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cover of episode The price of paying college athletes

The price of paying college athletes

2024/12/19
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Today, Explained

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Pablo Torre
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JP Acosta:NCAA及其成员大学长期以来一直反对将学生运动员视为雇员,这使得他们无法直接获得薪水。然而,NIL(姓名、形象和肖像权)规则的出现为运动员通过第三方交易获得报酬创造了机会。这导致了资金分配不均,资金雄厚的大学更容易吸引顶级运动员,而小型大学则面临人才流失的困境。NIL规则的缺乏联邦监管以及各州法律的差异进一步加剧了这种不平衡。此外,2025年即将实施的收益分成制度可能会进一步扩大大型学校与小型学校之间的差距,使大学体育更像职业体育,顶级人才集中在少数几所大学。 Pablo Torre:NCAA在运动员薪资问题上的法律诉讼中已经败诉,现在只能被动地接受NIL交易的现状。他们正在寻求国会通过反垄断豁免,以期能够控制收益分成以及运动员的权利,并阻止‘付费参赛’模式的全面实施。然而,鉴于NCAA的公众形象不佳,国会不太可能支持他们的请求。这场关于大学体育的争论反映了更广泛的政治和经济辩论,它超越了传统的政治分歧,甚至保守派和自由派人士在某些问题上也持有相似的观点。大学体育的未来取决于如何平衡运动员的权益与体育的传统魅力,如果大学体育完全商业化,可能会失去其独特的吸引力。

Deep Dive

Key Insights

Why are college athletes now getting paid, and where is the money coming from?

College athletes are getting paid due to the advent of Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) deals. This allows them to profit from their personal brand. The money isn't coming directly from universities, but rather from third-party boosters and collectives, often wealthy alumni, who are affiliated with the universities but not officially employed by them. For example, a reported $10 million deal for Bryce Underwood to commit to Michigan came partly from billionaire Larry Ellison, a Michigan booster.

Why is the NCAA resistant to paying college athletes directly?

The NCAA has long fought against classifying student-athletes as employees, which would require them to be paid directly by the universities. They argue that athletes receive compensation in the form of tuition, room and board, and other educational expenses.

How has NIL changed college sports?

NIL has created both positive and negative changes. It allows smaller schools with strong NIL collectives to retain talented players who might otherwise transfer to wealthier programs. However, it also exacerbates the financial imbalance between large and small schools, as wealthier programs can leverage their extensive alumni networks and resources to attract top talent through lucrative NIL deals.

What is the NCAA's strategy for maintaining control over college sports finances?

The NCAA is seeking an antitrust exemption from Congress. This would allow them to regulate how revenue is shared with athletes and maintain their classification as student-athletes, thereby avoiding employee status and associated worker rights.

What is the difference between NIL and "pay-to-play," and why is the NCAA concerned about the latter?

NIL deals are for marketing a player's image, while "pay-to-play" refers to paying athletes directly for their performance on the field. The NCAA is trying to prevent pay-to-play because it would solidify athletes' status as employees and further erode the traditional amateur model of college sports.

What are the potential downsides of unrestricted free market forces in college sports?

While increased athlete compensation is positive, an entirely free market system could transform college sports into minor leagues for professional sports, diminishing the unique appeal of college athletics rooted in school spirit and community.

What is the likelihood of the NCAA obtaining an antitrust exemption?

The likelihood is low, due to the NCAA's widespread unpopularity and lack of clear bipartisan support in Congress.

How does the revenue sharing model planned for 2025 impact the financial landscape of college sports?

Starting in 2025, colleges will be required to share up to 20% of their revenue with players. This is likely to further benefit larger, wealthier schools that generate more revenue, potentially widening the gap between them and smaller programs.

Chapters
The amount of money college athletes are making through NIL deals is rapidly increasing, with some athletes receiving millions of dollars. This money doesn't come directly from their schools but from third-party boosters and collectives, creating a loophole around the NCAA's stance on student athletes as employees.
  • Arch Manning's NIL deal: $3.1 million
  • Unnamed high school prospect's NIL deal: $8 million
  • Cam Ward's NIL deal with Adidas: $2 million
  • Bryce Underwood's NIL deal: $10 million (partly from Larry Ellison)
  • NIL deals come from boosters, not universities
  • NCAA's fight against classifying athletes as employees

Shownotes Transcript

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With playoffs kicking off Friday, it's a bigger than usual week for college football, but it's also been a huge year. College athletes have been getting paid. Arch Manning, 3.1 mil, I believe. There's an athlete, currently a high school prospect, unnamed, apparently getting...

An $8 million NIL deal. So I got to talk about Cam Ward, man. The $2 million deal with Adidas. The biggest deal of the year was a whopping $10 million reportedly paid out to quarterback Bryce Underwood to change his commitment from LSU to Michigan. But what's kind of weird about these deals is that the schools aren't necessarily the ones paying out. Bryce's millions apparently came at least partly from the Tech Foundation

billionaire Larry Ellison, all because his fifth wife went to the University of Michigan? We're going to figure out what's going on in college sports on Today Explained.

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College athletes are getting paid. At least some of them. At least some of them are getting huge paydays. But the money isn't coming directly from their schools. It's a kind of confusing situation and it all boils down to something called name, image, and likeness or NIL. It is a

Way for college football and college student athletes to make money off of their name, their image, or their likeness. An example of that would be the new video game that came out, EA College Football 25. Every player that was in that game that is currently an athlete in college football got $600 because their name, image, and likeness was used in the game.

But some athletes, the really good ones, are able to make way more money because of slush funds that college athletic programs have at their disposal. We reached out to JP Acosta from SB Nation to help us understand, and we started with the NCAA. I think at the crux of it all, the main point behind this is that the NCAA and most of their respective universities did not want to call student athletes employees. ♪

Calling them employees will require them being paid by the university. The idea of athletes being paid, do you think that will ever happen at the NCAA level? No, it will not happen, not while I'm president of the NCAA. They have spent years fighting the fact that college football and college student athletes are employees. We provide students with access to education.

and we provide them with the cost of tuition fees, room board, books and supplies, and there's not even a salary to debate. They're not employees, they're students. While they've been fighting this battle in court, name, image and likeness kind of slipped in through a loophole because it is a third party. So technically,

These boosters that provide the name, image, and likeness deals that you see a lot of, that comes from a booster who is not being paid by the university, but is affiliated with the university to help get this player to either go to their university or stay at their university. So it's kind of been a loophole around the, oh, student athletes aren't employees. We're going to keep fighting this in court.

But name, image, and likeness allows for a little bit of a side road to get to paying the players. Okay, so now I think we have to explain where this money is coming from. This $10 million that went to a University of Michigan football player. It didn't come from the University of Michigan? No, it technically does not come from the University of Michigan. The biggest example of this I would point to is the University of Arkansas.

The University of Arkansas, their biggest donor and their biggest booster is the founder of Tyson's Chicken Nugget. What? Everybody out there, we need NIL money, okay? Let's go. Let's get this on the record. I didn't write a big check for NIL. That's a mis- But I did help. Like a lot of families come in, you put money into the foundation. Tyson's Nuggets is an Arkansas alumni. Oh. Jerry Jones, the owner of the Dallas Cowboys.

is an Arkansas alumni. Jerry Jones is reportedly offering double whatever Kentucky commits were set to make. Jerry Jones essentially has basically said, if you need money, I'm here to give it. I think that he's... Every year, I think Arkansas plays a game in the Dallas Cowboys stadium because Jerry Jones wants to see his alma mater play in his stadium that he spent a billion dollars on. So...

What this owner founder of Tyson can do is with all the money that he has, uh,

He can help give a player money to either get him to come to Arkansas or he can get a player to stay at Arkansas through name, image, and likeness. And they will get paid via the collectives. Huh. And is it like happening above board? Or are these happening like in dark shadowy rooms with like, you know, low lighting and, you know, grime or something? Yeah.

It used to be the latter. It was very under the table. The NCAA investigated, alleging Bush and his family received improper cash and perks like free housing, eventually leveling harsh sanctions against USC. Well, it's reported that Johnny Manziel signed 4,000 items and this and that. Allegedly. Allegedly. Allegedly, Johnny signed 4,000 items for free. And then there's this...

Auburn bought Cam Newton. His daddy received this large monetary sum of money. Yeah. So what's going on? How did this come about? Allegedly.

Now with NIL being legal, everything is over the table. All the deals that were being made under the table can now be made over. Now that people have figured this out, how do you think it's changing college sports? Or is it? I think it's definitely changing college sports in multiple ways, both good and bad. I think NIL...

has worked with the transfer portal which allows players to go to whatever school they would like as they please of course the big schools with the most money are still going to be able to pay more players but you're more likely to keep

a good player around at your program, if you have a good booster program, if you have a good NIL collective. A big example of that would be Ashton Janty, Boise State's running back, won the Doak Walker Award. Ashton Janty breaks free! Here's Janty, patient running, breaks a tackle, picks up the first down, and he's in for the touchdown!

He had an option after his sophomore year to go to a bigger school and get more money from other big schools, but because

Boise State's NIL was able to get him compensated well, he's able to stay. - You know, this is exactly why I stayed at Boise State because I knew everything that I wanted to accomplish, it would be possible at Boise. - And Boise State's in the college football playoff for the first time. So it's kind of those things where NIL has helped create a little bit of parity at the college level. And I think that is a very good thing.

Now, the problem with NIL is there is no federal regulation on it. There is no NTA laws on NIL. Every state has their own separate laws. So what might work in Florida won't work in Arizona, won't work in California. And what's happening is...

With NIL, all these boosters and collectives, they can fundraise major amounts of money. If you have a strong enough and a big enough booster fan base, you can raise $20 million to go get yourself an entirely new roster filled with some of the best players. All these big schools with these big, powerful alumni can use that money to pay for players to come to their school.

And it kind of leaves the smaller schools to dry a little bit. We talked about Ashton John T. with Boise State. That is the good example. The bad example is every other group of five, every other small school that doesn't have that big of an alumni base, that doesn't have a lot of money, are losing their good players to the portal every year. Which makes...

I guess college sports feel a little bit more like pro sports where the biggest teams like the New York Mets or the Yankees or the Dodgers get to buy up

The best players. Yes, exactly. It feels like there is no salary cap right now with name, image, and likeness, which is what baseball sees with the Mets and the Yankees and the Dodgers because they can give out that money compared to a team that's a little smaller. They really can't because while Alabama might have $20, $30 million to hand out to a recruit, but

a school like my alma mater, FAU, might only have $20 million, even less than that, to give out to the entire team. So you see kind of the economic imbalances that we see between the big schools and the small schools. But where we're also seeing a change is, this is an added level to what's happening with NIL, is in 2025,

college sports will begin revenue sharing, which means up to 20% of what a school brings in in revenue has to be saved for players. And it feels like the bigger schools are just going to keep getting more top heavy and being able to pay players a whole lot more. So you just naturally get all the talent funneling into like 10 schools tops.

JPAcosta, SBNation.com. When Today Explained returns, we're going to find out why we're letting college sports turn into something that looks a lot like professional sports.

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Today, Explain is back and we're joined by... Pablo Torre. The host of Pablo Torre finds out a show that is technically a sports show where I use journalism to solve mysteries, arguably. Pablo's covered name, image, and likeness about a half dozen times on his show. So we asked him over to ours to help us understand how college sports ended up looking so much like pro sports this year. The NCAA, I think, has realized that they've already lost games.

The philosophical argument that allowed the NCAA to regulate pay, which is to say restrict pay, and the argument that has been made literally at the highest court in the land successfully by people who sued the NCAA could not have been clearer. Thank you, counsel. The case is submitted.

Sean, there just aren't many things that both sides of the political aisle agree on anymore. Maybe you hadn't heard America's a divided place. But you have at that Supreme Court in a 9-0 decision in the Alston verdict, as well as in every hearing you can check in on, you have Republicans and Democrats both wondering whether

The NCAA, what do you do here and why do you need to be here anymore? What is it precisely that you are complaining about in this court? And so when it comes to what the NCAA is allowing, they're really...

They're really fighting for a purpose that doesn't really exist. So when you say, okay, but now the NCAA is allowing Larry Ellison, the billionaire Michigan booster, to be a billionaire Michigan booster on the books this time and fund these $10 million...

Quarterback contracts. What they're really doing is saying, OK, I guess we can't stop this. And now we got to be the person who is basically signing off on it because that is the closest thing to regulation that they can be is basically rubber stamping as opposed to being sheriffs who are throwing people into the equivalent of college sports jail.

Do they have any other play here or is it just sort of rubber stamping? Are they quietly trying to fight this change in college sports? Well, the fight that they really are waging is in Washington, D.C.

The president of the NCAA now is a guy named Charlie Baker, who used to be himself a politician. And he was chosen because he was seen to be better at the art of retail politics, let's call it. Glad-handing senators going to Congress and making an argument that actually what the NCAA needs to save college sports as you love them is...

is an antitrust exemption. Congresswoman Dingell talked about the fact that at the end of the day here, whatever we do needs to work for all of college sports. I agree with that. I don't think employment works for all of college sports, and I think the math in this particular case is pretty clear. That is the Hail Mary, and I use that knowing all of the... what that means in the sports context, but in case you don't know, it means you're fucked and you have one last hope. And that last hope is...

College sports.

is uniquely American and one of the most powerful human potential development programs anywhere in the world. Which is, of course, a funny thing to have to admit, finally, but they realize that that's the only hope left to prevent what is coming to them, which is capitalism tearing apart the principles and practices that they always claimed were sacred. ♪

So tell us what that would mean just in practical terms for college sports if they had an antitrust exemption, if they were allowed to be a monopoly. Yeah. If the NCAA gets this Hail Mary to pass, which is the antitrust exemption, they would be allowed to dictate what amount of their revenue they want to share with athletes. They would allow...

They would be allowed to have these players still be called student athletes, which means, by the way, they wouldn't be employees, which means, by the way, that they wouldn't have the rights that workers in America would otherwise get. And, you know, beyond that, I think they're still figuring it out. But they're really trying to say, allow us to dictate the terms of our own existence at a time when their existence is limited.

Obviously in peril. So what impact would this monopolistic exception have on name, image and likeness rights on these $10 million deals? So I don't think it would be rolled back because we've gone too far. And because the NCAA has already said that part of what they're willing to cooperate with is the notion of these deals being marketing deals. Huh.

But marketing, Sean, is a half measure, right? It's a radical half measure because money was not allowed to go into players' pockets for the reasons that the NCAA has long argued about them being students and not employees.

employees. But the next step, the step that is really the existential crisis is what they call pay to play, which means we are paying you because you are a person we want on our team, an employee we want on our team, and you are not paid for your image. You're paid for your performance.

And that's the bridge they're trying not to cross. And so NIL could coexist in theory if this antitrust exemption is granted. But it's the bigger threat of pay to play that they're really trying to stave off. Okay. And do you think they'll be able to win over Congress? Is there bipartisan support for this antitrust exemption?

There is no indication so far that there would be support for this. Again, Congress seems pretty busy these days. I don't know if there is energy politically for it because the NCAA is so universally or near universally disliked.

that I don't see this having the juice, if you're a politician, among any given constituency. Everybody, whether it's Alabama, whether it's Ohio, whether it's California, whether it's Florida, everybody, if you ask a college football fan, a college sports fan, has a tale of how the NCAA did them wrong. They don't poll well. And so when you see, by the way, conservative justices at the Supreme Court, like Brett Kavanaugh,

really pillory the NCAA in the way that you'd imagine the most left-leaning judge would, it's incredibly revealing. There is bipartisan resentment of what the NCAA currently is. It does seem the schools are conspiring with competitors, agreeing with competitors to pay no salaries to

to the workers who are making the school billions of dollars it's funny you know it sounds these arguments that we're having over college sports end up replicating arguments we have

politically, you know, more broadly in the United States. These arguments between, you know, free market and regulation. But what's interesting about the college sports version is that it sort of transcends the traditional political divide, right? You've got, like, conservatives and progressives arguing the opposite positions in some cases. Isn't that right? Yeah. I mean, look, if you're a fan of college sports and you can be a left-leaning fan of the University of Alabama...

There are lots of them out there. What you are realizing is as much as you believe in your principles of, okay, these kids are employees, creating billion-dollar products, should be paid as such. It is, in fact, criminal that they haven't been paid as such for decades now, over a century now. You're also bummed that, okay, I'm not going to get the sport that I fell in love with. Entertainment is not the same as equity, right?

That is something that we're going to have to reckon with if you love college sports. And meanwhile, you look across at, you know, who's on the other side of the aisle here and realize, wait a minute. Why is it that I'm in agreement with people that disagree with me on pretty much everything else? Yeah. And so that's also something that people are going to have to get familiar with. Do we know ultimately...

Which version of the future of college sports better protects college athletes? Is it just letting the free market reign or is it having the NCAA there to step in when something goes too far? If you have the ability to take the long view of this, a longitudinal view of the evolution of college sports from the athlete perspective, you should be concerned, I would argue, that if college sports just becomes the minor leagues of

to a professional version of it, you are going to lose something that makes the product as compelling as it has been for over a century.

There is something about the sales pitch of these are college students involved in an ancient tribal warfare against the community that also involves the weird, you know, fiction writing professor you had once. And the drunk guy doing a keg stand and all of that, right? You're at a college that is so central to why this has been popular. But at the same time, obviously, the economy of all of this has changed.

been yearning to be made free. And so, yes, it is a good thing that you are trending towards college athletes being paid more and more what they are due. But there is a point at which

When your worth is also dictated by the demands of an audience, of a fan base that wants you to be a certain thing and not another, and that certain thing happens to be a fictionalized version of what the job of college athlete has always been, you're going to have to reckon with a bunch of people saying, this isn't the TV show I fell in love with.

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