Close Menu
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
Dana White says he refused to get down during White House Correspondents’ Dinner shooting

Dana White says he refused to get down during White House Correspondents’ Dinner shooting

April 26, 2026
Sydney Sweeney Seen on Scooter Braun’s Shoulders During Ella Langley’s Stagecoach 2026 Set

Sydney Sweeney Seen on Scooter Braun’s Shoulders During Ella Langley’s Stagecoach 2026 Set

April 26, 2026
Controversial Vanderbilt QB, Heisman Trophy runner-up Diego Pavia goes undrafted

Controversial Vanderbilt QB, Heisman Trophy runner-up Diego Pavia goes undrafted

April 26, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Dana White says he refused to get down during White House Correspondents’ Dinner shooting
  • Sydney Sweeney Seen on Scooter Braun’s Shoulders During Ella Langley’s Stagecoach 2026 Set
  • Controversial Vanderbilt QB, Heisman Trophy runner-up Diego Pavia goes undrafted
  • White House Correspondents’ Dinner shooting ‘traumatic experience’ for Melania Trump, says president
  • Mississippi students stop school bus after driver passes out on highway
  • Meghan Markle Just Wore These $72 Tennis Shoes Reviewers Call ‘Very Comfy and Supportive’
  • Nuggets falls to Timberwolves as Nikola Jokic, Julius Randle get ejected with seconds remaining
  • Charles Gasparino: College sports are spiraling into chaos — and courts are making it worse
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
Join Us
USA TimesUSA Times
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
USA TimesUSA Times
Home » Charles Gasparino: College sports are spiraling into chaos — and courts are making it worse
Charles Gasparino: College sports are spiraling into chaos — and courts are making it worse
Business

Charles Gasparino: College sports are spiraling into chaos — and courts are making it worse

News RoomBy News RoomApril 26, 20261 ViewsNo Comments

If President Trump needs more evidence that the business of college sports needs to get reformed as soon as possible, he can point to recent hijinks in California federal court.

This is where, sources close to Team Trump contend, a California magistrate judge might be given final say over the insane money grab that has upended collegiate sports. It also could make the White House’s efforts to restore sanity even more arduous, The Post has learned.

As reported, Trump has appointed the Saving College Sports Roundtable — a blue-ribbon commission led by New York Yankees president Randy Levine and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis — to reform college sports’ “Name, Image and Likeness” (NIL)  system.

The committee’s goal: To recommend new legislation to Congress that will end some of the nasty, often unintended side effects they believe NIL has ­unleashed on college sports.

A key concern is that colleges are competing for top athletes by diverting donor money from academic pursuits through so-called booster clubs, school-affiliated organizations that are allowed to raise money from these same sources as part of the athlete wooing process.

The system, as broken as it is, does have one safeguard. Under the terms of a class action that helped create the current NIL structure  (aka “The House Settlement”), something called the College Sports Commission puts a $20.5 million yearly cap on money distributed to student athletes from booster organizations.

More From Charles Gasparino

But now critics allege that plaintiffs’ lawyers have filed a motion in US District Court in Northern California seeking to craft what they say is a loophole in the rules that allows so-called “third-party NIL deals” to surpass the cap.

Those third-party deals are with sports marketing companies like PlayFly and Learfield, outfits that facilitate media-rights deals with athletes. The commission believes such groups should fall under the cap because they work with the schools (as opposed to a private company working directly with athletes).

I spoke to Levine about the matter; he tells me the roundtable is making progress, and there is also bipartisan support for legislation that reforms NIL. But he says the filing is scary since a magistrate judge might have the final say over how the business of college sports operates.

‘Further chaos’

“The latest attempt to circumvent NIL enforcement if successful will throw college sports into further chaos and accelerate colleges’ financial decline,” he told The Post. “It shows more than ever that the president and Congress’s leadership is needed now to save college sports. We cannot have magistrate judges running college sports.”

Reps for Learfield and PlayFly had no comment.

The plaintiffs’ lawyers claim that such NIL deals “are not subject to review by the College Sports Commission” because they are legitimate third parties not  directly  connected with the schools.

“The House settlement agreement is a negotiated deal among the NCAA, the conferences and class of athletes and approved by the court . . . [and] provides two types of payments — one that involves a cap and others from third parties,” said Jeffrey Kessler, co-executive chairman of Winston & Strawn and co-lead counsel on the House settlement case.

Charlie Gasparino has his finger on the pulse of where business, politics and finance meet

Sign up to receive On The Money by Charlie Gasparino in your inbox every Thursday.

Thanks for signing up!

“If those payments come from an affiliated entity then it is subject to review but if the payment doesn’t come from a booster then it is just free-market payment and that is the deal,” Kessler added. “The College Sports Commission would like to regulate this more, but that is not the deal.”

Again, who could be against student athletes sharing in the wealth they’re creating? But here’s the downside: If a new type of school-sponsored third-party deal becomes the norm, the deals luring athletes to jump from school to school will reach stratospheric levels, magnifying the problem the roundtable was created to fix.

For context, the money from NIL deals exploded after the landmark 2021 antitrust case  known as House v. NCAA, which allows student athletes to rake in huge amounts of money through sponsorships and the like that are sponsored by the schools themselves or the affiliated boosters.

Sounds good until you start peeling back the layers of insanity that have infected the system ever since.

What NIL has evolved into is something closer to a big-bucks free-for-all, with top athletes jumping from school to school in search of bigger endorsement deals.

Some college athletes — particularly in popular sports like football and basketball — have remained amateur athletes well after they were supposed to graduate so they can cash in on multimillion-dollar endorsements.

While football and basketball college stars can earn millions of dollars in endorsements, other college sports suffer, including those that support Olympic athletes.

Smaller schools are at a huge disadvantage in financing sports because they need to spend huge amounts of money they don’t really have to compete for athletic talent.

Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

Consumer confidence plummeted to record low this month, study reveals — though spending shows a glimmer of hope

Consumer confidence plummeted to record low this month, study reveals — though spending shows a glimmer of hope

How a divorced mom-of-three became the first woman on the NY Stock Exchange

How a divorced mom-of-three became the first woman on the NY Stock Exchange

We survived the death of the penny — the nickel could be nixed next, experts say

We survived the death of the penny — the nickel could be nixed next, experts say

Lawsuit brewing against Trader Joe’s over coffee’s caffeine label

Lawsuit brewing against Trader Joe’s over coffee’s caffeine label

Exclusive | Biz leaders pitch ‘exemption’ to Mamdani and Hochul’s pied-à-terre tax

Exclusive | Biz leaders pitch ‘exemption’ to Mamdani and Hochul’s pied-à-terre tax

James Dolan’s Sphere mints cash as Vegas mega-venue tops world in ticket sales

James Dolan’s Sphere mints cash as Vegas mega-venue tops world in ticket sales

Some Labubu dolls contain banned cotton from Chinese region known for forced labor: investigation

Some Labubu dolls contain banned cotton from Chinese region known for forced labor: investigation

Mamdani doubles down on Ken Griffin attack despite Citadel’s threat to pull  billion NYC project

Mamdani doubles down on Ken Griffin attack despite Citadel’s threat to pull $6 billion NYC project

Tesla’s Cybercab robotaxi has entered production, Elon Musk says

Tesla’s Cybercab robotaxi has entered production, Elon Musk says

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Sydney Sweeney Seen on Scooter Braun’s Shoulders During Ella Langley’s Stagecoach 2026 Set

Sydney Sweeney Seen on Scooter Braun’s Shoulders During Ella Langley’s Stagecoach 2026 Set

April 26, 2026
Controversial Vanderbilt QB, Heisman Trophy runner-up Diego Pavia goes undrafted

Controversial Vanderbilt QB, Heisman Trophy runner-up Diego Pavia goes undrafted

April 26, 2026
White House Correspondents’ Dinner shooting ‘traumatic experience’ for Melania Trump, says president

White House Correspondents’ Dinner shooting ‘traumatic experience’ for Melania Trump, says president

April 26, 2026
Mississippi students stop school bus after driver passes out on highway

Mississippi students stop school bus after driver passes out on highway

April 26, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News
Meghan Markle Just Wore These  Tennis Shoes Reviewers Call ‘Very Comfy and Supportive’

Meghan Markle Just Wore These $72 Tennis Shoes Reviewers Call ‘Very Comfy and Supportive’

April 26, 2026
Nuggets falls to Timberwolves as Nikola Jokic, Julius Randle get ejected with seconds remaining

Nuggets falls to Timberwolves as Nikola Jokic, Julius Randle get ejected with seconds remaining

April 26, 2026
Charles Gasparino: College sports are spiraling into chaos — and courts are making it worse

Charles Gasparino: College sports are spiraling into chaos — and courts are making it worse

April 26, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp TikTok Instagram
© 2026 USA Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.