News

The NCAA House settlement, which was approved on June 13 by a federal judge in California, sets the stage for a tidal wave of ...
House v. NCAA was filed by former Arizona collegiate swimmer Grant House, challenging a decades-old prohibition on schools ...
The $2.8 billion NCAA antitrust settlement is going to bring changes to hundreds of schools across the country.
The settlement will allow schools for the first time to compensate student athletes for past and future commercial use of ...
It’s a particularly significant moment for Boston College and UMass, the state’s two institutions that compete in FBS, the ...
Washington is the largest of the Big Ten's new additions, approaching 40,000 undergraduate students. The school is trending ...
The Post obtained copies of draft legislation from two House committees that addresses the priorities the NCAA has spent ...
The agreement brings a seismic shift to hundreds of schools that were forced to reckon with the reality that their players are the ones producing the billions in TV and other revenue.
The ability of college athletics to succeed in the new era of revenue sharing is dependent on schools actually following the rules for common good.
Division I athletes will soon be able to receive direct payments from their schools for the first time in NCAA history.
In a landmark moment in college athletics, one university has filed suit against another over torious interference, according ...