BMX Bandit said:
highlights from Ross Dellinger twitter:
Revenue Share
- How much: ~$20-22M annually (fluid; will escalate based on school rev figures)
- From: Schools
- To: Athletes
- Distribution: School discretion (Title IX applies)
- Implementation: Summer/Fall 2025
- Exceptions: $5M of Alston/new scholarships can count toward cap
Cap Enforcement
- Court oversight/audits
- Athlete reporting mechanism of 3rd party NIL
- Must be "true NIL" based on developed "fair market value" data
- Enforced thru NCAA/outside entity w/Court backing
- Burden on school/athlete to prove "true NIL"
- No pay-4-play/booster pay
Roster Change
- Eliminates scholarship caps
- Implements new roster limits (not finalized)
- Ability to provide scholarships to entire roster
- Potential football roster reduction to as few as 85 roster spots (on-going discussions)
- Title IX applies
Governance/other
- Potential new DI subdivision for increased power conference rule-making
- Flexibility for leagues to set some own rules
- Rev-share model could be extended beyond 10 yrs
- Plaintiffs agreed to lobby on behalf of NCAA's effort seeking Congressional protections
story here:
https://sports.yahoo.com/ncaa-power-five-conferences-vote-to-approve-28b-settlement-in-house-hubbard-and-carter-cases-001736810.html
Good summary, but per your link, the applicability of Title IX is far from settled.
In that article, Kessler (plaintiff attorney) stated, "The courts will decide... It doesn't impact us. If we have a settlement, we'll negotiate a system in which athletes will be compensated. The degree in which Title IX applies will be determined [by the courts]."
ETA: The non-power conferences - particularly those without football - are the ones getting the short end of the stick to the tune of $990M, or about 60% of the schools' end of the deal (per your link).