Miami Herald

Virginia law allows schools to pay NIL deals to athletes

- Field Level Media

A new law signed Thursday will enable schools in Virginia to pay name, image and likeness deals directly to student-athletes.

The legislatio­n, which takes effect on July 1, is the first of its kind in the nation. It makes it illegal for the NCAA to punish any school in Virginia for compensati­ng athletes with

NIL deals.

The law potentiall­y could give schools like Virginia and Virginia Tech — whose officials helped to draft the legislatio­n — a leg up in recruiting, as current NCAA rules prohibit schools from signing NIL deals with their own players. Currently, students receive their NIL pay through third parties.

Critics consider this another step toward the profession­alization of college sports, although the law does not allow Virginia schools to pay athletes for their performanc­e in a sport. It permits the use of university and athletic department funds to pay athletes for appearing in marketing campaigns.

Virginia athletic director Carla Williams said the new law could be a catalyst for change elsewhere.

“If this law gets us closer to a federal or a national solution for college athletics then it will be more than worthwhile,” Williams said, per ESPN. “Until then, we have an obligation to ensure we maintain an elite athletics program at UVA.”

Virginia Tech AD Whit Babcock called it “a step in the right direction for the commonweal­th of Virginia and the country in my opinion.”

Williams and Babcock declined to share their potential NIL budgets with ESPN. Both also said they were looking into Title IX considerat­ions as far as an equitable distributi­on of NIL opportunit­ies for male and female student-athletes.

ETC.

NFL: Veteran running back J.K. Dobbins agreed to sign a one-year contract with the Los Angeles Chargers, his agency, LAA Sports confirmed. Dobbins, 25, a second-round pick in the 2020 NFL Draft, spent his first four seasons with the Baltimore Ravens. He struggled to stay on the field because of injuries, missing 42 of a potential 67 appearance­s to start his NFL career.

College basketball: Former Seton Hall star

Dre Davis is transferri­ng to Ole Miss, his agent confirmed to ESPN. It will be the third stop for the 6-foot-6 senior swingman after Louisville (2020-22) and Seton Hall (2022-24).

NHL: Two-time Stanley Cup champion Jeff Carter announced his retirement from the NHL after playing his final game for the Pittsburgh Penguins on Wednesday. Carter, 39, totaled 851 points (442 goals, 409 assists) in 1,321 games in 19 seasons with Philadelph­ia, Columbus, Los Angeles and the Penguins. Carter won the Stanley Cup with the Kings in 2012 and 2014 and a gold medal with Canada at the 2014 Sochi Olympics.

“I’m going to be a dad. You miss a lot being a hockey player, you’re in and out in a way,” Carter said. “My family sacrificed a lot for me to live out my dream. I’m going to be home and be a dad, and then figure it out from there.”

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