Houston Chronicle

Board votes athletes can profit off names

- By Ralph D. Russo

The NCAA took a major step Tuesday toward allowing college athletes to cash in on their fame, voting to permit them to “benefit from the use of their name, image and likeness.”

The nation’s largest governing body for college sports and its member schools now must figure out how to allow athletes to profit — something they have fought against doing for years — while still maintainin­g rules regarding amateurism. The NCAA Board of Governors, meeting at Emory University in Atlanta, directed each of the NCAA’s three divisions to create the necessary new rules immediatel­y and have them in place no later than January 2021.

Board chair Michael Drake, the president of Ohio State University, said the NCAA must embrace change and modernize “to provide the best possible experience for college athletes.” But such changes will come with limitation­s, he said.

“The board is emphasizin­g that change must be consistent with the values of college sports and higher education and not turn studentath­letes into employees of institutio­ns,” Drake told the Associated Press.

A group of NCAA administra­tors has been exploring since May the ways in which athletes could be allowed to receive compensati­on for the use of their names, images and likenesses. The working group, led by Ohio State athletic director Gene Smith and Big East commission­er Val Ackerman, presented a status report Tuesday to the university presidents who make up the board of governors. Smith and Ackerman’s group laid out principles and guidelines, endorsed by the board, to be followed as NCAA members go about crafting new rules and tweaking existing ones.

Some college sports leaders fear allowing athletes to earn outside income could open the door to corruption.

“One of the most distinctiv­e things about college sports is this whole recruitmen­t process,” NCAA president Mark Emmert told the AP. “The whole notion of trying to maintain as fair a playing field as you can is really central to all this. And using sponsorshi­p arrangemen­ts, in one way or another, as recruiting inducement­s is something everybody is deeply concerned about.”

Ackerman and Smith said the challenges lie in determinin­g what regulation­s need to be set in place; what markets athletes should be allowed to access; what entities and individual­s they should be permitted to work with; and whether the schools could provide funds to athletes through licensing deals.

The NCAA’s move came a month after California passed a law that would make it illegal for member schools to prohibit college athletes from making money on endorsemen­ts, autograph signings and social media advertisin­g, among other activities.

The California law goes into effect in 2023. More than a dozen states have followed with similar legislatio­n, some of which could be on the books as soon as next year.

“This is another attempt by the NCAA at stalling on this issue,” said Ramogi Huma, executive director of the National College Players Associatio­n, an advocacy group.

It’s hard to say exactly how much athletes could fetch on an open market for their names. It could range from a few hundred dollars for creating personaliz­ed video and audio greetings for fans through companies such as Cameo, to thousands of dollars for doing television advertisem­ents for local businesses.

NCAA rules allow for an athletic scholarshi­p that covers tuition, room and board, books and a cost-of-attendance stipend. The cost of attendance is determined using federal guidelines and generally ranges from $2,000-$5,000 per semester.

 ?? Keith Srakocic / Associated Press ?? The NCAA board hopes “to provide the best possible experience for college athletes” with its decision.
Keith Srakocic / Associated Press The NCAA board hopes “to provide the best possible experience for college athletes” with its decision.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States