The NCAA Board of Governors took another important step forward at its April 28, 2020 meeting by outlining specific categories in which student-athletes could earn compensation from their name, image and likeness within certain categories.
Taking Action
Name, Image and Likeness
Looking Forward? ? Timeline? ?Q&A ? ?Statements??Resources? News
The College Athlete Model
The NCAA is committed to allow name, image and likeness opportunities for student-athletes consistent with the college athlete model.
The college athlete model is not the professional model, meaning students will compete against other students, not professionals or employees.?
The NCAA is best positioned to provide a uniform and fair name, image and likeness approach for all student-athletes on a national scale.
Looking Forward
The NCAA’s highest governing body has taken unprecedented steps to allow college athletes to be compensated for their name, image and likeness.
At its meeting in April 2020, the Board of Governors supported rule changes to allow student-athletes to receive compensation for third-party endorsements both related to and separate from athletics. It also supports compensation for other student-athlete opportunities, such as social media, businesses they have started and personal appearances within the E时彩guiding principles originally outlined by the board in October 2019.
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Those principles including the following:
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- Assure student-athletes are treated similarly to non-athlete students unless a compelling reason exists to differentiate.
- Maintain the priorities of education and the collegiate experience to provide opportunities for student-athlete success.
- Ensure rules are transparent, focused and enforceable and facilitate fair and balanced competition.
- Make clear the distinction between collegiate and professional opportunities.
- Make clear that compensation for athletics performance or participation is impermissible.
- Reaffirm that student-athletes are students first and not employees of the university.
- Enhance principles of diversity, inclusion and gender equity.
- Protect the recruiting environment and prohibit inducements to select, remain at, or transfer to a specific institution.
TIMELINE
Member schools in each division will continue to examine the issue, provide feedback and prepare for future rules changes.
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Board of Governors directs divisions to create flexibility in name, image and likeness rules.
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Status update and discussion of general concepts during division-specific delegate sessions at the NCAA Convention.
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Updates to divisional presidential committees and the Federal and State Legislation Working Group reports to Board of Governors during NCAA governance meetings.
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Continued discussion and feedback in each division.
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Each division should have initial legislative proposals.
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Each division should have final legislation drafted to update NIL rules.
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Legislation should be approved, with effective dates no later than the start of 2021-22 academic year.
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Questions and Answers
Yes. The Board of Governors directed each division to create rules using the principles and guidelines it approved in October 2019 and the recommendations it approved April 28, 2020. There are many examples now where each NCAA division has different rules, including in areas such as recruiting, financial aid, and playing and practice seasons. As a fundamental framework of the Association, member schools choose the division in which they compete and agree to follow the rules within that division. All three divisions will implement changes consistent with the principles within the NCAA constitution and endorsed by the Board of Governors.
It is critical that college sports are regulated at a national level. This ensures the uniformity of rules and a level playing field for student-athletes. The California law and other proposed measures ultimately would lead to pay for play and turn college athletes into employees. This directly contradicts the mission of college sports within higher education — that student-athletes are students first and choose to play a sport they love against other students while earning a degree.
E时彩Read the complete list of Q&As.
Statements and Positions
- Board of Governors moves toward allowing student-athlete compensation for endorsements and promotions (Apr. 29, 2020)
- NIL reforms for student-athletes stressed at Senate subcommittee hearing (Feb. 12, 2020)
- E时彩Statement from Federal and State Legislation Working Group co-chairs on name, image and likeness efforts?(Jan. 24, 2020)
- College Sports Insider: Name, Image and Likeness - What's Happening Today?(Jan. 17, 2020)
- Student-athlete voices on name, image and likeness (Jan. 17, 2020)?
- NCAA statement on Senate working group (Dec. 6, 2019)
- Board of Governors starts process to enhance name, image and likeness opportunities (Oct. 29, 2019)
- NCAA statement on Gov. Newsom signing SB 206 (Sept. 30, 2019)
- NCAA responds to California Senate Bill 206 (Sept. 11 2019)
Resources
- NCAA Board of Governors Federal and State Legislation Working Group Final Report and Recommendation
- Federal and State Legislation Working Group Charge and Roster
- Name, Image, Likeness: What Student-Athletes Should Know
- October?2019 Federal and State Legislation Working Group Report
- NCAA Board of Governors October 2019 Report
- NCAA Working Group to Examine Name, Image and Likeness?(May 2019)
- Additional Membership Information