Daily Press

Youngkin signs novel NIL measure

Legislatio­n gives colleges authority to manage deals for athletes; believed to be first of its kind

- By Jami Frankenber­ry Staff writer

As Gov. Glenn Youngkin prepared to sign an unpreceden­ted name, image and likeness bill Thursday in Richmond, he remembered his playing days.

“I want to be very clear that had the NIL rules been in place when I was in college, I would not have had an NIL deal,” joked Youngkin, who averaged just 1.4 points per game in four years as a basketball player at Rice University.

Youngkin signed into law a bill that grants Virginia colleges unpreceden­ted freedom to administer name, image and likeness benefits to athletes.

House Bill 1505, boasting wide-ranging support from administra­tors, permits state colleges and universiti­es to create and negotiate

NIL deals — and pay athletes — without NCAA restrictio­ns. The measure is believed to be the first of its kind.

“What an exciting moment,” Youngkin said, “to actually take this very important next step and making Virginia the most competitiv­e place, to not just to participat­e in college athletics, but also the most competitiv­e place for our universiti­es to really take care of our athletes and drive them to the next level.”

The bill’s sponsor, Del. Terry Austin, R-Botetourt, joined Youngkin and coaches and administra­tors from across the state for the ceremonial signing. Among those in attendance were football coaches Tony Elliott (Virginia), Brent Pry (Virginia Tech) and

Dawson Odums (Norfolk State); and Sen. Aaron Rouse, D-Virginia Beach.

Rouse was a star athlete at First Colonial High and played football at Virginia Tech before embarking on an NFL career.

“This legislatio­n protects athletes and permits Virginia’s institutio­ns and collective­s to create and negotiate NIL opportunit­ies,” Rouse wrote on X. “I’m proud to (have) worked with Delegate Austin to move this ball

forward & thank Gov. Youngkin for signing it into law.”

College athletes have cashed in since the NCAA enacted its NIL rules in 2021. Among a few examples across the state: Old Dominion football players have been paid to sign autographs, and UVA basketball players have inked endorsemen­t deals with a store that sells arch supports.

Those and other NIL deals have been directed by a third party.

“This is saying that the institutio­ns can get involved in all of that,” ODU athletic director Wood Selig told The Virginian-Pilot on Thursday. “It’s giving us permission to do all that.”

Added Christophe­r Newport University AD Kyle McMullin: “The NIL law will give us new flexibilit­y in the future to support our students, but our immediate priority is to direct all available resources to funding the day-to-day commitment to excellence in competitio­n and in the classroom.”

The law takes effect July 1. Among the bill’s provisions: Student fees are not permitted to be used in paying athletes for NIL.

“I am thrilled about the groundbrea­king and progressiv­e NIL legislatio­n signed by Governor Youngkin this morning,” NSU athletic director Melody Webb said in a statement. “This legislatio­n not only protects in-state schools and their student-athletes but also paves the way for positive change in collegiate athletics.”

Most colleges — including ODU, NSU, Hampton University and William & Mary — have started collective­s to help negotiate NIL deals, and those are expected to stay relevant.

“We’ll continue to work with our collective, which is the Pride of ODU,” Selig said. “We’ll continue to work with our 757 Club, which is membership-based with membership benefits. So we’re going to continue to do business as we have for the last year or so, and then we have to talk to our peer institutio­ns, our fellow institutio­ns in the commonweal­th, and kind of get a sense for, where are the advantages?

“Where are there potential pitfalls in this opportunit­y, and what works best for ODU? What works best for ODU may not be what works best for UVA, or vice versa.”

UVA athletic director Carla Williams echoed those sentiments at virginiasp­orts.com, saying the legislatio­n gives colleges “much-needed flexibilit­y, but we haven’t made any (final) decisions about which provisions within the law we’ll actually activate.”

“We’ll continue to support Cav Futures,” Williams added, referring to the school’s NIL collective, “we’ll continue to discuss our options internally, we’ll monitor the environmen­t, we’ll talk with our coaches, our student-athletes, and we’ll make a decision that’s best for UVA.”

Virginia Tech athletic director Whit Babcock said in a release the school was thankful for Youngkin and the state legislatur­e’s “proactive work in the NIL space.”

“Not only does this position us more competitiv­ely among other states during this critical time,” Babcock said, “but it also allows for more school involvemen­t as we continue to enhance our recruiting and retention efforts to bring the most talented student-athletes to Virginia Tech.”

William & Mary athletic director Brian Mann said Thursday the school “is still in the process of thoroughly evaluating how this new legislatio­n impacts our programs. We understand the importance of NIL and are committed to continue to find ways to support our student-athletes and coaches in this space.”

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