Deion Sanders Rips on NIL in College Football
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Mike Gundy, Oklahoma State and Football
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College athletics enters a new era July 1 as the House v. NCAA settlement takes effect, formally allowing schools to share revenue with athletes. For the first time, schools can directly pay players for performance -- a historic shift in the landscape of college sports.
The college football offseason heats up as NIL issues dominate Big 12 Media Days, setting the tone for a chaotic month of conference media days.
Here’s what it looks like from here: Red Raider athletes will make a reported $55 million in name, image and likeness deals this school year, apparently an NCAA record. And that doesn’t count the $5.1 million Tech just guaranteed a Mansfield Lake Ridge offensive tackle over three years. Once he actually graduates from high school, that is.
QB market range: $500,000 to $800,000. Just like in the NFL, quarterback is the most valuable position in college football.There are some notable outliers here -- more on them in a second -- but ...
Total viewing of College Football across all networks is up +12% this year and up +28% over the last five years. — Michael Mulvihill (@mulvihill79) October 10, 2023
State lawmakers are working with student-athletes and labor advocates to push for stronger protections for college athletes in Michigan.
Deion Sanders didn't disclose much about his health situation in his first public appearance in over two months, but the Colorado coach ribbed Texas Tech and said he'd like to see a salary cap in college football.