The NCAA Board of Governors held a conference call Wednesday morning to discuss their ruling to allow college athletes to be compensated for endorsements. The rule will take effect before January to be ready in time for the 2021-2022 academic year. Following some brief comments by the Board, they took questions from reporters. Highlights from that Q&A are below, with the full release from the NCAA below that.
+ Athletes can now be compensated as social media influencers along with this approval. They can also make public appearances and be paid for that as well.
+ The Board understood the gravity of their recommendation and the impact that this will have on college athletics.
+ No, the video game probably isn’t coming back any time soon. During the call, the idea was called “unworkable.” From the full report linked in the release below: At this time, the working group is also not recommending any changes to NCAA rules to permit group licenses of student-athlete NIL in what are characterized as group products (like video games). There are legal hurdles to such activity that preclude it as a realistic option for implementation at this time. The working group recommends that the NCAA continue to explore whether those legal hurdles can be overcome through efforts described in Section VI, so that this issue can be revisited in 2021 or later.
+ The distinction needs to be maintained that student-athletes are not employees.
+ There will be attention paid to the market value of student-athletes in order to make sure payments made do not become inducements. Players are accountable to every dollar they receive in this and schools and the NCAA will be aware. There will be some subjectivity in dollar amounts for some players because that’s the market.
+ On why athletes can’t wear school logos or jerseys in an endorsement, athletes can make it known where they play, but the use of school gear is prohibited. There’s not much difference in the pro sports realm in this regard. You don’t necessarily see players in their uniforms when they are in a commercial selling insurance. By bringing in the intellectual property of uniforms and logos, it’s harder to keep that separation of employee/employer, which is why they will not allow intellectual property.
+ Boosters cannot be involved in the NIL during recruitment of a player. But any involvement after that is still being ironed out. “This has come up over and over again by our schools. It’s the source of the most concern.” The difficulty of it doesn’t mean they can’t get it figured out. They have to figure out how to regulate involvement. They do not want boosters involved in the recruitment of players.
+ There is no cap to what a player can earn, but there will be “guardrails.”
+ How will “influencing” be regulated? They are still answering these questions. They have talked a lot with the sports marketing world. They are at a level of comfort regarding having that information and having some regulations in place by January. Getting $50,000 to like a couple of things on social media probably isn’t the answer though. Through transparency, they will be able to monitor booster involvement and notice patterns. “So that at least is a starting point for how we can go about monitoring this.” It is also important to educate the student-athletes in this that if they engage in this and make too much, they could lose out on Pell Grants and things like that.
+ How will they monitor the agents? They are still working on that. How much staff increase will be needed? That is still being talked about. There will be costs associated with this because new staff will have to be created, but it would be a wild guess at this point.
The full release is below.
Board of Governors moves toward allowing student-athlete compensation for endorsements and promotions
The NCAA’s highest governing body has taken unprecedented steps to allow college athletes to be compensated for their name, image and likeness.
At its meeting this week, the Board of Governors supported rule changes to allow student-athletes to receive compensation for third-party endorsements both related to and separate from athletics. It also supports compensation for other student-athlete opportunities, such as social media, businesses they have started and personal appearances within the guiding principles originally outlined by the board in October.
While student-athletes would be permitted to identify themselves by sport and school, the use of conference and school logos, trademarks or other involvement would not be allowed. The board emphasized that at no point should a university or college pay student-athletes for name, image and likeness activities.
The board directed all three divisions to consider appropriate rules changes based on recommendations from its Federal and State Legislation Working Group.
“Throughout our efforts to enhance support for college athletes, the NCAA has relied upon considerable feedback from and the engagement of our members, including numerous student-athletes, from all three divisions,” said Michael V. Drake, chair of the board and president of Ohio State. “Allowing promotions and third-party endorsements is uncharted territory.”
The board’s recommendations now will move to the rules-making structure in each of the NCAA’s three divisions for further consideration. The divisions are expected to adopt new name, image and likeness rules by January to take effect at the start of the 2021-22 academic year.
The board is requiring guardrails around any future name, image and likeness activities. These would include no name, image and likeness activities that would be considered pay for play; no school or conference involvement; no use of name, image and likeness for recruiting by schools or boosters; and the regulation of agents and advisors.
The board’s action is the latest step by the Association to support college athletes and modernize its rules regarding name, image and likeness. In October, the board identified guiding principles to ensure that any changes support college sports as a part of higher education. Any changes adopted by the divisions must be in concert with the following principles and guidelines:
- Ensuring student-athletes are treated similarly to nonathlete students unless a compelling reason exists to differentiate.
- Maintaining the priorities of education and the collegiate experience to provide opportunities for student-athlete success.
- Ensuring rules are transparent, focused and enforceable, and facilitating fair and balanced competition.
- Making clear the distinction between collegiate and professional opportunities.
- Making clear that compensation for athletics performance or participation is impermissible.
- Reaffirming that student-athletes are students first and not employees of the university.
- Enhancing principles of diversity, inclusion and gender equity.
- Protecting the recruiting environment and prohibiting inducements to select, remain at or transfer to a specific institution.
The board relied on a comprehensive report from the Federal and State Legislation Working Group to inform its recommendations.
“The NCAA’s work to modernize name, image and likeness continues, and we plan to make these important changes on the original timeline, no later than January 2021,” said Gene Smith, Ohio State senior vice president and athletics director and working group co-chair. “The board’s decision today provides further guidance to each division as they create and adopt appropriate rules changes.”
In its report, the working group recognized that the rules needed to accomplish the modifications may differ by division and stressed the need for appropriate regulation in the future.
“As we evolve, the Association will continue to identify the guardrails to further support student-athletes within the context of college sports and higher education,” said Val Ackerman, commissioner of the Big East and working group co-chair. “In addition, we are mindful of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on higher education, college sports and students at large. We hope that modernized name, image and likeness rules will further assist college athletes during these unprecedented times and beyond.”
The board also discussed the potential challenges to modernizing rules posed by outside legal and legislative factors that could significantly undermine the NCAA’s ability to take meaningful action. As a result, it will engage Congress to take steps that include the following:
- Ensuring federal preemption over state name, image and likeness laws.
- Establishing a “safe harbor” for the Association to provide protection against lawsuits filed for name, image and likeness rules.
- Safeguarding the nonemployment status of student-athletes.
- Maintaining the distinction between college athletes and professional athletes.
- Upholding the NCAA’s values, including diversity, inclusion and gender equity.
The recommendations for federal engagement were provided by the Presidential Subcommittee on Congressional Action, which was formed as part of the Federal and State Legislation Working Group to provide input on the potential assistance the NCAA should seek from Congress.
“The evolving legal and legislative landscape around these issues not only could undermine college sports as a part of higher education but also significantly limit the NCAA’s ability to meet the needs of college athletes moving forward,” Drake said. “We must continue to engage with Congress in order to secure the appropriate legal and legislative framework to modernize our rules around name, image and likeness. We will do so in a way that underscores the Association’s mission to oversee and protect college athletics and college athletes on a national scale.”
Apples and oranges. The’re not the same. Qui bono? Who profited? So the band is not Ceaser’s wife? Just a scarlet trollop working the streets! Where does it all end? And that is my point! Where does this all end? A far cry from Old Ohio, Our Honor Defend!
I prefer that amateurs remain amateurs, and for those who wish to seek compensation rather than an education, a D league should be created. Players can either choose to earn a scholarship, attend classes, earn passing grades and play college athletics, or choose compensation and take their chances playing in a Developmental league with the hopes of making it to the big show.
Their is a lot of difference between an engineering student at Ohio State and, say, Justin Fields. The common denominator between the two is they are both students at Ohio State. But few people know the engineering student and all of Buckeye Nation knows Justin Fields and wants his autograph.
But if the engineering student designs a better mousetrap, sells the patent, and makes a million bucks, it doesn’t bother anyone. Ohio State would probably send out a PR release and put the student on materials advertising the quality of its engineering department. We celebrate things like that as a part of the greatness of America.
Justin Fields has immense value – but because he plays football, if he leverages that value in any way, he is a (fill in all the things TTUN fans say anyway). His value is temporary and variable. Justin doesn’t know if an injury could end his career or whether he will become a professional and have no limits on how he can cash in on his NIL. For all he knows, his value will never be higher than right now – but the powers that be tell him he can’t even leverage it for a free Big Mac meal. It’s really very unamerican in that context.
I get the avenues for cheating and recruiting inducements this opens up – and those are legitimate concerns that have to be addressed. But we need to try to make Justin more like the engineering student in terms of how he can leverage his value. A wise person once told me that the one answer to any human problem is transparency, responsibility, and accountability. The devil is always in the details of the systems you set up for those 3 things. But I gotta believe it’s possible. After all, this is ‘Merica. :0
The world has gone nuts. This is just one more example. The times are out of joint! I’ll always love the Marching Band. Can’t put a price on that tradition!
The same marching band that was in an Apple commercial six years ago? 🙂
Does anyone remember, I think it was Mike Tomczak back in the early ’80s, the suspension he received from the NCAA for having his picture on a calendar for some sort of charity. He received no compensation for this.
So what has changed since then?
Let us please hope that there will be NCAA football seasons in 2020 and 2021
I can’t even describe what a huge mistake this would be and the exceedingly huge can of worms this would open up. Nothing good for college football can come of this.
I agree with Randy..big can worms that doesn’t need opened up..will cause more issues than it solves…and PLEASE..these players have 6 figure tuitions PAID for for not even “working” full-time most of a year…they DO get paid and most of the players won’t even be in the majority of games….and yes I care about the players and have had sons participate in college sports on scholarship level and yes the ncaa entity is a joke on a corporate level..but let’s not pretend these athletes are getting nothing…this is a stupid decision…and bring back the dang NCAA football videogame!!
it’s ‘so twue’. NCAA Committe ofi the Wonderful will “allow” you, the inferior…
to be used however we… feel.
To do this, we will say whatever. Then whenever, say whatever we feel it means… for you.
so…
this is “Higher Educational Authority”?
mebbe a tad closer to a-low imposter, imposing as usual in the same ol’ game.
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Humor Search Committee Report
The competition was fiece, the inputs Diversity.
WINNER: QUOTE recommendations for federal engagement were provided by the Presidential Subcommittee on Congressional Action, which was formed as part of the Federal and State Legislation Working Group to provide input on the potential assistance the NCAA should seek from Congress UNQUOTE
LOLOLOLOLOLOLOL !