Current:Home > ContactNCAA President Charlie Baker proposing new subdivision that will pay athletes via trust fund -MacroWatch
NCAA President Charlie Baker proposing new subdivision that will pay athletes via trust fund
View
Date:2025-04-14 12:14:16
NCAA President Charlie Baker on Tuesday sent a letter to Division I members proposing the creation of a new competitive subdivision whose schools would be required to provide significantly greater compensation for their athletes than current association rules allow.
Under Baker’s plan, “within the framework” of Title IX, the federal gender-equity law, schools in this new group would have to “invest at least $30,000 per year into an enhanced educational trust fund for at least half of the institution’s eligible student-athletes.”
Baker’s proposal also involves the schools in the new group committing to work together to “create rules that may differ from the rules in place for the rest of Division I. Those rules could include a wide range of policies, such as scholarship commitment and roster size, recruitment, transfers or” policies connected to athletes’ activities making money from their name, image and likeness (NIL).
Across all of Division I, Baker says the association should change its rules to “make it possible for all Division I colleges and universities to offer student-athletes any level of enhanced educational benefits they deem appropriate. Second, rules should change for any Division I school, at their choice, to enter into name, image and likeness licensing opportunities with their student-athletes.”
The proposal comes a little over nine months after Baker became the NCAA’s president, moving into the job amid a time of considerable tumult within college sports. In addition to multiple legal battles over athlete compensation, the association has been facing growing unrest from the schools that have the greatest revenues and expenses.
Under pressure from the multiple antitrust lawsuits and from some members of Congress, athletics administrators at those schools and their conferences have grown increasingly open to the idea of providing greater benefits for athletes as they collect billions of dollars in TV money and have coaches who are being paid millions of dollars annually and tens of millions in buyouts if they get fired.
However, for the broader membership within the NCAA’s Division I, there have been concerns about the financial and competitive consequences of this, particularly against the backdrops of Division I rules now allowing athletes to transfer once without having to sit out for a year, as used to be the case, and now allowing athletes to make money from the NIL.
In his letter Tuesday, Baker includes a detailed look at all of these issues and tensions, then states: “Therefore, it is time for us – the NCAA – to offer our own forward-looking framework.”
Baker wrote that he looks forward to gathering reaction and input from school officials and athletes about his proposals, but added, “moving ahead in this direction has several benefits” – and he proceeded to list 10 reasons for going forward with his framework, including:
►Giving “the educational institutions with the most visibility, the most financial resources and the biggest brands an opportunity to choose to operate with a different set of rules that more accurately reflect their scale and their operating model.”
►It provides schools “that are not sure about which direction they should move in an opportunity to do more for their student-athletes than they do now, without necessarily having to perform at the financial levels required to join the [new] subdivision.”
►It would allow other Division I schools “the ability to do whatever might make sense for them and for their student-athletes within a more permissive, more supportive framework for student-athletes than the one they operate in now.”
veryGood! (714)
Related
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Wear the New Elegant Casual Trend with These Chic & Relaxed Clothing Picks
- $1B donation makes New York medical school tuition free and transforms students’ lives
- Police in suburban Chicago are sued over a fatal shooting of a man in his home
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- 2 charged with using New York bodega to steal over $20 million in SNAP benefits
- Prince Harry was not unfairly stripped of UK security detail after move to US, judge rules
- A New York collector pleads guilty to smuggling rare birdwing butterflies
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Key witness in Holly Bobo murder trial says his testimony was a lie, court documents show
Ranking
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Hunter Biden tells Congress his father was not involved in his business dealings
- Panera Bread settles lawsuit for $2 million. Here's how to file a claim for food vouchers or money.
- Key witness in Holly Bobo murder trial says his testimony was a lie, court documents show
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Key witness in Holly Bobo murder trial says his testimony was a lie, court documents show
- Toyota recalls 381,000 Tacoma pickup trucks to fix potential crash risk
- Fans briefly forced to evacuate Assembly Hall during Indiana basketball game vs. Wisconsin
Recommendation
Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
Starbucks and Workers United agree to resume contract negotiations
Box of hockey cards found at home sells for $3.7m, may contain Wayne Gretzky rookie cards
Alabama man arrested decades after reporting wife missing
Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
'The Price is Right': Is that Randy Travis in the audience of the CBS game show?
Damaging storms bring hail and possible tornadoes to parts of the Great Lakes
'The Price is Right': Is that Randy Travis in the audience of the CBS game show?