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The College Sports Commission is designed to regulate the NIL market but won’t have subpoena power to control rogue boosters.
The College Sports Commission is designed to regulate the NIL market but won't have subpoena power to control rogue boosters.
Commissioner Teresa Gould said the conference is discussing how to allocate revenue across sports under the terms of the ...
Amid growing frustrations over NIL in college sports, SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey kept it simple: schools are asking for ...
The House settlement has set the stage for revenue-sharing between universities and their athletes. Here's a look at what the ...
Conference commissioners lauded a judge’s approval of a $2.8 billion antitrust lawsuit settlement as a means for bringing ...
As part of the settlement, the power conferences created the College Sports Commission, with a chief executive, Bryan Seeley, ...
If College Football Playoff indeed expands to 16 teams, it will become a more attainable destination for three-loss teams ...
The Pac-12 has a lengthy to-do list. It must resolve lawsuits with the Mountain West, finalize a long-term media rights deal, ...
NIH employees decry research changes. Small colleges lobby to dodge endowment taxes. Campus politics sway students’ college ...