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Some College Athletes Cash In While Others Lose Out

Star athletes at Division I schools are earning big payouts from the NCAA’s interim name, image and likeness policy, while athletes playing minor sports at smaller schools struggle to make sense of it.

Congress Weighs In on College Athletes Leveraging Their Brand

Lawmakers hear testimony from players, coaches and administrators as they consider establishing federal rules to govern college athletics.

Treating Private College Athletes Like the Pros

A new memo from the National Labor Relations Board’s top attorney classifies college athletes as employees with the right to unionize.

Where Are the Presidents?

Commercialism and college sports are on trial, yet, for the most part, higher education leaders have been conspicuously silent, argues John Thelin.

NCAA Powerless to Punish Baylor for Sexual Misconduct

With its hands tied by NCAA's lack of rules governing athletes' sexual violence, infractions panel leaves Baylor barely punished for institutional student sexual assault scandal.
The capitals on top of the pillars on the Supreme Court building's facade.

Supreme Court Upholds Payments to Athletes

Justices unanimously rule the NCAA cannot bar compensation for education-related benefits. But the narrow ruling may not upend the NCAA amateurism model as much as some had hoped (and feared).

Stanford Changes Admissions Policy for Athletes

University, citing competition in football from Notre Dame and USC, will allow athletes to enroll early in a three-year experiment.

Future of College Athletics Is in Congress’s Hands

College athletics stakeholders want Congress to pass a federal law allowing student athletes to make money while they participate in college sports -- and they want it done by July 1.