麻豆传媒映画

Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Judge gives preliminary approval to $2.78 billion settlement designed to pay college athletes

A judge granted preliminary approval Monday to the $2.78 billion legal settlement that would transform college sports by allowing schools to pay players. U.
fcf8685884bce7b1923be55afadc6c6d2e85ef9f9e6c2a298e01ffec9ce1e24d
Georgia quarterback Carson Beck (15) throws from the pocket in the first half of an NCAA college football game against Auburn Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024, in Athens, Ga. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)

A judge granted preliminary approval Monday to the that would by allowing schools to pay players.

U.S District Judge Claudia Wilken released an order setting a timeline for a deal that would put millions of dollars into the pockets of college athletes, who can begin making claims later this month.

A final hearing is set for April 7, 2025. If finalized, the deal would allow the biggest schools to have a pool of about $21.5 million in the first year to distribute to athletes via a revenue-sharing plan, but the athletes would still be able to cut name, image and likeness deals with outside groups.

鈥淲e are pleased that we are one step closer to a revolutionary change in college athletics that will allow billions in revenue sharing,鈥 said plaintiff attorney Steve Berman.

The judge鈥檚 approval comes 11 days after attorneys agreement to address Wilken鈥檚 concerns. The main change involved getting rid of the word 鈥渂oosters鈥 and replacing it with a better-defined description of whose potential NIL deals would be subject to oversight by a neutral arbitrator once the deal goes through.

That did not, however, strike to the heart of the settlement, which sets up a revenue-sharing arrangement between schools and the athletes. The $21.5 million figure comes from the 22% of average revenue that power conference schools generate through media rights, tickets and other sources. It will be recalculated periodically through the 10-year window the agreement covers.

___

AP college football: and

Eddie Pells, The Associated Press