The full term sheet includes guidelines on roster caps for individual sports that will replace scholarship limits; how the new financial payments will be monitored and enforced to ensure compliance by schools; how third-party payments to athletes will be regulated; and how nearly $3 billion in damages will be doled out by the plaintiffs over the next 10 years.
Those payouts will vary drastically and are determined by sport played, when, how long and what conference an athlete competed in. While Division I athletes across all sports will be eligible to collect damages, the majority of damages is expected to go to football and basketball players from power conferences because those leagues and teams generate most of the revenue that comes from billion-dollar media rights contracts.
The deal covers three antitrust cases — including the class-action lawsuit known as House vs. the NCAA — that challenged NCAA compensation rules dating back to 2016. The plaintiffs claimed NCAA rules denied thousands of athletes the opportunity to earn millions of dollars off the use of their names, images and likenesses.
The NCAA lifted its ban on athletes earning money off their fame through endorsement and sponsorship deals in 2021.
The agreement does not settle the issue of whether college athletes should be deemed employees. The NCAA and college sports leaders continue to plead for help from Congress in the form of a federal law that would supersede state laws and allow the association and conferences to self govern without fear of future antitrust litigation.
“This settlement is an important step forward for student-athletes and college sports, but it does not address every challenge,” the commissioners of the Atlantic Coast Conference, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12, Southeastern Conference and NCAA President Charlie Baker said in a joint statement. “The need for federal legislation to provide solutions remains. If Congress does not act, the progress reached through the settlement could be significantly mitigated by state laws and continued litigation.”
While that help still seems unlikely to come soon — especially with a presidential election months away — college sports leaders hope the settlement can provide some certainty for schools and finally stem the constant legal attacks on its antiquated model of amateurism.
Paying athletes
The NCAA and conferences have agreed to amend their rules to permit a landmark compensation system that allows schools to share up to about $21 million in athletic revenues with their athletes annually, starting in 2025.
That number is derived from taking 22% of the average revenue generated through media rights contracts, tickets and other sources by power conference schools. The agreement will create an audit system that allows plaintiffs to monitor athletic revenue, which is expected to rise in the coming years as new media rights agreements kick in for conferences and the College Football Playoff.
Athletes are projected to receive $1.5 billion-$2 billion annually.
All athletes will be eligible to receive the new financial benefits, but each school will be permitted to determine how they want to divvy up the money among sports. How exactly Title IX gender equity rules apply is still unclear and will require federal clarification. How schools comply with Title IX will be the responsibility of each institution.
Scholarships and rosters
Replacing scholarship limits with roster caps could mean even more athletic scholarship opportunities in Division I.
Most notably, major college football teams will now be permitted to have 105 player on scholarship instead of the current 85, though schools will no longer be required to give full scholarships to every football player.
Partial scholarships have been used in some sports for years, but will now be permitted in all.
The roster caps for baseball (34), softball (25) and volleyball (18) will also allow for a significant jump in the number of scholarships schools can provide in those sports, though schools will not be required to meet the cap.
NIL deals and oversight
NCAA rules have been tweaked recently to allow schools to be more involved in providing NIL opportunities for college athletes, but they will still be allowed to strike deals with third parties.
A new voluntary reporting system for deals that surpass $600 is scheduled to start next month. The NCAA is creating a public database that it hopes will allow athletes to assess fair market value.
Booster-funded NIL collectives have become a common way athletes are compensated, but now those deals with be subject to review through an arbitration process.
Damage payments
The plaintiffs in the House case are responsible for doling out damages. Included in Friday’s filing was a chart breaking down the categories of eligible athletes along with four different types of payouts they could be in line to receive.
According to the plaintiffs, about 19,000 power conference football players and men’s basketball players will be in line to receive an average of $91,000, with payments ranging from $15,000 to $280,000 just for what is referred to broadcast name, image and likeness.
Some of those same athletes could also be in line for tens of thousands of dollars more related to lost opportunities to earn NIL money while in college and what is deemed by the plaintiffs as pay-for-play. Plaintiffs’ lawyers say a few athletes will be eligible to receive upward of $1 million.
Next steps
Plaintiffs’ attorneys say they will file a motion for preliminary approval and — if granted — a public website will go up in about two months where former college athletes can determine how much they are eligible to receive.
Still, the settlement is months away from final approval. There will be an opportunity for athletes who are members of the plaintiffs’ class to object to the settlement and ask to be excluded. Already one school, Houston Christian, has objected — though the judge denied its request to intervene.
___
Follow Ralph D. Russo at https://twitter.com/ralphDrussoAP
___
AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/college-football
veryGood! (4)
Related
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- Léon Marchand completes his dominating run through the Paris Olympics, capturing 4th swimming gold
- Does the alphabet song your kids sing sound new to you? Here's how the change helps them
- Brittney Griner on Paul Whelan, Evan Gershkovich being released: 'It's a great day'
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- 2024 Olympics: What Made Triathlete Tyler Mislawchuk Throw Up 10 times After Swim in Seine River
- Léon Marchand completes his dominating run through the Paris Olympics, capturing 4th swimming gold
- Netflix announces release date for Season 2 of 'Squid Game': Everything you need to know
- Sam Taylor
- 'You're going to die': Shocking video shows Chick-fil-A worker fight off gunman
Ranking
- Who's hosting 'Saturday Night Live' tonight? Musical guest, how to watch Dec. 14 episode
- When does Simone Biles compete next? Olympic gymnastics event finals on tap in Paris
- Attorneys for man charged with killing Georgia nursing student ask judge to move trial
- Periodic flooding hurts Mississippi. But could mitigation there hurt downstream in Louisiana?
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Olympian Kendall Ellis Got Stuck in a Porta Potty—& What Came Next Certainly Doesn't Stink
- Election 2024 Latest: Harris raised $310M in July, new poll finds few Americans trust Secret Service
- First two kickoff under NFL’s new rules are both returned to the 26
Recommendation
NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
When does the Pumpkin Spice Latte return to Starbucks? Here's what we know.
French pharmacies are all the rage on TikTok. Here's what you should be buying.
An assassin, a Putin foe’s death, secret talks: How a sweeping US-Russia prisoner swap came together
Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
Who were the Russian prisoners released in swap for Paul Whelan, Evan Gershkovich?
Love and badminton: China's Huang Yaqiong gets Olympic gold medal and marriage proposal
Surgical castration, ‘Don’t Say Gay’ and absentee regulations. New laws go into effect in Louisiana