-- The National Collegiate Athletic Association was sued by a bipartisan group of US states over restrictions that allegedly hinder the ability of student athletes to get a better cut from the commercial use of their names and images, including on video games and merchandise.Treasuries Rally With Fed Not as Hawkish as Feared: Markets Wrap
“Student athletes should be able to call the shots on their career fairly and evenly,” Letitia James, the Democratic attorney general of New York, said in a statement. The rule forces student athletes to “commit, enroll, or transfer to a university without understanding the full scope of NIL opportunities or comparing those opportunities to ones at competing schools,” the states alleged in their complaint.In a statement, the NCAA said it is working with the attorneys general to try to reach an agreement and that the current rules were “overwhelmingly supported” by member schools.
A coalition of states previously sued the NCAA in December over a so-called transfer eligibility rule, which they alleged harms student athletes’ ability to move to other schools and still participate in collegiate sports, according to James’s statement. The New York attorney general said the NCAA temporarily stopped enforcing that rule as a result of the earlier suit.
Source: Education Headlines (educationheadlines.net)
National Collegiate Athletic Association Student Athletes NCAA Letitia James NIL Image And Likeness
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