OrangeXtreme
The Mayor of Dewitt
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Or, Congressional intervention"But this case," Kavanaugh stresses, "involves only a narrow subset of the NCAA's compensation rules." He says he is writing to "underscore that the NCAA's remaining compensation rules also raise serious questions under the antitrust laws." (This is from SCOTUS Blog site chat.) It's being interpreted there as: "Justice Kavanaugh's concurrence pretty much begs for a case challenging the remaining NCAA rules (compensation)."
“To a certain extent, the Supreme Court ruling is a bit of a sideshow,” Alan told me. “The real change that’s going to affect most athletes playing now is coming a week from Thursday.” |
That’s when at least six states — Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, New Mexico and Texas — will enact laws allowing college athletes to profit from their names, images and likenesses. A player could, for example, sign an endorsement deal, sell autographs or host a training camp. |
Endorsements are fine. What will cause real problems is any greater movement toward paying players directly. That's going to raise the bar for entry high enough that some schools will drop out, IMO. And there is a bad optic associated with that outcome as well.Another interesting wrinkle (pasted from another article). Critics are saying schools from those states will have an unfair recruiting advantage. We are very early in this evolution
“To a certain extent, the Supreme Court ruling is a bit of a sideshow,” Alan told me. “The real change that’s going to affect most athletes playing now is coming a week from Thursday.”
That’s when at least six states — Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, New Mexico and Texas — will enact laws allowing college athletes to profit from their names, images and likenesses. A player could, for example, sign an endorsement deal, sell autographs or host a training camp.