Pay to Play? College Athletics’ New Deal for the Pro Sports Era

-

To give an idea of the befouled nature of big-time college sports, it is perhaps the only enterprise in America that has sought help from the beleaguered federal government to save the industry from itself. That is like asking to wash your car in the driveway of the neighbor whose home is on fire.

That preposterousness may begin to ease, starting today.

The NCAA and its litigious athletes together open a new chapter July 1. If it mostly works, the charred remains of the federal exchequer might be spared the embarrassing request to rescue people who are massively undeserving. If the plan, known as the House settlement, fails, the unregulated business chaos via private donors over the past four years will seem like sunshine, lollipops and rainbows. Failure would leave an opening to invite in the Trump administration to broker a solution. Begin your cringe now.

This long-awaited attempt to resolve multiple class-action violations of antitrust law by the NCAA and its member schools is considered by some to be the most consequential business development in the history of college sports. Formally abandoning amateurism (which has been unofficially dead for most of a century), many of the nation’s sports-playing universities have agreed to pay athletes directly about $2.8 billion, including back pay to eligible athletes dating from 2016. Like it or hate it, full professionalization of college sports is underway.

For 2025, the parties have agreed to a kind of salary cap of $20.5 million per school, a figure scheduled to increase annually, for the use of athletes’ names, images and likenesses (NIL), mostly from revenue-producing platforms such as TV broadcasts and social media. Private donations will still play a major role, but the money now goes through athletic departments.

Last year, University of Washington athletes unofficially were estimated to have received $9.4 million in NIL payments, said to be 24th in the nation The University of Texas led all schools with $22.3 million. Schools are not required to pay the cap amount, but the big-budget operations almost are compelled to do so, because any bashfulness will be excoriated by a fan base (stoked by ESPN, Fox Sports, the gambling industry and online harassers) for failure to do enough for sports. Another option is a complete opt-out, which is what the Ivy League schools have done. They will earn little TV revenue and pay no athlete. How 1880s of them.

Which players and teams get the money at each school is still a little nebulous, as are the decisions by campus budget-cutters contemplating abandonment of some non-revenue (Olympic) sports as well as staff reductions. One school that has disclosed information is Big Ten Conference powerhouse Michigan.

According to MLIVE.com, the athletics department is planning a 10 percent reduction in staff. In a letter to fans, alumni and supporters last week, AD Warde Manuel explained the cuts that will help reduce a projected $27 million budget deficit for the 2025-26 academic year. Additionally, the Wolverines have only six home football games instead of eight in 2024.

A current working model in the Big Ten and elsewhere uses a 75-15-5-5 ratio for divvying up money. Typically that means 75 percent to football, 15 percent to men’s basketball, five percent to women’s basketball and five percent to the remaining sports.

At UW, the athletics department has vowed to keep all 22 varsity sports and has announced no cutbacks. Joe Knight, hired eight months ago as executive director of the new Dawgs Unleashed, an internal marketing entity that manages some of the NIL operation, told the Seattle Times that UW’s size and proximity to Fortune 500 companies creates an opportunity rare in the cutthroat world of college sports.

“UW and Seattle, there’s nothing like it,” Knight said. “We’re so inextricably married. The corporations and the student body within Husky athletics, there’s such a unique opportunity for us to really do this in an effective way.

“I don’t think anyone is as well positioned as the Huskies in this new era.” 

Since optimism is among the few things still free in college sports, it may as well be spilled around.

Another significant development emerging from the settlement is a new agency,  the College Sports Commission, which has been deputized to enforce the rules and regulations. In response to a query from The Athletic about the commission, a joint letter from the power conferences offered a lofty aspiration: “The draft legislation represents a very encouraging step toward delivering the national clarity and accountability that college athletics desperately needs.”

Historically, the NCAA’s enforcement of its rules regarding recruiting violations and other misconduct often has been criticized variously as biased, incompetent and invisible. The new commission could be a little like Sheriff Andy of Mayberry actually putting bullets in the gun of a quaking Barney Fife.

A reason for optimism is the commission’s first CEO. Bryan Seeley is a former U.S. attorney who for the past 10 years has been a senior vice president with MLB. He’ll be in charge of enforcing the revenue-share cap, running the clearinghouse on NIL deals, and handing out punishments to rule violators.

Perhaps Seeley’s most noteworthy feat at MLB was leading the sign-stealing investigation in 2017 that put the Houston Astros in baseball’s graybar hotel for awhile. If you’re a Mariners fan who still enjoys booing the crap out of Jose Altuve every time he appears in Seattle, you may enjoy what could happen to the scofflaws, scoundrels, rogues and charlatans that populate big-time college sports. Presuming, of course, that none of them wear purple.

Right now, however, it’s just speculation. We have to wait a while before results manifest. Keep in mind that there was no genuine urge to reform the business model, no development of a conscience, only a desire to stop all the courtroom losses that finally doomed a corrupt system of phony amateurism that existed nowhere else in global sports. The new deal still has many unanswered questions, starting with Title IX, the federal law requiring schools to provide equal athletic opportunities for women. A lawsuit has already been filed.

As sports lawyer Cal Stein put it to The Athletic: “The House settlement started with the goal of the NCAA putting an end to the losses it has taken all over the country. But the great irony is that it’s just going to lead to more lawsuits.”

Maybe the century-long corruption and hypocrisy of the NCAA and its member universities is nearing an end. I’d sooner bet on a brain worm in Robert F. Kennedy Jr. starving to death.


Discover more from Post Alley

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Art Thiel
Art Thiel
Art Thiel is a longtime sports columnist in Seattle, for many years at the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, and now as founding editor at SportsPressNW.com.

2 COMMENTS

  1. Art, aside from your astute analysis of the situation, I commend you for referencing Barney Fife and RFK Jr. in the same post. As for brainpower, I think I’d have to go with Barney.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Comments Policy

Please be respectful. No personal attacks. Your comment should add something to the topic discussion or it will not be published. All comments are reviewed before being published. Comments are the opinions of their contributors and not those of Post alley or its editors.

Popular

Recent