logo
The NCAA settlement is a big win for football players. For other athletes, the picture is murkier.

The NCAA settlement is a big win for football players. For other athletes, the picture is murkier.

DI track and field athlete Sabrina Oostburg isn't celebrating the recent NCAA settlement, which allows colleges to pay athletes directly.
The Belmont University student said she was standing next to a volleyball player and two football players when the news came out. One of the football players reacted positively and then turned to the volleyball player to get her take.
"It's good for you because you're going to get paid, but some of your female athlete friends might get cut," Oostburg recalled the volleyball player saying.
The recent settlement, which ended multiple antitrust cases against the NCAA, sets up a system in which football players will likely get the lion's share of the money. The settlement's back-pay portion, for example, allocates 75% to football, guided by how much revenue the sport brings in.
Colleges that opt into the settlement can pay up to $20.5 million to their athletes for the year starting July 1 (with increases in subsequent years).
"It's going to be focused on football, basketball," Craig Weiner, a partner and litigator at Blank Rome, told Business Insider.
While schools are free to distribute the money to different teams as they wish, there is a clear incentive for them to want to remain competitive in football to generate revenue. That could mean some athletic programs — if we take that 75% figure as guidance — will need to cover $15 million in new expenses to pay football players.
Where is the money going to come from? Oostburg said she's worried about cuts to her team and others that don't make money for the college. She fears they could lose roster spots, places where they practice and train, or even snacks.
"I think you're going to see cuts potentially in the non-revenue sports," Weiner said. "As far as support, athletic facilities, athletic support. Money that is that is earmarked to help the non-revenue producing sports, because they're going to focus on the money makers."
The settlement ruling could create Title IX issues
The skew toward football and men's basketball in the $2.8 billion back-pay part of the settlement has already attracted a legal challenge.
Dan Ain, an attorney at Reavis, Page, Jump, noted that current and former DI female athletes had filed an appeal. They argued that 90% of the back pay going to former football and men's basketball players was a violation of Title IX, which requires schools to give male and female athletes equitable opportunities.
Ain also pointed out that Judge Claudia Wilken, who oversaw the case, said that athletes could sue if they felt there was any infringement on Title IX due to the nature of the revenue share model.
"This is new territory for schools," Ain said. "Schools, for the first time, will be deciding how to allocate tens of millions of dollars in revenue share to individual athletes. The expectation right now is that the distribution is going to be grossly unequal between men and women, and that will open schools up to Title IX litigation."
Athletes have to run their deals through a clearinghouse
Oostburg said she also had concerns about a new clearinghouse that will oversee deals athletes strike on their own with brands, called NIL deals (short for "name, image, and likeness").
Athletes with deals of over $600 will have to report them to the clearinghouse, operated by Deloitte, which will determine the athlete's value. If the deal is higher than their assessed value, it can't go through. Athletes who don't report deals or violate them by taking something of a different value could have their eligibility taken away.
For athletes like Oostburg in "non-revenue" sports, NIL deals — often driven in part by their social media footprint — are the biggest money-making opportunity.
"That does concern me," Oostburg said. "If I get a deal over $600 and they decide, no, that doesn't make sense for someone like a track athlete like me to get a $1,000 deal."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tennis Star Emma Navarro Reveals What She Thinks About Getting Labeled a 'Billionaire's Daughter'
Tennis Star Emma Navarro Reveals What She Thinks About Getting Labeled a 'Billionaire's Daughter'

Yahoo

time16 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Tennis Star Emma Navarro Reveals What She Thinks About Getting Labeled a 'Billionaire's Daughter'

Emma Navarro addresses the focus on her family's background The 24-year-old is the daughter of billionaire Ben Navarro Navarro won her first two matches and will next play in the third round of Wimbledon Championships on July 5Tennis star Emma Navarro is ranked 10th in the world with an NCAA championship and several quarter and semifinal Grand Slam finishes to her name — but too often for her liking, the focus is on her father's name, and his status as a billionaire. Navarro, 24, has cruised through her first two matches at the Wimbledon Championships, defeating Veronika Kudermetova and veteran Petra Kvitova both in straight sets. She's on to the third round — something most other American players cannot say as the Wimbledon carnage continues this week — but chatter about Navarro frequently focuses on her father, who runs Sherman Financial Group and is worth an estimated $4.8 billion. Navarro opened up about the "label" she often gets of a "billionaire's daughter" in an interview with U.K. outlet Tatler, just before the start of Wimbledon. Navarro explained her gripe with the subject: 'I don't love being referred to as whoever with however much money's daughter. It's a label I don't really like.' Navarro, who won the NCAA Singles Championship in 2021 as a member of the University of Virginia's tennis team, told Tatler her background does not mean she didn't work hard to rise through the challenging WTA tour. 'I didn't grow up being handed things. We grew up in a sort of traditional way. We'd get up at 6 a.m. on a Saturday morning and go play tennis," the former Cavalier said. "Growing up it was a priority that we learnt toughness and we learnt work ethic.' While Ben was involved in Navarro's tennis development from a young age, her mother Kelly provided a reprieve from the game, Navarro said, calling her, 'the rock of the family." Despite the unique quality of Navarro's background, she is not the only American female tennis player from a billionaire background. The current No. 3 ranked player, Jessica Pegula, is the daughter of Terry Pegula, who owns the Buffalo Bills and Buffalo Sabres and boasts a net worth of $7.6 billion. Pegula, who reached the finals of the US Open last September, was eliminated from Wimbledon in a shocking upset on Tuesday by Elisabetta Cocciaretto, who is ranked No. 116. Navarro, meanwhile, will continue on at Wimbledon — but with a tough matchup coming down the pike. The American plays 16th-ranked Barbora Krejčíková, who is defending her Wimbledon title from last year, on Saturday. Read the original article on People

Cam Newton Hopes Arch Manning Learned Lessons from Quinn Ewers Like He Did from Tim Tebow
Cam Newton Hopes Arch Manning Learned Lessons from Quinn Ewers Like He Did from Tim Tebow

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Cam Newton Hopes Arch Manning Learned Lessons from Quinn Ewers Like He Did from Tim Tebow

Cam Newton Hopes Arch Manning Learned Lessons from Quinn Ewers Like He Did from Tim Tebow originally appeared on Athlon Sports. There is a lot of excitement around Arch Manning heading into next season. After two years serving as the backup quarterback behind Quinn Ewers, Manning is set to be the starter for Texas next season. Advertisement On Wednesday, in a new episode of "4th & 1 with Cam Newton," the former Heisman winner spoke about what he hopes Manning took from playing behind Ewers. He spoke about his experience with Tim Tebow in Florida and how he hopes that while Manning is a more talented QB than Ewers, he still learned something from him. "I've always felt like I was more talented than Tim Tebow, but I needed Tim Tebow to show me what I lacked," Newton said. "Tim Tebow was an unbelievable leader. Verbally and by action. Arch will be a fool if he has not learned anything from Quinn Ewers. How he prepared, how he led his team, and how he handled and managed the expectations of being a quarterback at a university like Texas." Cam Newton on Radio Row at the Super Bowl LIX media Lee-Imagn Images Arch Manning enters the 2025 college football season viewed by most as one of the best quarterbacks in the NCAA. He has earned this praise despite never starting for a full season at the college level. Advertisement Manning started two games this past season in September while Ewers was injured. While Manning performed well in those games against UL Monroe and Mississippi State, throwing for 250+ yards and two TDs in both games, he does not have experience starting a full season. As a result, it would not be shocking if he experienced growing pains next season. Related: Louis Riddick Blasts Miami Dolphins for Drafting Quinn Ewers This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jul 3, 2025, where it first appeared.

Emma Navarro beats defending Wimbledon champ Barbora Krejcikova. There will be a first-time winner

timean hour ago

Emma Navarro beats defending Wimbledon champ Barbora Krejcikova. There will be a first-time winner

LONDON -- LONDON (AP) — Emma Navarro describes herself as 'stubborn' and her tennis as 'scrappy.' The American's attitude and game both were in just the right places at Wimbledon on Saturday, when she pulled off another Grand Slam victory over a defending champion by eliminating Barbora Krejcikova 2-6, 6-3, 6-4. Sending an ill and dizzy Krejcikova home in the third round, the 10th-seeded Navarro extended a recent run of one-and-done winners at the All England Club and assured the grass-court major of yet another first-time women's champion. 'Something I take a lot of pride in is being tough and fighting till the last point, no matter what the circumstances are. It's something I always try to do,' said Navarro, who was born in New York, grew up in South Carolina and won the 2021 NCAA championship for the University of Virginia. 'I could never live with myself if I ever gave up. It's just not in my nature. I don't think it's in any of my family members' nature to ever give up on anything. I guess we're a stubborn bunch.' Krejcikova faded in the third set, getting her blood pressure checked at the changeover after Navarro broke her to lead 3-2 at No. 1 Court. Krejcikova ate a banana and drank liquids during the medical timeout, while Navarro walked to her guest box and spoke to her coach during the break in action. When play resumed, Krejcikova showed clear signs of being in distress, often leaning over and placing her hands on her knees between points. 'I was actually feeling worse and worse,' said Krejcikova, who was seeded 17th but now will tumble out of the top 70 in the WTA rankings. 'It's very sad for me and very unfortunate.' This is hardly Navarro's first big win on a big stage. Last year, she eliminated Coco Gauff at Wimbledon to reach her first major quarterfinal. Then, in a rematch a couple of months later, Navarro won again at the U.S. Open — where Gauff was the 2023 champion — en route to her debut in a Slam semifinal. Whoever ends up winning the Wimbledon women's title on July 12 will be the ninth champion in the past nine editions of the grass-court Grand Slam tournament. Serena Williams was the last repeat champ in 2016. The trophy-takers since then have been Garbiñe Muguruza in 2017, Angelique Kerber in 2018, Simona Halep in 2019, Ash Barty in 2021 — all of whom are now retired — Elena Rybakina in 2022, Marketa Vondrousova in 2023 and then Krejcikova (the tournament was canceled in 2020 because of COVID-19). Rybakina lost Saturday; Vondrousova exited in the second round. Against Krejcikova, Navarro was down a set and a break at 2-1 in the second before turning things around. 'I kind of regrouped a little, tried to slow things down a bit from my side and make her look at some different shots,' said Navarro, 24, who will meet No. 7 Mirra Andreeva, an 18-year-old Russian, on Monday for a quarterfinal berth. 'Kind of just try to make her as uncomfortable as I could.' Most points were decided by what Krejcikova did. That's how she ended up with 34 winners — 21 more than Navarro — and 53 unforced errors. Remarkably, Navarro finished with just 11 unforced errors. Last year's triumph was the second at a major tournament for Krejcikova, who also won the 2021 French Open. It has been a fortnight filled with surprises, and Navarro is one of four top-10 seeds left in the women's bracket. The others are No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka, who won her third-round match Friday against Emma Raducanu, Andreeva and No. 8 Iga Swiatek, a 6-2, 6-3 winner against Danielle Collins on Saturday. 'My slice is coming along pretty nicely. I'm able to use that to my advantage,' Navarro said. 'Played scrappy at times. Played tough. Hit some good groundstrokes, as well. I feel pretty good about where I'm at.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store