Professional Chaos in College Sports

Source Summary
Federal judge Claudia Wilken presided over a sprawling hearing on the proposed $2.8 billion settlement in the House v. NCAA case, which would allow colleges to directly compensate student-athletes. The settlement sets guidelines for schools to share revenue with athletes, imposes roster limits to replace scholarship caps, and establishes a third-party clearinghouse for monitoring name, image, and likeness (NIL) deals.
During the hearing, former LSU gymnast Livvy Dunne objected to the settlement’s limits on pre-NIL-era compensation, noting that NCAA restrictions deprived her of sponsorship opportunities worth millions. Current collegiate athletes voiced concerns about the disruption that roster limits will cause, including the end of walk-on team members.
Judge Wilken clearly listened to the players’ input: on April 23, she notified all parties that she was only ready to approve the settlement if the NCAA and its member schools agree to “grandfather” players currently on college teams, protecting the players against the disruptive and draconian cuts that would be mandated by the roster limits. She gave the NCAA and its member schools 14 days to come back with a fix that protects the players.