How college sports are preparing for ‘seismic change,’ including revenue sharing and new roster limits
- Judge Wilken will preside over the final House vs. NCAA settlement hearing on Monday.
- The settlement addresses NIL and revenue sharing, responding to changes in college sports.
- The agreement includes $2.8 billion in back damages for missed NIL opportunities.
- Mark Jackson said, "Hey, we're not just going to survive this. We're going to thrive in this."
- If approved, universities could directly share revenue with athletes starting this summer.
44 Articles
44 Articles

McKewon: Nebraska can win big in revenue-sharing era — even if settlement goes awry
The revenue-sharing era seems near, and Nebraska football is in position to win big — even if a key piece of the NCAA settlement goes awry, writes Sam McKewon.
NCAA athletes earn millions in NIL deals. But who supports them when the tax bill comes due?
The rights of SC student-athletes to profit from the commercial use of their name, image and likeness is a driving force for college athletic programs. But with millions of dollars in paychecks, who's supporting these players when the tax bill…
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