Boston Herald

Athletes sue Ivy League over no-scholarshi­p rule

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HARTFORD, CONN. >> A pair of basketball players from Brown allege in a federal lawsuit that the Ivy League’s policy of not offering athletic scholarshi­ps amounts to a price-fixing agreement that denies athletes proper financial aid and payment for their services.

The lawsuit was filed Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Connecticu­t by attorneys representi­ng Grace Kirk, a member of Brown’s women’s team, and Tamenang Choh, who played for the men’s team from 2017 through 2022. They are seeking class-action status to represent all current and former athletes at the eight Ivy League schools dating back to those recruited since March 2019.

The suit argues Ivy League schools illegally conspired to limit financial aid and not compensate athletes for their services.

“In either case, regardless of whether considered as a restraint on the price of education, the value of financial aid, the price of athletic services, or the level of compensati­on to Ivy League athletes, the Ivy League Agreement is per se illegal,” the lawsuit states.

Harvard, Yale, Brown, Princeton, Dartmouth, Cornell, Columbia and Penn don’t offer merit scholarshi­ps of any kind, including athletic scholarshi­ps. The policy, which dates back to 1954, makes the Ivy League the only Division I athletic conference that prohibits member schools from offering any athletic scholarshi­ps.

Ivy League Executive Director Robin Harris defended the policy in a statement responding to the legal action, noting there are a wide variety of options when it comes to opportunit­ies available to collegelev­el athletes.

“The Ivy League athletics model is built upon the foundation­al principle that student-athletes should be representa­tive of the wider student body, including the opportunit­y to receive need-based financial aid,” she said. “In turn, choosing and embracing that principle then provides each Ivy League student-athlete a journey that balances a world-class academic experience with the opportunit­y to compete in Division I athletics and ultimately paves a path for lifelong success.”

But attorneys for the Brown athletes point out that other elite academic schools, such as Stanford and Duke, do offer athletic scholarshi­ps.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO — BEN MCKEOWN ?? Brown’s Tamenang Choh handles the ball during an NCAA college basketball game against Duke in Durham, N.C., Saturday, Dec. 28, 2019.
AP FILE PHOTO — BEN MCKEOWN Brown’s Tamenang Choh handles the ball during an NCAA college basketball game against Duke in Durham, N.C., Saturday, Dec. 28, 2019.

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