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While college sports awaits a final ruling on the House settlement, the newly formed "NIL Go" will soon start regulating deals made with players. Will schools and collectives play by the new rules ...
As schools prepare to pay college athletes for the use of their name, image and likeness, details of proposed NIL contracts have been revealed. Sports newsletter šŸˆ's best, via šŸ“§ Studio IX ...
NIL collectives could continue operating outside of athletic departments under the settlement, and college athletes could still sign third-party NIL agreements, whether with collectives or outside ...
As the first class who were freshman under NIL privileges, which were instated July 1, 2021, are now ready to graduate, the college sports landscape is a chaotic one. Not only did it change the ...
What exactly is NIL? "NIL" stands for "name, image and likeness." It refers to a person's legal right to control how their image is used, including commercially. In college, ...
NBA star John Wall shares why he’s glad he missed the NIL era at Kentucky, even though he could’ve made millions. Find out what he said and what’s next for the Wildcat legend.
NIL money is reshaping how college athletes view the need to go pro, with many earning more in school than as rookies. Here’s how it’s changing college sports.
There are no rules in the NIL right now,ā€ Donner said. ā€œI can give you $6 million and Michigan can come back and give you $7 million. It’s a buyer’s market.
The NIL market gives athletes potentially more time to develop before going pro. If they can still make decent money in college, they don’t have to sacrifice their degree to make a living.
Bill Paulos, the head of UNLV’s name, image and likeness collective, talks to the Review-Journal about NIL and its importance to the university’s future.
Despite Jackson getting an NIL deal on day one and D1 Training partnering with a handful of high school athletes since it became legal in Tennessee, the landscape has not really blown up for high ...