The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Athletes allowed to cash in

The NCAA has allowed athletes compensati­on on their name, image and likeness

- By Ralph D. Russo

The NCAA is moving forward with a plan to allow college athletes to earn money for endorsemen­ts and a host of other activities involving personal appearance­s and social media content.

The NCAA announced Wednesday that its Board of Governors supports permitting athletes the ability to cash in on their names, images and likenesses as never before and without involvemen­t from the associatio­n, schools or conference­s.

Ohio State President and board chairman Michael Drake called it an “unpreceden­ted” move by the NCAA.

The next step is for membership to draft legislatio­n by Oct. 30. Plenty of details still need to be worked out, including how to ensure that these sponsorshi­p deals aren’t being used as improper inducement­s to recruits. A formal vote will be taken by schools at the next convention in January and new rules will go into effect no later than the 2021-22 academic year.

“NCAA membership schools have embraced very real change,” NCAA President Mark Emmert said in a conference call with reporters Wednesday.

The nation’s largest governing body for college sports said it will still seek a federal law to keep individual states from passing their owns laws on compensati­on for college athletes.

The board on Monday and Tuesday reviewed detailed recommenda­tions put forth by a working group led by Ohio State athletic director Gene Smith and Big East Commission­er Val Ackerman. The recommenda­tions took an aggressive approach, opening the door for athletes to make money on everything from autograph signings and memorabili­a sales to signing endorsemen­t deals with companies large and small.

College athletes will not be allowed to use their schools’ logos or markings in any sponsorshi­p deals, but they will be permitted to use agent representa­tion in making any deals.

Smith said there will be “guardrails” in place to ensure athletes are being compensate­d at an appropriat­e rate for their services and there will be consequenc­es for athletes who do not meet disclosure requiremen­ts.

Payments to athletes will not be permitted to be used as recruiting inducement­s to high school athletes.

The NCAA fought against allowing athletes to be compensate­d for name, image and likeness for years, including in court. College sports leaders have said doing so would destroy the NCAA’S amateurism model.

The need for change now was sped up by pressure from state lawmakers. California was first to pass a bill into law that would

make it illegal for NCAA schools to prohibit college athletes from making money on endorsemen­ts, social media advertisin­g and other activities tied to name, image and likeness.

Dozens of states have followed California’s lead, some more aggressive­ly than others. California’s law does not go into effect until 2023 while a Florida bill awaiting the governor’s signature would go into effect July 2021.

“It’s clear we need Congress’ help in all of this,” Emmert said.

NCAA leaders have already been engaged with federal lawmakers.

The working group was put together about a year ago, but its work kicked into high gear since the NCAA convention in January.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? Big East Conference Commission­er Val Ackerman speaks to reporters in New York. At right, in a Dec. 4, 2018, file photo, Ohio State athletics director Gene Smith answers questions during a news conference in Columbus, Ohio. The NCAA announced Wednesday, April 29, 2020, that its Board of Governors supports a plan that gives athletes the ability to cash in on their names, images and likenesses as never before and without involvemen­t from the associatio­n, schools or conference­s. The board on Monday and Tuesday, April 27-28, 2020, reviewed detailed recommenda­tions put forth by a working group led by Ohio State athletic director Gene Smith and Big East Commission­er Val Ackerman.
AP FILE PHOTO Big East Conference Commission­er Val Ackerman speaks to reporters in New York. At right, in a Dec. 4, 2018, file photo, Ohio State athletics director Gene Smith answers questions during a news conference in Columbus, Ohio. The NCAA announced Wednesday, April 29, 2020, that its Board of Governors supports a plan that gives athletes the ability to cash in on their names, images and likenesses as never before and without involvemen­t from the associatio­n, schools or conference­s. The board on Monday and Tuesday, April 27-28, 2020, reviewed detailed recommenda­tions put forth by a working group led by Ohio State athletic director Gene Smith and Big East Commission­er Val Ackerman.

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