Los Angeles Times

College sports stars could prof it

Ignoring NCAA’s warnings, lawmakers send governor bill allowing payments to student athletes.

- By Melody Gutierrez and Nathan Fenno

Bill sent to the governor would allow student athletes to earn money through endorsemen­ts.

SACRAMENTO — California would allow college athletes to earn money from the use of their names, images and likenesses under a bill passed by the state Legislatur­e on Wednesday and headed to Gov. Gavin Newsom.

The legislatio­n has garnered national attention, with athletes such as NBA stars LeBron James and Draymond Green praising the potential for California to give college athletes a share of the windfall they help create for their universiti­es and the National Collegiate Athletic Assn. The Senate gave final approval to Senate Bill 206 by Sen. Nancy Skinner (D-Berkeley) in a 39-0 vote. The Assembly passed the bill 73-0 on Monday.

But the NCAA has forcefully pushed back against the bill, saying it has the potential to kill amateur athletics if it becomes law. The NCAA sent Newsom a letter Wednesday calling the legislatio­n “unconstitu­tional” and “harmful.”

“If the bill becomes law and California’s 58 NCAA schools are compelled to al-

low an unrestrict­ed name, image and likeness scheme, it would erase the critical distinctio­n between college and profession­al athletics and, because it gives those schools an unfair recruiting advantage, would result in them eventually being unable to compete in NCAA competitio­ns,” the letter said.

NCAA President Mark Emmert and 21 other members of the organizati­on’s board of governors signed the letter. Emmert sent a letter to state legislator­s in June that warned of dire consequenc­es if the bill passed.

Skinner dismissed the NCAA’s warnings as empty threats and said Wednesday that legal scholars have concluded her bill is in fact constituti­onal.

“The NCAA has repeatedly lost anti-trust cases in courts throughout the nation,” Skinner said. “As a result, threats are their primary weapon.”

NCAA rules bar athletes from being compensate­d for use of their names, images or likenesses. The bill would not allow schools to directly pay athletes, but would permit students to receive compensati­on from outside sources — for example, from a video game company or for signing autographs or memorabili­a.

Lawmakers supporting the bill provided examples of other situations in which college athletes are unable to earn money for their services that they said simply do not seem fair: a collegiate swimmer barred from teaching swim lessons, a volleyball player unable to put on a summer camp or a baseball player who can’t promote an autobiogra­phical book.

“Forget shoe deals and video games, NCAA athletes can’t make a little money over the summer coaching youth sports, can’t promote their social media, can’t model athletic wear, can’t accept groceries or help with rent or equipment,” Assemblyma­n Kevin Kiley (RRocklin) said. “When a line in the sand is enforced obsessivel­y, excessivel­y and to the point of absurdity, that’s usually a sign it doesn’t belong there.”

The bill moved through the Legislatur­e despite NCAA President Emmert’s June letter. Emmert urged lawmakers to delay making a decision until after a group of college presidents, conference commission­ers, athletic directors and athletes studied whether such a financial arrangemen­t can exist “in a fashion that would be consistent with the NCAA’s core values, mission and principles.” That report is expected next month.

Emmert’s letter read, in part: “[W]hen 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. As a result, it likely would have a negative impact on the exact student-athletes it intends to assist.”

The bill heading to Newsom would prohibit the NCAA from banning a university from competitio­n if its athletes were compensate­d beginning in Jan. 1, 2023. Supporters of the bill argued that the delayed implementa­tion provides the NCAA time to make changes to its rules and gives California leeway to introduce future legislatio­n if changes are needed to ensure schools are not penalized.

The bill prohibits athletes from entering into endorsemen­t deals that conflict with their team’s contract. SB 206 does not apply to community college athletes.

“Our name, image and likeness was given to us by our parents and our Creator,” said Ramogi Huma, a former UCLA football player who is executive director of the National Collegiate Players Assn., which pushes for college sports reforms. “It’s dehumanizi­ng for the NCAA to demand complete ownership of players’ identity as a condition of participat­ing in college sports. Players are people not university property. It’s especially offensive given the majority of California athletes and players elsewhere are minorities and women.”

The Pac-12 Conference referred to its previous statement on the bill that asked the Legislatur­e to delay taking action until an NCAA working group finished studying the issue this fall.

During a committee hearing earlier this year, Long Beach State athletic director Andy Fee warned of “many potential and unintended consequenc­es” if the bill becomes law.

“I fear the distinct possibilit­y of a scenario where California schools could be expelled for willful breaking of NCAA rules,” Fee said. “Should California schools be expelled, the very student-athletes the bill is intended to assist would be adversely affected.”

 ?? Shizuo Kambayashi Associated Press ?? THE LEGISLATUR­E approved a bill allowing payments to college athletes without any dissenting votes despite warnings from NCAA President Mark Emmert.
Shizuo Kambayashi Associated Press THE LEGISLATUR­E approved a bill allowing payments to college athletes without any dissenting votes despite warnings from NCAA President Mark Emmert.

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