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โ€ขPosted by3 years ago
Archived

The Supreme Court has announced their spring docket and they will hear arguments for NCAA v. Alston on March 31.

The case is specifically related to the argument that the NCAA eligibility rules regarding compensation of student-athletes and federal antitrust law.

IANAL, so therefore, here's more background on the case here, the facts of the case here and for the sophisticated like myself, here's the Wikipedia article.

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โ€ขPosted by2 years ago
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โ€ขPosted by4 months ago

https://dailynorthwestern.com/2023/05/23/campus/schill-nu-administrators-talk-collegiate-athletics-at-faculty-assembly/

โ€œGiven the current negative view of the Supreme Court toward the NCAA that was reflected in the (NCAA v. Alston) opinion, it is very possible that they will side with those who are seeking to characterize students as employees,โ€ said Schill, who is also a professor at the Pritzker School of Law.

Schill, who previously served as chair of the Pac-12 CEO Group and on the Board of Governors for the NCAA, said if the Supreme Court rules against the athletic association in a future case involving the NLRB, he anticipates student athletes would unionize and bargain for wages.

If the University directly distributed payments to student athletes, he said, there would be less overall revenue for NU athletics as a whole.

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