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Braden Fiske is a defensive tackle for Florida State projected to be drafted by the NFL. AdvertisementUntil recently, the National Collegiate Athletic Association barred student athletes from being compensated despite the billions of dollars their efforts were earning for their universities. College athletes can also receive money by autographing signs, creating or sharing branded content, making guest appearances, and being a spokesperson for a company or brand. We're now seeing college athletes from several sports score so-called NIL deals ranging from five to seven figures. He has signed several NIL deals since joining the Florida State Seminoles in 2023, and other deals are in the works.
Persons: Braden Fiske, LeBron James, Bronny James, Fiske Organizations: Florida State, NFL, National Collegiate Athletic Association, US, Business, Florida State University, Florida State Seminoles
What Would Paying Student Athletes Look Like?
  + stars: | 2024-03-09 | by ( Joe Nocera | Ephrat Livni | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
Still, it was the latest example of the pressure the association is under to finally abandon “amateurism” — the N.C.A.A.’s long-held dogma that prevents college athletes from being paid. But that’s an ad hoc system, organized largely by supporters of the athletic department, that allows some athletes to bring in millions while others make nothing. It’s not the same as universities paying athletes they employ. The suit alleges that college athletes have been illegally deprived of any payment for having their names, images and likenesses used in promotional broadcasting that have earned millions for big athletic conferences like the Big Ten. remains stubbornly resistant to settling the antitrust cases against it, the prospect of paying billions in damages might finally bring the organization to the table.
Persons: ” Jay Bilas, you’ve, ” “, , Bilas, It’s, Jeffrey Kessler, Kessler Organizations: ESPN, National Collegiate Athletic Association, Dartmouth College men’s
New York CNN —Members of the Dartmouth College men’s basketball team Tuesday became the first college athletes to vote to join a union, a significant milestone in the rapidly changing business for collegiate sports. The team members voted 13-2 in favor of the union, according to the National Labor Relations Board, which oversees union representation votes for private employers. The affirmative vote does not automatically mean that there will be a union for members of the the team. Dartmouth has already indicated it will appeal the decision by the NLRB to recognize the players as employees who are eligible to join a union. They are among the best paid union members in the country.
Persons: Sian Beilock, CNN’s Poppy Harlow, Dartmouth “ Organizations: New, New York CNN, Dartmouth College men’s, National Labor Relations Board, Dartmouth, NLRB, Dartmouth men’s, Department of Education, National Collegiate Athletic Association, NCAA, National Basketball Association Locations: New York, America, American
Romeo Myrthil #20 (C) of the Dartmouth Big Green watches as his team play against Columbia Lions in their NCAA men's basketball game on February 16, 2024 in New York City. The Dartmouth Men's Basketball team voted 13-2 in favor of becoming the first-ever labor union for college athletes on Tuesday afternoon. The vote could present a huge shakeup to the National Collegiate Athletics Association's (NCAA) model, which currently only allows college athletes to financially benefit from their role on teams through name, image and likeness. "Because Dartmouth has the right to control the work performed by the Dartmouth men's basketball team, and the players perform that work in exchange for compensation, I find that the petitioned-for basketball players are employees within the meaning of the [National Labor Relations] Act," Sacks said in a statement. This isn't the first time a college athletics team has made a bid to be recognized as employees.
Persons: Romeo Myrthil, Laura Sacks, Sacks, Michael L, Huyghue, We've, Dartmouth, Cade Haskins, Haskins Organizations: Dartmouth Big Green, Columbia Lions, NCAA, Dartmouth Men's Basketball, National Collegiate Athletics Association's, National Labor Relations Board, Regional, Dartmouth, Dartmouth men's, National Labor Relations, NLRB, Cornell Sports, Supreme, NBC News, NBC, Northwestern University's Locations: New York City
Read previewPepsiCo's lemon-lime soda Starry is only one year old, but millions of US consumers will soon see its first-ever Super Bowl ad, as it battles to steal share from stalwarts like 7-Up and Sprite. AdvertisementPopeye's will use its Super Bowl spot to introduce five new chicken wing flavors. First-time advertisers are also looking beyond TVTo justify the high price of a Super Bowl ad, however, marketers invest heavily to keep the conversation going across other channels. And Popeye's, which hopes to drive people to one of its restaurants with a Super Bowl-themed promo, also hopes to extend the campaign beyond the Super Bowl. Highdive is working on BetMGM's first Super Bowl ad this year.
Persons: , Nielsen, Sami Siddiqui, Michael Smith, Bob O'Brien, O'Brien, Popeye's Siddiqui, Mark Gross, Highdive Organizations: Service, Business, Super, Kawasaki, Popeye's, Kawasaki Motors Corp, Bowl, National Collegiate Athletic
Connor Stalions, left, resigned from his job as a Michigan football analyst amid an NCAA probe of alleged sign-stealing by the Wolverines football program. Photo: Paul Sancya/Associated PressConnor Stalions, an analyst on the Michigan football coaching staff who is at the center of a sign-stealing scandal, resigned on Friday, according to an athletic department spokesperson. Michigan came under scrutiny from the National Collegiate Athletic Association in October for allegedly breaking rules by sending scouts to future opponents’ games to record signals the teams use from the sidelines to communicate with players on the field.
Persons: Connor Stalions, Paul Sancya Organizations: NCAA, Wolverines, Michigan, National Collegiate Athletic Association Locations: Michigan
On Thursday, Michigan disclosed that its No. 2-ranked football team is under investigation by the National Collegiate Athletic Association for allegedly stealing the play-signal signs of their opponents. The details of what Michigan allegedly did haven’t been disclosed by the university or the NCAA. On Friday afternoon, Michigan suspended with pay one of its football analysts, Connor Stalions, pending the result of the outcome of the NCAA probe. Stalions is a United States Naval Academy graduate hired by Michigan full-time in May 2022 after serving as a volunteer coach there since 2015.
Persons: haven’t, Connor Stalions Organizations: National Collegiate Athletic Association, NCAA, United States Naval Academy, Michigan Locations: Michigan
On Thursday, Michigan disclosed that its No. 2-ranked football team is under investigation by the National Collegiate Athletic Association for allegedly stealing the play-signal signs of their opponents. The details of what Michigan allegedly did haven’t been disclosed by the university or the NCAA. On Friday afternoon, Michigan suspended with pay one of its football analysts, Connor Stalions, pending the result of the outcome of the NCAA probe. Stalions is a United States Naval Academy graduate hired by Michigan full-time in May 2022 after serving as a volunteer coach there since 2015.
Persons: haven’t, Connor Stalions Organizations: National Collegiate Athletic Association, NCAA, United States Naval Academy, Michigan Locations: Michigan
Athletic programs at Boston College, New Mexico State University and Northwestern University are just three US institutions that have been dealing with hazing allegations in 2023. That was the highest incidence of hazing among a student group or team, ahead of fraternities and sororities, in which 38.3% of respondents reported having experienced hazing. Recent examplesThere has been considerable fallout following allegations of hazing among college sports teams this year. The following week, attorneys representing at least 15 former Northwestern University student athletes announced plans to sue the university over allegations that its athletics department fostered a “toxic culture” which facilitated harassment and sexual abuse. Former Northwestern University football player Ramon Diaz is suing the school over hazing and racism allegations.
Persons: CNN —, , Plato, Hank Nuwer, Pennalism, Nuwer, , Pat Fitzgerald, Fitzgerald, Joe Robbins, Michael Schill, Schill, Ben Crump, Ramon Diaz, Claire Savage, Jon Yates, , Greg Heiar, Stone Organizations: Lifeline, CNN, Boston College, Boston College , New Mexico State University, Northwestern University, Collegiate Athletic Association, Journal, Student Affairs Research, , Northwestern Wildcats, Ohio State Buckeyes, Wildcats, Former Northwestern University, New Mexico State University, Bowling Green Locations: Boston College ,, Ancient Greece, Athens, Europe, Northwestern, New, Montana , Wyoming, South Dakota, New Mexico, Alaska, Hawaii, Ohio
CNN —Boston College has suspended the men’s and women’s swimming and diving program indefinitely for hazing, the school announced on Wednesday. During the suspension, all Swimming and Diving student-athletes will continue to have access to academic and medical resources provided to all Boston College student-athletes,” the school added. Hazing creates an environment/climate in which dignity and respect are absent.”Both the men’s and women’s teams finished last out of 12 teams in the 2023 Atlantic Coast Conference championships. In July, Northwestern University fired the head coach of its football program, Pat Fitzgerald, after allegations of hazing surfaced, for which the university faces several lawsuits. Fitzgerald has denied any knowledge of hazing in the program.
Persons: Pat Fitzgerald, Michael Schill, ” Fitzgerald, Schill, Fitzgerald, Loretta Lynch Organizations: CNN, Boston College, University, Boston College Eagles, George Washington University, , Collegiate Athletic Association, Atlantic Coast Conference, Northwestern University, Northwestern
Discovery has targeted the beginning of the Major League Baseball playoffs to debut a sports tier for its Max streaming service, according to people familiar with the matter. The company plans to simulcast games from the MLB, National Basketball Association, National Hockey League and National Collegiate Athletics Association, including college basketball's March Madness, on Max. It also intends to add content from its sports media outlet Bleacher Report, such as highlights and interviews. Discovery plans to brand the new tier using the Bleacher Report name, the people said. No MLB games would appear exclusively on Max.
Persons: Julio Rodríguez, David Zaslav, JB Perrette, Max Organizations: Seattle Mariners, American League, Warner Bros, Discovery, Major League Baseball, Max, MLB, National Basketball Association, National Hockey League, National Collegiate Athletics Association, Time Warner, Warner Bros ., Warner Bros . Discovery, TBS Locations: Max
Anson Dorrance knew he was a pioneer during his eight years as head coach of the US Women’s National Team (USWNT). Any understanding of how and why the USWNT is women’s soccer’s dominant force, a four-time Women’s World Cup winner and favorite to win the next edition currently taking place in Australia and New Zealand, must start with Dorrance, the groundbreaker and the bricklayer. Five years later, the first Women’s World Cup was held in China – not that it was initially labelled a World Cup as world governing body FIFA worried it might not be a success. A third-placed finish followed at the 1995 Women’s World Cup, and then came the Atlanta Olympics a year later. The success of 1999 would lead to the world’s first professional women’s soccer league, the Women’s United Soccer Association (WUSA).
Persons: CNN —, , Anson Dorrance, “ You’re, Dorrance, , , Michelle Akers, ” Akers, Mike Ryan, , Akers, IX, I’m, ” Dorrance, “ There’s, Lori Lindsey, Lauren Cheney, Darryl Dyck, George Bush, Barry Thumma, didn’t, ” Caitlin Murray, Murray, David Cannon, Billie Jean King, “ We’ve, Lindsay, USWNT, Harry, Brandi Chastain’s, “ We’re, ” Brandi Chastain, Robert Beck, Chastain, Mia Hamm, Kristine Lilly, Julie Foudy et, Megan Rapinoe, they’re, it’s, ” Rapinoe, Richard Heathcote, Lindsey, Becky Sauerbrunn, Rapinoe, Alyssa Thompson, Naomi Girma, Taylor Swift Organizations: CNN, US, National, CNN Sport, Dorrance, men’s, University of North, Coaches, FIFA, America, Soccer, Federal, Olympic, Canada, American, High School, National Collegiate Athletic Association, Guatemala, CONCACAF, Canadian Press, Central, USA, “ National, Atlanta Olympics, Getty, US Soccer, revelled, China, Rose, Women’s United Soccer Association, National Women’s Soccer League, “ 99ers, Tokyo, England Locations: Australia, New Zealand, University of North Carolina, Italy, Seattle, Irish, United States, England, Brazil, Central Florida, China, Norway, New York, Hamm
What is gender dysphoria, and is it a mental disorder?
  + stars: | 2023-07-19 | by ( Kristen Rogers | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +10 min
Gender identity, an aspect of gender, is a person’s “psychological sense of their gender,” the American Psychological Association says. Symptoms of gender dysphoriaFor an adolescent or adult to be diagnosed with gender dysphoria, they must be experiencing certain criteria for gender dysphoria, along with clinically significant distress or functional impairment, according to the American Psychiatric Association. Not every person who doesn’t identify with their assigned gender experiences gender dysphoria, particularly the distress and impairment. Because gender dysphoria is included in the American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, also called the DSM, it is diagnosed as a mental disorder, experts said. But the gender incongruence — having a gender identity that’s not the one assigned at birth — isn’t what makes gender dysphoria a mental disorder.
Persons: CNN — Schuyler Bailar, ” Bailar, , , , swimsuits, Schuyler Bailar, New York City, Amos Mac, Bailar, Jonah DeChants, DeChants, Sex, Jack Drescher, Amir Ahuja, that’s, Ahuja, Trevor Project’s DeChants, Ellen DeGeneres, Schuyler, What’s, Sydney Claire, He’s Organizations: CNN, New York, American Psychological Association, American Psychiatric Association, Columbia University, Los Angeles LGBT Center, The Association, Psychiatrists, Prevention, Disorders, DSM, Harvard University, National Collegiate Athletic Association Division, Sydney Locations: New York, New, New York City, Harvard, Boston
The National Collegiate Athletics Association (NCAA) has not stripped transgender athlete Lia Thomas of the National Championship following “unfavorable” test results, the organization said in an email. The posts link to an article titled, “NCAA Strips Lia Thomas Of National Championship After ‘Unfavorable’ Test Results.”Reuters found no credible reporting on the claim. A search for Lia Thomas yields two results, one of which mentions the swimmer directly (here). No release regarding stripping of the National Championship can be found. Claim that NCAA has stripped transgender athlete Lia Thomas of National Championship stems from a satirical website.
USC, the NCAA and the Pac-12 Conference, which is also named in the complaint, did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Friday. The board in December had said it found merit to charges filed by a group of USC players seeking to be treated as employees, and said it would issue a complaint absent a settlement. The U.S. Supreme Court in 2021 struck down the NCAA's limits on non-cash compensation for athletes, such as scholarships and paid internships. Several states including California have passed laws letting college athletes profit from their name, image and likeness rights. The USC case is the first filed by the board since its top lawyer, in a 2021 memo, asserted that college athletes should be classified as employees because they provide services that generate profits controlled by their schools.
The NCAA also argued the plaintiffs' division of damages unlawfully favored male athletes over female ones. In a statement, the NCAA said the plaintiffs' claims for "billions of dollars in damages" do not have "legal or factual support." Plaintiffs' lawyers for years have challenged rules that prohibited college athletes from receiving compensation. Class actions provide plaintiffs an avenue in court to pursue claims collectively rather than as individuals, imposing greater pressures on defendants. The plaintiffs' lawyers have asked the court to approve three classes seeking monetary damages: football and men's basketball; women's basketball; and an additional sports class.
Two former college athletes filed the complaint against the NCAA, which is the governing body for U.S. intercollegiate sports, and a group of its member conferences. The lawsuit alleged an unlawful conspiracy to bar cash awards for academic success. The suit seeks to represent a class of "thousands" of current and former student athletes who competed on a Division I team starting in April 2019, before the academic awards were permitted. The complaint said the NCAA, its league conferences and member schools "generate billions of dollars a year in revenues from Division I sports." The plaintiffs "did not receive the academic achievement awards that they would have received in a competitive market," the complaint alleges.
Another Kind of March Madness: Tell the NCAA to Buzz Off
  + stars: | 2023-03-28 | by ( William Mcgurn | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
The Final Four is upon us, and with it the fiction that National Collegiate Athletic Association men’s basketball is an amateur competition. The NCAA has a vested interest in this fiction, because the bulk of its annual $1.14 billion in revenue comes from its March Madness tournament. Critics fall into two broad camps. The first complains that those generating the cash—the players—are the only ones who aren’t paid. The other argues that college sports has become a big business, corrupting our universities.
The lawsuit was filed by current and former basketball players from Brown University. The eight schools that make up the Ivy League engage in illegal price-fixing by not awarding athletic scholarships, alleges a lawsuit filed Tuesday by current and former Brown University basketball players. While all Division I athletic programs award financial aid to selected athletes, Brown, Harvard, Yale and the other Ivies have for years agreed to provide only need-based financial aid to students, including athletes. According to the suit, that agreement violates federal antitrust law, and harms recruited athletes who otherwise could have gotten scholarships covering tuition and fees, or been eligible for reimbursement on thousands of dollars of other school-related expenses under National Collegiate Athletic Association regulations.
I think I worked very hard, I put my head down and continued to work," said 18-year-old Danelle Tan. The perception that soccer is a "male sport" isn't new, but Tan said she believes that's changing. Snakes and laddersTan knows all about breaking barriers — she's already made history more than once at a young age. I don't think there's anybody in the entire world who can be motivated every single day ... "I don't think there's anybody in the entire world who can be motivated every single day.
Brands will account for 70% of that spend, with most of the rest coming from so-called collectives, alumni groups that funnel money to athletes, according to Opendorse. Female athletes and meme starsGiven the wide-open field, brands’ strategies with NIL deals vary widely. Jill Cress, chief marketing and experience officer of H&R Block in a 2018 picture. Favorability ratings from both Gen Z consumers and parents of college students rose after the campaign, according to Ms. Cress. Bigger deals aheadNIL deals will likely evolve to often include intellectual property agreements with the schools in question, said Mr. Schwab.
The National Collegiate Athletic Association needs to make its own rules to govern the chaotic landscape that has developed around athlete compensation, incoming president Charlie Baker said in an interview—regardless of whether Congress establishes a national standard for paying athletes, as his predecessor long urged. Baker, the former governor of Massachusetts, is taking over the NCAA less than two years after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the NCAA had violated antitrust law by capping education-related benefits available to athletes. The case, along with pressure from athletes and state legislatures, kicked the door open to a new era in which college athletes for the first time could cash in on their name, image and likeness.
College football is one of the hottest properties in broadcasting. The Big Ten Conference recently made a deal for more than $1 billion a year with several networks, mostly to air its football games. The College Football Playoff is expected to grow substantially from its current $470 million-a-year deal when it expands to 12 teams after the 2024 season, and further increase the value under its next deal two years later. So when the National Collegiate Athletic Association said last week that increasing its revenue is a top goal, it may not have seemed like a major challenge. But that’s not the way things work in big-time college football, whose leading conferences legally aren’t required to share a dime of their burgeoning riches with the NCAA.
The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) director of the agency's Region 31 office issued a finding of merit in an unfair labor practice charge brought by the student athletes against USC, the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the Pac-12 athletic conference. The parties to the case were informed of the decision on Thursday, according to NLRB spokesperson Kayla Blado. read moreA separate case filed by college athletes in Indianapolis against the NCAA and others has been held in abeyance pending the outcome of the USC case. The judge's ruling could then be appealed to the full NLRB, which would render a decision as to whether USC, NCAA and Pac-12 are employers under labor law, and could order its own remedies. The National College Players Association, which brought the charges on behalf of 113 USC athletes, also could not be reached for comment.
CNN —The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) has hired Charlie Baker, the outgoing Governor of Massachusetts, as the next president of the organization. A year ago, Baker announced he would not seek re-election in 2022 for a third term as governor. Baker succeeds long-time president Mark Emmert. Outgoing NCAA president Mark Emmert speaking at a press conference for the before the 2022 Men's Final Four on March 31 in New Orleans. Tom Pennington/Getty Images“As a former student-athlete himself, husband to a former college gymnast, and father to two former college football players, Governor Baker is deeply committed to our student-athletes and enhancing their collegiate experience.
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