News

Three weeks into the House Settlement era, it's Atlantic Coast Conference Commissioner Jim Phillips with the latest data on agents and athletes utilizing the new College Sports Commission's mandatory ...
The House settlement that was supposed to have calmed the college sports waters has done nothing but churn them. Here are four bullet points to know.
Texas A&M almost tripled its NIL war chest from 2023-24, when its athletes received $19.4 million. Though there is major ...
President Donald Trump is out to put a cap on NIL money for college athletes with signing a new executive order.
The goal is to prevent schools from utilizing booster-driven entities to funnel payments to recruits and transfers.
The new agency in charge of regulating NIL in college sports sent a letter to schools saying it had rejected deals that hold ...
College football’s biggest battle this summer isn’t on the field—it’s over booster collectives, The Wall Street Journal writes.  These donor-funded groups have funneled nearly $1.4 billion to athletes ...
July 2025 marked the completion of four academic years in which college athletes could earn money from their name, image, and likeness. Texas A&M’s total compensation has at least doubled every year ...