News

The College Sports Commission is designed to regulate the NIL market but won’t have subpoena power to control rogue boosters.
Ohio State’s athletic department is creating a Name, Image, and Likeness group for student-athletes in response to a ruling ...
The Post obtained copies of draft legislation from two House committees that addresses the priorities the NCAA has spent ...
Nearly all of the $20.5 million that Ohio State is allowed to share with athletes in the next academic year will be through ...
The NCAA's landmark settlement in the House case included a pool of roughly $2.8 billion to be set aside for former college athletes who weren't allowed to be c ...
Texas Governor Greg Abbott has signed House Bill 126 into law, a sweeping measure that allows the state's universities to ...
Just one day after Texas passed a bill letting athletes over 17 sign contracts with schools for NIL, the long-running House v ...
As schools prepare for the changes, here’s what the settlement means for Alabama. The most obvious change stemming from the ...