The Daily - A New Era in College Sports
Episode Date: July 1, 2021Throughout its 115-year history, the N.C.A.A.’s bedrock principle has been that student-athletes should be amateurs and not allowed to profit off their fame.This week, after years of agitation and l...egislation, the rule was changed.What will this new era of college sports look like?Guest: Alan Blinder, a reporter covering college sports for The New York Times. Sign up here to get The Daily in your inbox each morning. And for an exclusive look at how the biggest stories on our show come together, subscribe to our newsletter. Background reading: Here’s a breakdown of why the N.C.A.A. finally relented to pressure to allow athletes to make money beyond the cost of attending their universities.Despite the N.C.A.A’s argument that payments would be a threat to amateurism, this month, the Supreme Court backed payments to student-athletes.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
For decades, the NCAA has banned college athletes
from earning money for their work,
even as everybody else, from colleges to TV networks,
has profited from it.
Today, why that is about to change.
Astead Herndon spoke with our colleague, Alan Blinder, about a new era in college sports.
It's Thursday, July 1st.
So, Alan, what's happening in college sports today?
For the first time in the 115-year history of the NCAA,
college athletes will be able to make money off their names, images, and likenesses. That's never happened in the entire history of the NCAA in college sports.
So what does that mean?
What do we mean by name, image, and likeness?
Well, essentially, you're going to have players who are able to capitalize on their fame.
They'll be able to sell autographs.
They'll be able to monetize their social media.
They'll be able to make endorsements.
You know, for the 115-year history of the NCAA, the bedrock principle has been that student athletes should be amateurs.
That students should be students first.
They shouldn't be players first.
They shouldn't be, you know, borderline professionals playing sports.
They should be students who are on campuses to get an education.
And they should, at most, play for scholarships and some living expenses. And look, for a long
time, that was seen as a really great deal for a lot of student-athletes. They'd come to a campus,
they'd play a sport, they'd earn a degree, they'd go off into the world. And it worked out really well for
generation after generation of student-athlete. So what changes? So the easiest answer to that
question starts with really the rise of cable television. So in the early 1980s, you had March
Madness, the NCAA men's basketball tournament, pulling in about $16 million a year in TV revenues. But as the 80s
progressed, and as cable became more popular, ESPN had just been founded a couple years earlier,
there were battles about how college sports could be televised. A lot of legal fights,
a lot of arguments inside the industry. With today's ruling, any team can now make any deal with any broadcaster.
And that really opened the way for bidding wars
as time went on.
The kids grind out the yards,
television grinds out the money.
And good evening everyone, I'm Jim Nance.
Welcome to CBS Sports coverage of the NCAA Championship.
Great night in Miami, Florida for this most important game.
We have the two finest teams in the land
battling for the title. So, you know, by the late 80s, the NCAA lands a $1 billion TV deal.
The seven-year, $1 billion contract to show the NCAA college basketball tournament.
The $143 million a year was front page news at the time it happened because it was that seismic for the industry and for American sports.
You know, and as the 90s roar on, you've got more and more eyeballs coming on to college sports, more and more games people are watching.
And welcome to Bowl Day 93 at NBC Sports.
Because of that, you have more and more TV networks trying to get in on it as well.
Welcome to CFA primetime here on ESPN.
College football on ABC.
Fox Sports Net.
ESPN 2.
CBS Sports.
ESPN Plus.
Now, if that doesn't whet your appetite, you're watching the wrong channel.
The NCAA is rolling in money at this point,
and they start branching off more and more into, you know,
things that can bring in more
money. Open your playbooks and get ready to kick off. So you get things like video games. This game
has all the guts and glory of the past. And that just fuels this fire and fuels this industry as
it, you know, crawls toward being this multi-billion dollar juggernaut. But it's still not going to the players themselves.
So even as more money is coming in, that broader system of unpaid amateurism is still holding in
place. It barely budged, barely budged. The billions came in and the system really did not
shift really much at all. So where was the money going? If it went
from $16 million to a billion, but not to the players, who got the money? Well, it went to fund
sports that aren't as popular, that maybe don't draw big crowds or big TV contracts. It goes to
help fund women's sports, which have really exploded in popularity in recent years especially,
it frankly goes to help pay for the scholarships for these student-athletes. But at the same time,
on the other side of the coin, you've got coaches who have started to make more and more money.
You've got coaches making $2, $5, $10 million a year in salaries. You've got coaches flying on
private jets to go recruit future athletes. You've got coaches flying on private jets to go recruit future athletes.
You've got an arms race among campuses to build bigger, better facilities to try to attract people.
And at the end of the day, they could find places to spend a lot of money,
but it never really trickled down in any meaningful way to the athletes themselves.
I remember reading a fun fact once that in several states,
the highest paid public employee is often the football coach at a large university.
Absolutely. I mean, there's a running joke, you know, in some states,
that the head football coach at the big university is more powerful than the governor.
There might even be some truth to that.
Is that really a joke? I mean, that seems to be...
Yeah, I mean, look, there are a lot of people who write in people like Nick Saban for president or for
governor. I mean, they're cultural symbols as much as coaches. So, if the industry is ballooning,
and that's apparent to everyone from spectator to student athlete to colleges, what do the
athletes themselves do about it? Well, there's only so much they can do within the system
itself i mean the system is run largely by you know university presidents and chancellors
athletic directors conference commissioners but from time to time we start to see more and more
athletes speaking out they might have a press conference they might tell a report or something
you know word starts to get out that there is
some unhappiness in the ranks of college athletes. And then a guy named Ed O'Bannon comes along.
I remember him, the 90s basketball legend. How does he fit into this?
So Ed O'Bannon was one of the finest basketball players to come out of UCLA in the mid-1990s,
was an absolute star in the 1995 NCAA men's
basketball tournament, went on to play in the NBA for a little while. But eventually,
O'Bannon realizes that he's in a video game.
You know, I was at a friend's house, and his kid was playing a video game.
And my initial thought when I saw it, I was pretty fired up.
I mean, who wouldn't be excited to see your face on, your likeness on a video game?
His likeness is in a video game, essentially.
Not with his name, but someone who looks like him someone who played for ucla
someone who resembles ed o'bannon in every way so i saw that and then came to the conclusion that
there was a profit and i had no share in it
and o'bannon realizes that he hasn't seen a penny of money for his depiction
penny of money for his depiction.
You know, I remember these video games.
I used to play NCAA basketball, and I also used to play the football game, NCAA football.
Yeah, I mean, I played all the time.
My dad and I used to play when I was a kid.
And my dad and I used to marvel over how realistic it seemed.
You know, you'd see, I mean, very much a wink and a nod kind of thing.
You know, there would be a player who would resemble an actual player in every way,
when they were playing, what their skills were, what they weren't skilled at for that matter.
And they would be the spitting image on a video game.
But the actual player, the living, breathing flesh version of that matter, and they would be this spitting image on a video game. But the actual player, the living, breathing flesh version of that player,
wouldn't make any money off of it.
In Ed O'Bannon's case, he didn't even know he was in it.
So what did O'Bannon do when he sees his likeness in this video game?
Well, he went to court.
Former basketball star Ed O'Bannon is suing the NCAA
and could change the future of college athletics as we know it.
And becomes the face of a massive antitrust lawsuit against the NCAA and the video game maker EA Sports.
And eventually a judge hands down a ruling that is decidedly unfavorable to the NCAA.
ruling that is decidedly unfavorable to the NCAA. Claudia Wilkin writing Friday that college players should be able to, quote, receive a limited share of the revenue generated from the use of their own
names, images, and likenesses. And it starts to open the door to the idea that players should be
able to make money off their names, images, and likenesses. The NCAA eventually decides that just getting rid of the games entirely is the path of least
resistance.
So they got out of it.
The game vanishes from store shelves all over the country.
So Ed O'Bannon's the reason why I haven't played that video game in 10 years.
Ed O'Bannon is definitely one of the reasons why you haven't played that game in a long time. And, you know, it's interesting when there's a philosophical debate in college
sports and it's being hammered out in boardrooms or in courtrooms and, you know, at conventions of
the NCAA, it doesn't always resonate with people. You take a video game that's wildly popular off
store shelves, and that was a wake-up call to people about the debate that had been happening inside the industry.
You know, what you're describing feels true for me in my own life.
When those games were taken away, I remember a couple things.
One, being really sad because I liked playing those games.
But also, it did make that issue of payment for college athletes and what is fair just more
tangible for the average fan it was a dawning for people i mean this look the removal of the video
game hardly sent people into the streets to protest name image and likeness rights it wasn't
like that but it did make a lot of people maybe pause for a second and say, hold on, this is how the system works.
And it sets the NCAA on a course that will totally change the nature and texture of college sports.
We'll be right back.
So, Alan, you said that things really begin to change in college sports after that court ruling that led to the end of the NCAA video games. What happened?
So, around the country, people started to pay more attention. But in, I guess it was 2015, there was a Rotary Club meeting in Oakland, California.
And there was an economist who was speaking about all the NCAA rules that restricted student athletes.
And a woman named Nancy Skinner was in the audience.
And she told the Times later it was like a light bulb going off.
You know, she starts to see college athletics not just as a sports issue, but as a civil rights issue.
In what way? She starts to wonder how can an industry bring in billions
and offer very little monetarily to the students who are doing the labor for the most part.
And it strikes her as a fundamental breach of civil rights in this country.
Senator Skinner, please join us.
You have been very patient.
So she gets elected to the state senate,
and then she starts to write some legislation that changes college sports.
Okay.
Thank you, Madam Chair, committee members.
Very happy to be presenting SB 2062 today as we wrap up
or face the last weekend of March madness.
The legislation is called the Fair Pay the Play Act.
What this bill does is it does not require our colleges to hire the athletes or give them a pay.
And it essentially calls for student athletes to make money off their fame.
Rather, it puts our college athletes on the same level as Olympic athletes are allowed,
which is that they can pursue sponsorships or endorsements or get an agent.
So Skinner goes at it with the idea that if the state of California, this enormous state with
enormous sports and enormous colleges, says the NCAA's rules don't really apply here anymore, then it could really
change California and change college sports more broadly. So Ed O'Bannon kicks off a lawsuit that
really challenges the NCAA. Now you have this California politician, Nancy Skinner, writing
legislation that challenges the NCAA. How is that received throughout the state?
Oh, it just sails through the state legislature. It turns out the Democrats and Republicans
both really like dunking on the NCAA.
So it passes the legislature unanimously in 2019.
And then not long after that,
the governor of California, Gavin Newsom,
and I met in New York to talk about the bill itself.
And it turned out he gave two interviews. He gave one to me and one to LeBron, the governor of California, Gavin Newsom, and I met in New York to talk about the bill itself.
And it turned out he gave two interviews. He gave one to me and one to LeBron,
which normally I just don't get to say that in a sentence. So that was kind of cool.
I'm sure you ask better questions.
I don't know about that.
Thank you for being with us. I want to start talking of sports about your own background in college sports. I understand you played a little bit of baseball at Santa Clara.
Yeah, a little bit is the operative word, but it got me into college. So I'm quite literally
sitting here, no small part due to baseball. So the governor was a baseball player when he
was in college. But let me assure you, it was a full-time occupation being a baseball player. And that helped
make him think that the idea of student first was a totally absurd concept. I mean, did any of these
people honestly, did any of these coaches, especially in football and basketball, and say
that they abide by the rules of the NCAA on the amount of hours of practice? Give me a break.
Everybody knows what they have to do
if they're going to compete.
So he has all these views about the NCAA
and how the system really works for students,
but he also, like Nancy Skinner,
sees the issue at hand as a civil rights issue,
not just a matter of business.
Look, the money has perverted the entire system.
I mean, we've professionalized college
sports. We've monetized the hell out of it. Coaches are making a fortune. Let's go back to
the racial lenses here. The dominant, especially in Division I basketball and football, dominantly
white coaches that are making millions of dollars a year and can continue to make more with
endorsement deals. Predominantly, it's majority Division I men's basketball,
majority Black, and a plurality in football, Black, putting their mind and quite literally
their body on the line to make millions and millions, hundreds of millions of dollars for
others. So the governor seems to be saying that the concept of unpaid amateurism, that bedrock that you mentioned of the NCAA's operations,
that it's not this altruistic gifting of an education, but that more that it's a cover
to not provide compensation, particularly to people who come from disadvantaged neighborhoods
or tend to be Black. They're not getting the money that they deserve.
That's totally what he was saying.
It's what a lot of people have said about the NCAA over the years,
that amateurism is this nice cloak.
It's a focus group tested kind of idea
that makes people feel all warm and fuzzy about college sports.
But when you strip away the veneer,
you see an industry that pulls in billions of dollars
and really it's a business at the end of the day.
Unless we force their hand, they're not going to reform.
If we just let them do it voluntarily, they'll come up with some window dressing,
a nice thing here, a nice thing there, but they won't fundamentally reform.
So the governor just says he's going to sign this bill and he says,
consider the consequences of other states following suit with variations.
And then the patchwork that that would create in terms of challenge to the NCAA that would force them to go farther and deeper to address the issue of remuneration and equity.
He expects that other states will start to follow to challenge the NCAA more often and more aggressively.
Is he right? Did that happen?
It absolutely happened.
We start to see states all over the country crafting their own laws to try to challenge
the NCAA.
And these laws look almost exactly like the California measure.
Well, what states are we talking about here?
Because the argument coming from the governor, coming from the state senator, that seems to be a particularly liberal argument, making explicit civil rights
justification for the law. Is that the same justification that other states are using?
Well, it depends on the state, because you had a whole variety of states start looking at these
types of proposals. And look, there were a lot of people who agreed with the civil rights argument
that we saw in California. There were also a lot of people who agreed with the civil rights argument that we saw in California.
There were also a lot of people who agreed with kind of this free market capitalism argument that Republicans embraced in California.
And what was that capitalism free market argument against the NCAA?
The biggest argument they make is that the NCAA's rules are unfair restraints on business, that the free market doesn't really work as well as it can
if the NCAA has its thumb
on every part of a college athlete's experience.
The NCAA, this non-profit organization,
is essentially choking the free market.
So you see some states, like Illinois,
pass these kind of laws,
but you also see them pop up in places like Alabama,
Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, Texas. They really start to take root all over the country.
Alabama, Florida, Georgia. This strikes me as also real hubs of particularly college football.
Absolutely.
So is there any self-interest here for these states? I mean, I imagine if I was a player
and I had the chance to make money
in California but couldn't make money in Alabama, then that might sway some of my decisions.
Are we seeing some of these bills move through these states purely because they don't want to
lose out on the top talent that has helped those football programs? I'm not sure you could say
that the laws move through only because of that,
but I think in the heart of hearts of some legislators, that was totally a factor.
You don't want to see some hotshot quarterback go to a different school if you can help it.
So yeah, there was a worry that the landscape of college sports might look a little less fair
if one school in one state had an advantage over another. So what does the NCAA do in response?
So you see these states passing these laws, and they have an effective date of July 1st. And the
NCAA is really backed into a corner. So just this week, the association decided to essentially wave
the white flag and let student-athletes across the country start
making money off their names, images, and likenesses, whether they live in a state with
one of these laws or not. Wow. So that 115-year history, that bedrock of amateurism that the NCAA
has founded on, it seems to be completely upended with this virtual surrender to these changing laws.
When you talk to NCAA officials, when you talk to commissioners, when you talk to athletic
directors, they all acknowledge that there would not have been this kind of action, this
kind of activity without the state governments really pressuring the NCAA to change the rules.
I don't think there's really any question of whether we'd be at this point without those
state laws.
This is an enormous change, I imagine, for the athletes themselves.
Have you talked to any of them about their new ability to make money off of their name,
image, and likeness?
Yeah, how are you?
How are you?
I'm Alan.
Good to meet you.
So, a couple weeks ago, I flew down to Miami to see Derek King, a quarterback at the University of Miami.
How long have you lived here?
I moved here in February of this year.
A quarterback at the University of Miami, a famed football school.
I imagine he's one of the players who stands to gain from this in a big way.
South Beach, North Beach.
Absolutely. He is a quarterback who very easily could go into the NFL once his time at Miami ends.
And he's someone who, because he's the quarterback now, draws a lot of attention, has a lot of prominence, and could easily stand to gain from these changes.
I think it's better closer to you so it can pick up the audio a little bit.
And we start to talk about whether he ever thought he would make money as a college athlete.
thought he would make money as a college athlete.
At the time you were in high school,
were you thinking at all about,
is there ever going to be a way for me to make some kind of money while I'm in college?
See, I thought it would happen when my kids were in college.
You know what I mean?
Like a long time from now.
I didn't know it would happen this quickly.
You know, NCAA, they have so many rules
and so many things in place for us not to make money.
And it's finally here now.
I'm just grateful for that.
We see all these speculative figures out there right now.
You know, there were some guys who make millions.
Do you buy the idea that some guys will make millions while they're in college?
They make millions while they're in college.
That's insane.
You know, I don't know.
Like I said, I mean, I definitely, I think some guys will make six figures, 100%.
But then these next however long.
But millions? I don't know about that.
And, you know, he's not entirely sure how much he'll end up making,
but his goal is, you know, maybe a six-figure haul if he gets lucky.
I mean, six figures is a lot of money, particularly when you were starting from zero.
How are these athletes navigating this new world?
Are they doing this alone? Do
they have advisors? How are they talking to each other? What did he say? Well, they can hire folks
to help them work through these deals. In his case, he's been relying on his mom and his brother
to help him sort through what is to come. A lot of folks have been taking classes. They've been
working to figure out what their tax implications might be.
You've got to pay taxes on this money.
So you've had a lot of athletes relying on family, relying on outside advisors, relying on their schools, relying on each other to try to come up with, you know, the ways to really maximize the opportunities.
So what do you all talk about?
I mean, you talk about the best ways to make money.
You know, what are y'all kicking around at this point? One of my teammates was like,
let's build each other's social media. We all can help each other's brand. Another one of my
teammates is going to do a podcast. So it's a bunch of ideas floating around.
In a lot of ways, it sounds like what he is planning on being is capitalizing on what we would call in other fields being an influencer.
That's exactly what he's planning to do.
And that's an argument I've heard from a lot of college athletes over the years.
They've said, look, you know, a guy in my chemistry class or a woman, you know, in my history class could be a social media influencer and cash in.
I was never able to do that because I was a student athlete. That
was the only thing that held them back. They're seeing this as very much a leveling of the playing
field so they can have comparable opportunities to what other students have. But not everyone's
going to get a shoe deal. For a lot of athletes, you know, especially folks in lower profile sports,
it might be something like, you know, an endorsement of a local restaurant.
It might be, you know, taping a video for a fan for 50 bucks or whatnot.
The vast, vast majority of student athletes are going to be earning hundreds of dollars, a few thousand dollars.
They're not going to be making six or seven figures.
So, yeah, there are going to be people who make a ton of money, money that is unfathomable
in so many ways. But for a lot of athletes, this is going to be a much more modest change in their
lifestyle. It's a brave new world. Yeah. All right. Appreciate it.
You mentioned how the money that's generated from the most profitable sports go to a lot of different things, not only the coaches and the schools, but go to supporting other sports and go to supporting the growth of women's sports, for example.
Does any of that change with this new landscape?
Well, that's one of the great things that we're still trying to figure out, to be honest.
It's one of the most important things we're still trying to figure out.
I remember a couple of years ago, I had a conversation with an athletic director of a Power 5 school. And this athletic director used, for sake of argument,
a pizza company and said that that pizza company has a marketing budget. The marketing budget is
not necessarily getting any bigger because the NCAA has different rules for how athletes can
profit off their fame.
The worry I hear most consistently from athletic executives and administrators
is that the money that companies spent marketing with them will now go to these athletes and that
the pie is not actually going to get any bigger. It's just going to be going to different people.
So there's a worry that, yeah, there will be shortfalls in athletic budgets
because companies are spending money they would have spent with a school with an athlete instead.
It seems as if, while there are still a bunch of unknowns about the future, that what there has
been a big agreement on, whether from a state level or from an athlete level, was that the
status quo as it existed, that 115-year tradition of the NCAA
and amateurism, that that was just unfair and had to change. So from the very beginning, the NCAA's
business model has been based on the idea of unpaid labor by student-athletes. And that has
been a wildly successful model for a whole lot of people.
I mean, billions and billions and billions of dollars have come through because of that model.
Now, with name, image, and likeness, it's a test of that model,
and it's going to be the start of maybe a slippery slope, the NCAA thinks.
The more and more the model gets tested, the more and more players have a chance
to make money as college athletes, the more strain it puts on the system.
And the big question is whether that system could eventually come crashing down.
No one can really say at this moment whether it will, whether players will, you know, one day be
able to make salaries, or if that line between the professionals and the college players will, you know, one day be able to make salaries or if that line between the professionals and the college players will get blurred even more. But the name, image, and likeness debate
and what we're seeing this week is one of the single most transformative steps in that entire
debate in the history of the NCAA. Thank you for your time, Alan.
You bet. My pleasure.
Alan, does this mean we get our video game back?
Actually, they've already announced it's coming back.
Oh, really? Did I miss that? We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
On Wednesday, the death toll from the collapse of a condominium tower in Surfside, Florida, rose by four to 16.
And officials put the number of those still missing at 147.
In an interview with The Times, the mayor of Surfside, Charles Burkhead, said that the effort to rescue and recover the missing will persist for, quote, the indefinite future.
And on Wednesday, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has unexpectedly overturned the three-year-old sexual assault conviction of Bill Cosby and released him from prison.
The court found that a prosecutor involved in investigating Cosby
had persuaded him to make incriminating statements in a civil case
by promising that the statements would not be used in a criminal case.
Later, a different prosecutor broke that promise
and used the comments to
prosecute Cosby. That, the court found, violated Cosby's right against self-incrimination.
Today's episode was produced by Daniel Guimet and Rob Zipko. It was edited by Rachel Quester
and Lisa Chow, engineered by Marion Lozano, and contains original music by Dan Powell.
That's it for The Daily. I'm Michael Barbaro. See you tomorrow.