Malvern Daily Record

Latest bill would bar NCAA limits on athlete NIL rights

- By RALPH D. RUSSO AP Colege Sports

U. S. Sen. Chris Murphy introduced a bill Thursday that would guarantee college athlete the right to earn money from endorsemen­ts and sponsorshi­p deals while barring the NCAA, schools and conference­s from imposing restrictio­ns.

The College Athlete Economic Freedom Act is the third piece of legislatio­n related to name, image and likeness compensati­on for college athletes introduced in Congress since December and second sponsored by Democrats.

The latest bill, co- sponsored by U. S. Rep. Lori Trahan of Massachuse­tts, focuses on creating a national standard for socalled NIL compensati­on that would pre- empt the more than two dozen state laws currently in the pipeline. Iowa became the latest state to get in the game, with lawmakers introducin­g a bill Wednesday they hope will go into effect July 1.

Murphy’s bill would give college athletes unfettered access to the free market, allow them to organize and make group licensing deals, and hand oversight to the Federal Trade Commission.

“It’s simple: this is about restoring athletes’ ownership over the use of their own names and likeness. They own their brand, not their school or the NCAA,” Murphy said in a statement. “Giving students a right to make money off endorsemen­ts is just one part of a much broader package of reforms that need to be made to college athletics, but it’s a good start.”

In December, Sen. Roger Wicker ( R- Miss.), chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee, put forth an NIL bill that is narrowly focused like Murphy’s, but with numerous restrictio­ns that critics consider too NCAA- friendly.

Wicker’s bill would provide antitrust protection­s to the NCAA, shielding the associatio­n from legal challenges to its NIL rules, and allow the associatio­n to limit the types of financial agreements for athletes. Murphy’s bill provides no such antitrust cover and would punish schools that stand in the way of athletes earning money off their fame.

Last month, the NCAA delayed what was expected to be a landmark vote on NIL legislatio­n after the Justice Department warned the associatio­n it could be in danger of violating antitrust laws.

“As leaders at the NCAA finally come to grips with the need for change, it’s important that Congress enact reforms to establish and protect student- athletes’ right to be compensate­d for the use of their name, image, likeness, or athletic associatio­n,” said Trahan, who was a volleyball player for Georgetown.

Sen. Cory Booker ( D- N. J.) and Sen. Richard Blumenthal ( D- Conn.) have also introduced the College Athlete Bill of Rights, which would extend the federal government’s reach into intercolle­giate athletics far beyond name, image and likeness compensati­on.

The Supreme Court is scheduled to hear an antitrust case involving the NCAA in March that could ultimately guide where name, image and likeness reform and the definition of amateur athletics is headed.

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