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Student athletes can get paid from profits
Topic Started: Dec 11 2015, 08:20 AM (9 Views)
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Student athletes can get paid from profits

district court judge ruled Friday that colleges must now pay players money accrued from their names, images and likenesses.

"The challenged NCAA NFL throwback jerseys rules unreasonably restrain trade in the market for certain educational and athletic opportunities offered by NCAA Division I schools," wroteJudgeClaudia Wilken, for the Northern District of California.

According to the decision, "any rules or bylaws that would prohibit its member schools and conferences from offering their FBS football or Division I basketball recruits a limited share of the revenues generated from the use of their names, images, and likenesses in addition to a full grant in aid."

In other words, schools will have to share profits made from jerseys and all otherparaphernalia sporting a student name or picture. The money will go into a trust forfootball and men basketball players that will be payable once they graduate or when their eligibility expires.

The decision also allows the NCAA to cap the amount of money (but not below $5,000) in the trust and to cheap basketball shoes restrict student athletes from using the funds to obtain other financial benefits while they are still in school.

NCAA president Mark Emmerthas said he will appeal the ruling.

"There a lot in the ruling that I think is admirable and that consistent with arguments that we been making all along," he told ABC Martha Raddatz. "And there are some things about it that we really fundamentally disease disagree with, most notably, we disagree that there a violation of anti trust NFL jerseys wholesale laws going on here. And we probably continue to argue that in the coming months and beyond."

Forward Ed O of the UCLA Bruins looks on during a game against the Oregon State Beavers, March 9, 1995.

The lawsuit against the NCAA was brought by former UCLA basketball star Ed O we did is just a small amount of change," O told ESPN in his first interview following the landmark decision. "This is just the tip of the iceberg. I think that a lot of change is going to happen. This is just the beginning."

O who helped lead UCLA to a Division I championship title in 1995, has been frustrated by the use of his name and image in video games without compensation or permission.

"My biggest thing has been change," O said. "These rules have been in place for a hundred years and there has been no change. Times have changed, the economy has changed, the players themselves have changed, the salaries of the coaches have changed. Everything has changed except for how a player is compensated. And ugg boots clearance whether [they paid] while they in school, or whether it once their eligibility is up, that part of the game has to change.".
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