Proposed $2.77 billion settlement clears first step of NCAA approval with no change to finance plan

entertainment2024-05-22 10:19:276369

A potential multibillion-dollar settlement of an antitrust lawsuit has cleared the first of a three-step NCAA approval process, with no change to a payment structure that would have the 27 college conferences not named in the suit cover the majority of a $1.6 billion portion of the damages.

The Division I Board of Directors finance committee on Monday night passed the proposed $2.77 billion settlement of House vs. NCAA to the full board with a recommendation to stick with the original finance plan.

The NCAA, Big Ten, Big 12, Atlantic Coast Conference, Pac-12 and Southeastern Conference are defendants in the House case, a class-action lawsuit that seeks back pay for college athletes who were denied name, image and likeness compensation dating to 2016. The NCAA lifted its ban on athletes earning money for sponsorship and endorsement deals in 2021.

Address of this article:http://thailand.downmusic.org/news-98c299604.html

Popular

Wayne Bennett, at 74, signs a 3

Output of Tibet's Culture Industry Grows Fourfold over Decade

GLOBALink

China Plans to Expand National Park System

Russia begins nuclear drills in an apparent warning to West over Ukraine

China Steps up Minors Protection on Campus

5th CIIE Attracts 145 Countries, Regions, Int'l Organizations

Pharmaceutical Companies in China Work at Full Capacity Increase Medicine Supply

LINKS