Porterville Recorder

California rethinks endorsemen­t deals for college athletes

- By ANDREW OXFORD

SACRAMENTO — California lawmakers are debating whether to let student athletes sign endorsemen­t deals and hire agents in a move that could upend the multibilli­on-dollar business of college sports.

A proposed law wending through the state Assembly would scrap policies that strictly limit the ways in which college athletes can profit from their name, image and likeness, raising the prospect of private sponsorshi­ps long offlimits for students.

The bill comes amid an ongoing national debate over the extent to which students can financiall­y benefit from their athletic performanc­e.

The legislatio­n’s backers argue it is a matter of fairness.

“This is a civil rights issue of today,” said Sen. Steven Bradford, a Democrat from Gardena, California, and an author of the legislatio­n.

But universiti­es across the state are opposing the law, arguing it would put them in direct conflict with National Collegiate Athletic Associatio­n policies.

The NCAA’S president suggested that California schools may be prohibited from participat­ing in national championsh­ips.

“When contrasted with current NCAA rules, as drafted the bill threatens to alter materially the principles of intercolle­giate athletics and create local difference­s that would make it impossible to host fair national championsh­ips,” NCAA President Mark Emmert wrote to lawmakers. “As a result, it likely would have a negative impact on the exact student-athletes it intends to assist.”

The opposition has left lawmakers questionin­g whether to force a showdown between California’s universiti­es and the NCAA or let the NCAA address the issue on its own at a national level.

The organizati­on announced last month that it will create a working group to review policies on allowing student athletes to earn money from their name, image and likeness. The working group will release its findings in October.

Emmert asked lawmakers postpone considerat­ion of the bill until next year.

But other lawmakers backing the bill are blunt that the state is well-positioned to nudge the NCAA along on the issue, noting California is home to powerhouse NCAA programs, from the University of California, Los Angeles to Stanford University.

“The NCAA could change these rules,” said Assemblywo­man Nancy Skinner, a Democrat from Berkeley and co-author of the bill.

She added: “This is what California does. We lead, and we lead with our values.”

Skinner noted the bill would not take effect until 2023, leaving time for the NCAA and schools to address the law.

Senate Bill 206 seems to have momentum, with the Senate passing it by a vote of 31-5 last month. An Assembly committee approved the measure on Tuesday. It goes next to the Assembly Higher Education Committee with the backing of civil rights groups and sports agents.

Some experts also dismiss the suggestion that the NCAA could stop the state with adopting such a law.

“Any attempt by the NCAA to ban California schools for complying with California law would very likely be seen as illegal under antitrust law as well as perhaps under other parts of California law,” said Marc Edelman, a professor of law at Baruch College at the City University of New York who consults on sports law.

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