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Seven former A&M athletes opted out of the House settlement and joined onto a different lawsuit and one former A&M football player objected to the settlement.
The House settlement ushered in a new era of collegiate athletics, allowing universities to pay athletes with new guidelines on NIL and roster limits.
Last week Federal Judge Claudia Wilken approved a deal on a $2.8 billion settlement between the NCAA, top conferences, and lawyers representing division 1 athletes. Athletes that have competed between ...
Universities will be able to pay student athletes up to $20.5 million in NIL revenue after a new House v. NCAA settlement was granted final approval by a federal judge ...
Friday’s historic House vs. NCAA settlement will bring more changes to the landscape of college athletics and Colorado State ...
The landmark lawsuit led to closure on one college sports issue, but there are other things to deal with, and there is no ...
House v. NCAA settlement paves the way for Oklahoma colleges to directly pay athletes, sparking a 'wild west' debate in ...
A $2.8 billion settlement between the NCAA and former student-athletes will soon allow schools to pay players directly. But ...
Commissioner Teresa Gould said the conference is discussing how to allocate revenue across sports under the terms of the ...
The landscape of college sports will officially change forever on July 1 as schools start paying players through revenue ...
The University of New Mexico and New Mexico State University both decided to opt in and directly pay their student-athletes.
The House lawsuit settlement terms have been a constant topic of conversation for Pac-12 commissioner Teresa Gould and campus executives.
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