The Denver Post

Power Five leagues ask Congress for NIL law

- By Ralph D. Russo

The Power Five conference commission­ers are asking Congress to move forward with federal legislatio­n regarding compensati­on for college athletes.

The commission­ers of the Atlantic Coast Conference, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12 and Southeaste­rn Conference sent a letter dated May 23 to congressio­nal leaders.

The letter was signed by John Swofford of the ACC, Bob Bowlsby of the Big 12, Kevin Warren of the Big Ten, Larry Scott of the Pac-12 and Greg Sankey of the SEC.

They encouraged federal lawmakers to not wait for the NCAA process to play out before passing a national law that would set parameters for college athletes to be compensate­d for use of their names, images and likenesses.

“I don’t think it’s indicative of anything other than our belief that the five of us bring substantia­l equity to college athletics and that our brands are strong,” Bowlsby said Friday during a conference call.

Last month, the NCAA’s Board of Governors signed off on recommenda­tions that would make it permissibl­e for college athletes to make money for personal endorsemen­ts, appearance­s and sponsorshi­p deals that are currently against the rules.

The board acted after California passed a law clearing the way for athlete compensati­on that takes effect in 2023. Other states are moving to have laws take effect earlier than that, including Florida.

The NCAA hopes to have legislativ­e proposals crafted by November and ready to be voted on in January. Even with that, NCAA leaders have acknowledg­ed the need for congressio­nal help and a national standard that would ward off a wave of state-level NIL laws that are in the pipeline.

Some lawmakers are skeptical of the NCAA’s desire to place what it calls guardrails on a compensati­on model.

College sports leaders have been working for months to get their message to lawmakers about what they believe are the best solutions for athlete compensati­on, long a thorny issue for the NCAA and its model of amateurism.

The Power Five commission­ers said the letter was to ensure lawmakers “hear directly from us, as any NIL changes will have the greatest impact upon the (five autonomy) conference­s and our member institutio­ns.”

The letter stressed guiding principles that echo what has come from the NCAA and other college sports leaders for months, including a ban on anything that resembles pay-for-play.

“First, those who participat­e in collegiate athletics are students, not employees. A critical aspect of the college model has been and remains that student-athletes are not paid for playing sports,” the commission­ers wrote.

The commission­ers said payments should come from third parties, not, universiti­es, and boosters must be kept out of the recruiting process.

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