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(Reuters) -A U.S. judge on Friday granted final approval to a $2.8 billion settlement with the National Collegiate Athletic Association that will allow schools for the first time to compensate student ...
The landscape of college sports has been altered forever. For the first time in the history of collegiate athletics, ...
The groundbreaking case leading to the transformation of college sports in the United States comes nearly five years after ...
The NCAA doesn't have an anti-trust exemption that protects it from those challenges. Artificially placing a cap on someone's ...
NCAA member schools can compensate players across all sports beginning July 1, according to approval issued by U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken.
The House v. NCAA settlement was officially ratified on Friday, clearing the way for universities to directly pay athletes ...
A federal judge in California gave final approval to the $2.8 billion settlement between the NCAA, major conferences and former players. As a result, schools will be able to directly pay athletes.
SUNY Ulster golfers Jessie Rodriguez and Austin Uhl are halfway through the 72-hole National Junior College Athletic ...
The general shared a secret: Prior to attending West Point, he played professional baseball in the Kansas State League under ...
This could be one of the final compelling showdowns in the form we’ve come to know as college athletics moves toward a post-House settlement world.
Methods Cross-sectional analysis of the 2021–2022 National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) myPlaybook survey on 3317 athletes (aged ≥18 years). The survey captured self-reported demographics, ...