Los Angeles Times

Why shouldn’t student athletes get their share?

A state bill to let college players sign endorsemen­t deals heads to Gov. Newsom. He should sign it.

- Ollege athletes

Care required by their schools and leagues to be amateurs, which makes them the only ones not earning money off the vast number of hours they put into their craft. In fact, a multibilli­on- dollar industry has grown up around collegiate athletics in the United States, thanks to a vast marketing and monetizati­on apparatus that turns the games and their players into lucrative sources of revenue.

Making matters worse, student athletes are forced to make a sacrifice no other celebrated California­n has to make: They must give up their right to strike licensing deals for the commercial use of their name, image or likeness. While their schools are free to sign highly profitable endorsemen­t deals with the makers of athletic gear and sports drinks and video games, some of which rely on their students’ images and likenesses, the athletes who give their schools cachet and marketabil­ity are not.

It’s one thing to bar schools from paying athletes so as to preserve at least some pretense of amateurism; it’s another to say that schools can exploit their students’ names and images, but their students can’t.

That limitation strikes California lawmakers as fundamenta­lly unfair, and they’ve overwhelmi­ngly approved a bill ( Senate Bill 206) by Sen. Nancy Skinner ( D- Berkeley) to end it. The measure, which Gov. Gavin Newsom has not yet signed, picks a fight with colleges, the Pac- 12 Conference and the National Collegiate Athletic Assn., all of which bar students from striking endorsemen­t deals. But it’s a fight worth starting.

Skinner’s proposal would require fouryear colleges and universiti­es to let students in California sell the rights to their names, images or likenesses. It would also forbid intercolle­giate sports authoritie­s to penalize students or the colleges they attend if they struck such deals or hired an agent or lawyer to help them negotiate — a prohibitio­n that would almost certainly be tested in court by collegiate athletic organizati­ons whose members are spread over multiple states.

The measure would inevitably eat away at the distinctio­n between profession­al and college sports. Celebrated collegians could make money not only by endorsing sneakers and sports drinks, but also by autographi­ng jerseys, pitching workout videos and putting their name on baseball bats and hockey sticks. In short, they could profit from the fame that their work as an athlete brings.

Yet an important distinctio­n would remain: Students would not be paid by universiti­es to play. They could receive scholarshi­ps that cover the cost of their education, but couldn’t draw any share of the profits generated when their team fills the Rose Bowl with 90,000 fans. They would still be toiling largely for someone else’s benefit.

It’s worth rememberin­g that the vast majority of student athletes gain no renown and won’t turn pro after they leave school. Their teams may cost their colleges more to operate than they produce in revenue.

Skinner’s bill isn’t aimed at them. Its main effect will be on athletes in the highprofil­e college sports who serve as cogs in the profit- generating machine. The demands on those athletes are enormous; being a member of a major college team can require as many hours of preparatio­n and performanc­e as a full- time job. These athletes also risk career- ending injuries with no workers’ compensati­on safety net and only a slim hope of a big profession­al contract someday.

The UC system and other intercolle­giate groups have pushed back hard against the bill. They warn that their teams and students could lose eligibilit­y to participat­e in championsh­ip games and tournament­s for violating the NCAA’s clear rules against endorsemen­t deals, and that the colleges themselves could lose the sponsorshi­p revenue they use to support teams and pursuits that don’t make money. Even though Skinner’s bill wouldn’t go into effect until 2023, it would have implicatio­ns immediatel­y for recruiting. Perversely, it could discourage talented athletes from going to school in California for fear of their team losing eligibilit­y to compete in tournament­s.

Those are legitimate concerns, but they don’t justify maintainin­g a system that’s exploitati­ve. An NCAA committee is exploring what to do about athletes’ names, images and likenesses in light of court rulings that have opened the door to greater student compensati­on. Ideally, other states would follow California’s lead, if for no other reason than to level the playing f ield and give their student athletes the same benefits California wants to give ours. In the meantime, though, California should move ahead and give student athletes the same rights every other California­n enjoys.

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