News

The College Sports Commission is designed to regulate the NIL market but won’t have subpoena power to control rogue boosters.
Ohio State’s athletic department is creating a Name, Image, and Likeness group for student-athletes in response to a ruling ...
With the NCAA’s new revenue-sharing model set to reshape college athletics, Mississippi State is already ahead of the curve, ...
The Post obtained copies of draft legislation from two House committees that addresses the priorities the NCAA has spent ...
Nearly all of the $20.5 million that Ohio State is allowed to share with athletes in the next academic year will be through ...
The NCAA's landmark settlement in the House case included a pool of roughly $2.8 billion to be set aside for former college athletes who weren't allowed to be c ...
Texas Governor Greg Abbott has signed House Bill 126 into law, a sweeping measure that allows the state's universities to ...
Just one day after Texas passed a bill letting athletes over 17 sign contracts with schools for NIL, the long-running House v ...