Loveland Reporter-Herald

The Portland Press Herald on how the ‘NIL’ policy is a win for athletes at all levels:

-

Bronny James, son of Lebron and a top NBA prospect, endorses headphones and sneakers, for which he is paid millions of dollars.

Maddie Niles, a sophomore on the Lawrence High School field hockey team, endorses a brand of maple products, for which she is paid in maple syrup.

Both are part of a new era in high school athletics, one in which prep athletes can leverage their local or national popularity into endorsemen­t deals. And even though their circumstan­ces are wildly different, both are better off under the new rules.

Elite athletes like James stand to make millions, finally getting a piece of the pie generated by their talent and hard work.

Others, like Niles, may not strike it rich — but they’ll pick up valuable experience, and maybe open a few doors for themselves. It’s all the result of a Supreme Court decision in July 2021 that found the NCAA had unfairly built “a massive money-raising enterprise on the backs of student athletes who are not fairly compensate­d,” as Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote in a concurring opinion.

As Travis Lazarczyk of the Press Herald recently reported, the ruling opened the way for amateur athletes to benefit from their own name, image and likeness, allowing them to sign endorsemen­t contracts just like their profession­al counterpar­ts, with some limitation­s.

It has been a long time coming. Big-time college athletics generates billions of dollars in revenue for conference­s and schools, as well as media, sneaker and apparel companies, and very little of it goes toward the athletes themselves.

Now, just as CBS Sports uses the names and likenesses of college basketball stars to promote its broadcast of the Final Four, those stars can now do the same for themselves.

And in many cases they won’t have to wait until college. Since the Supreme Court’s ruling, at least 25 states have passed laws allowing high school athletes to enter the “name, image and likeness” marketplac­e as well.

Elite athletes have found that their endorsemen­ts are worth millions. It’s hard to see those valuations as anything but fair. That the money has been there all along; at least now more of it will go to the people who are generating it.

It’s also no different in other sports or in other industries. Young tennis and golf stars are able to leverage their talent and exposure into endorsemen­t contracts well before they turn 18, as are actors and other performers, including the legion of young stars on Youtube.

The situation is much different for athletes like Niles. Maine high school field hockey is not generating millions of dollars in revenue. Nike and Under Armour won’t be showering endorsemen­t deals down on Maine athletes anytime soon.

While those big deals get attention, most contracts signed under NIL policy will be small ones. Niles, for instance, has deals with an activewear company and a local high school sports broadcasti­ng studio, as well as the Maine-based maple syrup producer . ... Besides keeping the athletes well fed and maybe giving them a little bit of walking-around money, the deals offer a valuable foray into entrepeneu­rship, allowing athletes to get to get to grips with the business world.

They also give athletes a chance to promote themselves for the next chapter in their lives. They can use the exposure to get noticed by college coaches, or to build a following based on their own interests.

That sort of deal can do a lot of good for a student athlete — even beyond free maple syrup.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States