NCAA’s $2.78 billion settlement with colleges to allow athlete payments gets preliminary approval

NCAA’s $2.78 billion settlement with colleges to allow athlete payments gets preliminary approval
NCAA President Charlie Baker, Jason Sudeikis and Robin Roberts attend the 2024 NCAA Women’s Basketball Tournament national championship between the Iowa Hawkeyes and South Carolina Gamecocks at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse on April 07, 2024 in Cleveland, Ohio. (File/Getty Images/AFP)
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Updated 08 October 2024
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NCAA’s $2.78 billion settlement with colleges to allow athlete payments gets preliminary approval

NCAA’s $2.78 billion settlement with colleges to allow athlete payments gets preliminary approval
  • NCAA President Charlie Baker: Today’s progress is a significant step in writing the next chapter for the future of college sports
  • US 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

NEW YORK: A judge granted preliminary approval Monday to the $2.78 billion legal settlement that would transform college sports by allowing schools to pay players.

US 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 applying for payment on Oct. 18.

A final hearing is set for April 7, 2025, the day that one of college sports’ biggest moneymakers, March Madness, comes to a close with college basketball’s national title game.

If finalized, the deal would allow the biggest schools to establish a pool of about $21.5 million in the first year to distribute money to athletes through a revenue-sharing plan. Athletes would still be able to cut name, image and likeness deals with outside groups.

Former college athletes from as far back as 2016 would be able to apply for their share of $2.576 billion set aside to help them recoup money they could’ve made from NIL deals, which weren’t allowed until 2021.

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

The judge’s approval comes 11 days after attorneys tweaked wording in the original settlement agreement to address Wilken’s concerns. The main change involved getting rid of the word “boosters” 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 athletes who, for decades, played for scholarships, a few expenses and little else, while coaches and athletic departments brought in millions. The $21.5 million figure comes from the 22 percent 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.

Not every school will chip in the full amount. Those that will are hurrying to find ways to replace what they’ll pay out to athletes. They worry it could impact their overall sports programs, especially the “non-revenue” sports that play an outsized role in populating US Olympic rosters.

“We are thrilled by Judge Wilken’s decision to give preliminary approval to the landmark settlement that will help bring stability and sustainability to college athletics while delivering increased benefits to student-athletes for years to come,” said NCAA President Charlie Baker. “Today’s progress is a significant step in writing the next chapter for the future of college sports.”

In addition to creating a payment system, the settlement sets up a framework to regulate future NIL deals and replaces scholarship caps with “roster limits,” which will grow to 105 for football, the biggest sport at most major universities, and also the sport that brings in the most money while incurring the most expense.

How those new roster caps and everything else will impact Title IX has yet to be seen. Plaintiffs lawyers have estimated around 90 percent of the money will go to football and men’s basketball players whose sports bring in the lion’s share of the revenue. Critics of the settlement have suggested that could be in violation of Title IX.

This settlement resolves three major antitrust lawsuits filed against the NCAA, including one spearheaded by Grant House, a former swimmer at Arizona State. Berman’s law firm says the value of new payments and benefits to college athletes is expected to exceed $20 billion over 10 years.

The $21 million that the biggest schools will dole out represents not even 10 percent of an NFL salary cap, but is considered big progress for college sports, which are undergoing a revolution with an expanded football playoff (with its $7.8 billion TV contract) and a related move to mega-conferences; the Southeastern and Big Ten Conferences now have 34 teams between them.

“For far too long, these athletes have been deprived of their economic rights in an unjust system that will now, finally, be fundamentally reformed,” plaintiff attorney Jeffrey Kessler said in a news release that was part of the court filings.

Still unknown is how long the terms of this deal will last. Litigation regarding the rights of players to unionize and potentially be considered employees remains unsettled. Meanwhile, the NCAA is pushing for federal legislation to knit together a streamlined policy for NIL, which is currently regulated by a patchwork of state laws, legal settlements and NCAA rules.


Isack Hadjar on Red Bull rumors: ‘I didn’t sign anything’

Isack Hadjar on Red Bull rumors: ‘I didn’t sign anything’
Updated 18 September 2025
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Isack Hadjar on Red Bull rumors: ‘I didn’t sign anything’

Isack Hadjar on Red Bull rumors: ‘I didn’t sign anything’
  • Telling reporters this week that he “couldn’t care less” about the rumors, Hadjar added, “I think it’s very funny. Because I didn’t sign anything“
  • While no official announcement has been made yet, Hadjar acknowledged that earning a seat with the main team has been his goal since signing with the Red Bull Junior team

BAKU: Isack Hadjar downplayed rumors that he is set to replace Yuki Tsunoda in the second Red Bull seat alongside Max Verstappen in 2026, saying “I didn’t sign anything.”

Tsunoda has struggled to consistently generate points since being promoted to the main team ahead of the third race of the season, and enters this weekend’s Azerbaijan Grand Prix with just 12 . Meanwhile, the 20-year-old Hadjar has recovered from a crash in his first race in Australia to produce 38 points for the junior team.

With Tsunoda currently 19th place in the driver’s standings and Hadjar in ninth, speculation has been rampant that the young Frenchman is set to be Red Bull’s next attempt to find a consistent points producer alongside Verstappen.

Telling reporters this week that he “couldn’t care less” about the rumors, Hadjar added, “I think it’s very funny. Because I didn’t sign anything.”

Liam Lawson lasted just two races into the season before being replaced by Tsunod, and Red Bull team principal Laurent Mekies, who replaced the ousted Christian Horner, said recently that there will not be another midseason change in the second Red Bull seat.

While no official announcement has been made yet, Hadjar acknowledged that earning a seat with the main team has been his goal since signing with the Red Bull Junior team.

“I think it is quite clear,” he said. “It (driver decisions) has always been decided, at least for me, at the very end of the season. I think it makes sense, because there are eight races to go, so I need to keep pushing.”

Tsunoda is the third driver to struggle to effectively race the notoriously difficult to drive Red Bull car, following Lawson and Sergio Perez, who parted ways with the team over the offseason. Lawson, who got only two races before being replaced, was asked what advice he would give Hadjar should he be the next in line to be teamed with Verstappen.

“I would honestly just say ignore everything that’s being said,” Lawson said. “At the end of the day, we’re all racing drivers, we all have to have enough self-confidence to be in the sport in the first place. We don’t come here thinking that other people are better than us, otherwise we wouldn’t be here. So I think to just have faith in yourself.

“He’s done a good job this year and I think he needs to just focus on the job and focus on preparing the best he can. Not listening to everything that’s said about what it’s going to be like because, at the end of the day, nobody actually knows. Only the guys that have done it (know).”


Mourinho appointed at Benfica as he returns to Portugal

Mourinho appointed at Benfica as he returns to Portugal
Updated 18 September 2025
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Mourinho appointed at Benfica as he returns to Portugal

Mourinho appointed at Benfica as he returns to Portugal
  • Mourinho has signed a contract “to run until the end of the 2026/27 season,” Benfica said in
  • He will soon face reunions against former sides Chelsea and Porto, in the Champions League on September 30 and in the Primeira Liga on October 5 respectively

LISBON: Benfica appointed Jose Mourinho as their coach on Thursday, with the Portuguese returning to work in his homeland 21 years after leaving Porto for Chelsea.

The 62-year-old, who also coached Real Madrid and Manchester United among other clubs, was sacked by Turkish side Fenerbahce in August after Benfica beat them in the Champions League play-offs.

Mourinho has signed a contract “to run until the end of the 2026/27 season,” Benfica said in a statement, with an option for either party to end the deal at the end of the current campaign.

The two-time European champions sacked Bruno Lage after a shock defeat in their Champions League opener against Azerbaijani minnows Qarabag on Tuesday.

Mourinho will soon face reunions against former sides Chelsea and Porto, in the Champions League on September 30 and in the Primeira Liga on October 5 respectively.

“I come to Benfica at a different stage in my career, and as a person... we transform for the better,” Mourinho told reporters, sitting alongside Benfica president Rui Costa.

“I’m more altruistic, less self-centered, I think less about myself and more about the good I can do for others, the joy I can bring to others. I’m not the important thing — Benfica is important.”

After starting out his coaching career as an assistant to Bobby Robson and then Louis van Gaal at Barcelona, Mourinho made the step up to head coach at Benfica in September 2000.

He quit after just 11 matches and then, after impressing at Uniao de Leiria, he joined the Eagles’ fierce rivals Porto and guided them to back-to-back league titles and the Champions League crown in 2004.

That set him on the path to a successful career coaching Chelsea, Inter Milan and Real Madrid before his fortunes dived after joining Manchester United in 2016.

More modest stints then followed at Tottenham, Roma and Fenerbahce.

“In some people’s minds, I have two resumes — one that lasted a certain period and another that represents, let’s say, a less happy phase of my career,” said Mourinho.

“My misfortune is that in the last five years, I’ve played in two European finals. The negative part of my career... is two European finals in the last five years.”

- ‘My mission’ -

Mourinho won three Premier League titles across two spells at Chelsea, as well as the Champions League with Inter Milan in 2010, and a La Liga title with Real Madrid among other trophies.

However, since 2017, when he won the Europa League with Manchester United, Mourinho’s only silverware was the Conference League with Roma in 2022.

Mourinho’s first game at the helm of Benfica will be a visit to face AVS on Saturday in the top flight.

“It’s been 25 years in which I’ve had the opportunity to work for the biggest clubs in the world,” said Mourinho, of the time since he first departed Benfica.

“I’d like to say that none of the other giant clubs I’ve had the opportunity to coach have made me feel more honored, responsible, or motivated than being the coach of Benfica,” he added.

“The promise is very clear: I will live for Benfica, for my mission.”

Mourinho said he was more “mature” now than when he previously coached the club, and insisted his team had the quality to win the title.

Sporting Lisbon won the last two titles, with Benfica’s last triumph in 2023.

“Benfica have enough potential within that dressing room to be champions,” said Mourinho.


Spain overtake Messi’s Argentina to lead FIFA rankings for first time since 2014

Spain overtake Messi’s Argentina to lead FIFA rankings for first time since 2014
Updated 18 September 2025
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Spain overtake Messi’s Argentina to lead FIFA rankings for first time since 2014

Spain overtake Messi’s Argentina to lead FIFA rankings for first time since 2014
  • Argentina’s loss in a World Cup qualifier in Ecuador also let France rise one place to No. 2
  • Morocco at No. 11 were the best of the African nations and Japan led Asia at No. 19

ZURICH: Spain and Lamine Yamal took top spot from Argentina and Lionel Messi in the FIFA men’s rankings published on Thursday, and lead for the first time since being dethroned as world champion in June 2014.

Spain’s two-win start to a 2026 World Cup qualifying group this month — against Turkiye and Bulgaria — lifted the European champion up from second place behind 2022 World Cup winner Argentina, which fell to third.

Argentina’s loss in a World Cup qualifier in Ecuador also let France rise one place to No. 2.

England stayed at No. 4, and Portugal climbed one place to No. 5 in a swap with Brazil, which lost a game at Bolivia.

Morocco at No. 11 were the best of the African nations and Japan led Asia at No. 19. Both have already qualified for the World Cup.

Mexico and the United States were Nos. 14 and 16 respectively as the World Cup co-hosts both fell one place. Canada, the third co-host next year, rose two to No. 26.

The rankings are updated in October and again in November when the standings are more significant.

The November rankings should decide seedings for the 48-team World Cup tournament draw being held on Dec. 5 in Washington, plus draws for playoffs in Europe and the intercontinental brackets. Those games are scheduled in March.

The World Cup draw will have 42 confirmed entries and six placeholders for the eventual playoff winners. Those placeholders all must come from the lowest-ranked teams in seeding pot 4 and could include Italy.


Ligue 1 leader PSG face bitter rival Marseille and Lille look to stay unbeaten

Ligue 1 leader PSG face bitter rival Marseille and Lille look to stay unbeaten
Updated 18 September 2025
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Ligue 1 leader PSG face bitter rival Marseille and Lille look to stay unbeaten

Ligue 1 leader PSG face bitter rival Marseille and Lille look to stay unbeaten
  • “We know the importance of this match, for the fans and the club,” PSG coach Luis Enrique said
  • Marseille have improved under coach Roberto De Zerbi but the players still lack confidence

PARIS: Ligue 1 leader Paris Saint-Germain face their biggest rival Marseille at Parc des Princes on Sunday.

Marseille’s longstanding bragging rights as the only French side to win the Champions League finally ended when PSG won it in emphatic style last season. On the domestic front, PSG have pulled away from Marseille with 13 Ligue 1 titles compared to nine.

PSG have won their four league games so far.

“We know the importance of this match, for the fans and the club,” PSG coach Luis Enrique said. “It’s a strong rivalry.”

Marseille have improved under coach Roberto De Zerbi but the players still lack confidence and De Zerbi demanded they show more daring and ambition after Tuesday’s 2-1 loss to Real Madrid in the Champions League.

Second-placed Lille are the only other unbeaten side and have a northern derby at Lens on Saturday.

Key matchups

Marseille captain Leonardo Balerdi could be in for a busy night, whoever he faces.

While it might be a relief that he doesn’t have to deal with injured stars Ousmane Dembélé and Désiré Doué, his performance in central defense is crucial to Marseille’s chances.

It’s a question of which Balerdi will turn up.

Will it be the combative and rugged Balerdi who did well in a man-marking role against Real Madrid star Kylian Mbappé on Tuesday? Or the error-prone Balerdi who has given away clumsy goals since joining four years ago?

PSG defenders will keep a close eye on Marseille forward Mason Greenwood. He set up United States winger Tim Weah’s goal against Madrid and has two goals and three assists so far in Ligue 1.

Players to watch

Aladji Bamba is the latest player to come through Monaco’s reputed youth academy. The 19-year-old midfielder impressed on his first start last weekend in a win against Auxerre.

He is set to feature against Metz on Sunday, and could get more playing time in the next few weeks as former France star Paul Pogba works his way back to fitness.

Former Barcelona prodigy Ansu Fati could also make his Ligue 1 debut for Monaco.

Out of action

Monaco midfielder Denis Zakaria will miss several weeks with a thigh muscle injury.

Injury-hit PSG are waiting for further news on key midfielder João Neves after he limped off early in the second half of Wednesday’s 4-0 rout of Atalanta in the Champions League.

Off the field

Lens fans are still angry about heavy-handed policing before and after last Sunday’s game at Paris Saint-Germain.

Lens supporters’ groups complained about being surrounded by aggressive French riot police with baton shields raised when they arrived at a pre-designated area near Parc des Princes.

When other police officers came on to search the buses, Lens supporters said they were prevented from leaving the bus by the riot police — known as the CRS — who were outside. Women on board were not even allowed to step out to use the toilet when they asked.

Tensions boiled over and led to brief but violent clashes.

“The club wishes to express their deep concern about the conditions reserved for football supporters,” Lens said in a statement. “Respect for supporters and the preservation of a peaceful atmosphere in stadiums requires clear rules applied consistently.”

Lens do not have a history of hooliganism and fans expressed outrage at their treatment.

The French riot police were roundly criticized for their aggressive behavior before the 2022 Champions League final between Liverpool and Real Madrid.


Naoya Inoue to headline Riyadh’s ‘Night of the Samurai’

Riyadh Season hosts ‘Ring V: Night of the Samurai’. supplied
Riyadh Season hosts ‘Ring V: Night of the Samurai’. supplied
Updated 18 September 2025
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Naoya Inoue to headline Riyadh’s ‘Night of the Samurai’

Riyadh Season hosts ‘Ring V: Night of the Samurai’. supplied
  • Japanese superstar Inoue will fight for the first time in Saudi Arabia on Dec. 27, against Mexico’s Alan Picasso Romero

RIYADH: Turki Alalshikh, chairman of the General Entertainment Authority, has announced that Japanese superstar Naoya Inoue (31-0, 27 KOs) will defend his WBC super-bantamweight title against Mexico’s Alan Picasso Romero (32-0-1, 17 KOs) on Dec. 27.

The fight will headline Riyadh Season’s “Ring V: Night of the Samurai” at the Mohammed Abdo Arena, according to reports on Thursday.

This marks Inoue’s first fight in Saudi Arabia, following his dominant title defense last weekend against Murodjon Akhmadaliev.

Ring Magazine has ranked Inoue third in boxing’s pound-for-pound ratings, with Terence Crawford first and Oleksandr Usyk second.

The card includes Junto Nakatani (31‑0, 24 KOs), the unified bantamweight champion, who will make his super‑bantamweight debut against Mexico’s Sebastian Hernandez Reyes (20‑0, 18 KOs), a 24‑year‑old rising star.

The card will be broadcast live worldwide on DAZN and Lemino in Japan.