Starting a separate thread on this.
If the House settlement is approved following a court hearing on April 7, NIL as it exists today will change. Schools will be allowed to provide money directly to student-athletes through revenue sharing, with an annual cap of $20.5 million. Third parties who are “associated entities or individuals” (certain boosters and all collectives) will be allowed to provide NIL money to a student-athlete only for the actual business use of the student-athlete's name, image or likeness, and only at fair market value rates. Student-athletes will be required to disclose all NIL deals with third parties that are greater than $600. If the NIL deal is with a booster or collective, an entity will determine whether the amount paid exceeds fair market value. If it does, the NIL deal would be void, but could be renegotiated to a fair market value rate. A student-athlete would be able to appeal the decision through a neutral arbitration system.
This means that if the settlement is approved, big boosters and collectives would not be able to fund “pay-for-play” NIL deals, as they do now.
According to the Sports Illustrated article linked below, the Power 4 conferences have agreed to create a separate entity that would serve the following functions:
“First, it will oversee a cap management system, ensuring schools stay within the $20.5 million annual revenue-sharing limit. It will additionally establish an NIL clearinghouse, run by Deloitte, to assess the fair market value of NIL deals and prevent schools from using booster-backed collectives to bypass the cap. A new investigative and infractions unit will police violations, including tampering and salary cap circumvention. Penalties will include fines, revenue-share reductions, and suspensions for coaches and administrators. The power conferences believe this structure will prevent the chaos and unchecked spending wars that have defined the NIL era thus far.”
SI: Power Conferences to Take Over NIL Oversight as NCAA Forfeits Control
More details are provided here:
If the House settlement is approved following a court hearing on April 7, NIL as it exists today will change. Schools will be allowed to provide money directly to student-athletes through revenue sharing, with an annual cap of $20.5 million. Third parties who are “associated entities or individuals” (certain boosters and all collectives) will be allowed to provide NIL money to a student-athlete only for the actual business use of the student-athlete's name, image or likeness, and only at fair market value rates. Student-athletes will be required to disclose all NIL deals with third parties that are greater than $600. If the NIL deal is with a booster or collective, an entity will determine whether the amount paid exceeds fair market value. If it does, the NIL deal would be void, but could be renegotiated to a fair market value rate. A student-athlete would be able to appeal the decision through a neutral arbitration system.
This means that if the settlement is approved, big boosters and collectives would not be able to fund “pay-for-play” NIL deals, as they do now.
According to the Sports Illustrated article linked below, the Power 4 conferences have agreed to create a separate entity that would serve the following functions:
“First, it will oversee a cap management system, ensuring schools stay within the $20.5 million annual revenue-sharing limit. It will additionally establish an NIL clearinghouse, run by Deloitte, to assess the fair market value of NIL deals and prevent schools from using booster-backed collectives to bypass the cap. A new investigative and infractions unit will police violations, including tampering and salary cap circumvention. Penalties will include fines, revenue-share reductions, and suspensions for coaches and administrators. The power conferences believe this structure will prevent the chaos and unchecked spending wars that have defined the NIL era thus far.”
SI: Power Conferences to Take Over NIL Oversight as NCAA Forfeits Control
More details are provided here:
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