What is NIL, how has it changed college sports and why are schools under investigation? (2024)

What is NIL, how has it changed college sports and why are schools under investigation? (1)

By David Ubben and Tess DeMeyer

Feb 2, 2024

You’ve seen the three letters:NIL.

You’ve heard the buzz these three letters have caused around college sports, read headlines about universities filing lawsuits against the NCAA on the issue and watched commercials of athletes like LSU gymnast Livvy Dunne tumbling while wearing Vuori joggers or USC quarterback Caleb Williams drinking Dr. Pepper.

But what does NIL — “name, image and likeness” — encompass, and why is the line between what’s within the rules and what isn’t so difficult to discern?

Here’s a breakdown of the acronym that has changed college sports:

What is NIL? How’d we get to this point in college sports?

NIL stands for “name, image and likeness” and has become the universal shorthand for college athletes’ ability to become paid endorsers and monetize their success outside of their school-funded scholarships and benefits. Before July 1, 2021, college athletes were not permitted to receive profits from their name, image and likeness. Since then … a lot has happened.

That summer, in response to pressure from laws passed by state legislatures that permitted varying levels of NIL activity, the NCAA created an interim NIL policy: For schools in states with laws on the books, the state law would guide them; otherwise, schools could set their own policies. The NCAA maintained that NIL opportunities could not be used as a recruiting inducement or as payment tied directly to athletic performance (colloquially referred to as pay-for-play).

However, the introduction of one type of permissible market for players’ services made clear just how much most players had been undervalued during the preceding decades. Some prominent stars landed TV commercials and personal sponsorships, but countless others entered into financial agreements with less obvious deliverables for the people or organizations paying them. Quite predictably, the NIL deal has become a recruiting tool and a de facto pay-for-play device, with fans and donors, rather than the universities themselves, footing the bill for players to represent their schools. Almost three years later, most Division I college football and basketball players are earning some money, with average deals in the five-figure range but many going into six figures and beyond. Additionally, the school plays a major factor in an athlete’s earning potential through NIL deals. But unlike most coaching salaries, NIL deals are private transactions between private citizens and mostly privately funded companies, so few concrete numbers exist in the public record.

GO DEEPER'It's basically like a silent auction': Why are college football NIL deals hush-hush?

What is an NIL collective?

Collectives are organizations that fundraise via large and small donors with the intent to direct that money to a school’s athletes through NIL deals. Collectives are not formally associated with schools or athletic departments themselves, but they do exist to benefit certain programs, and their names, staffing and activities make that clear. Some school officials, including athletic directors and coaches, have openly directed fans to donate to specific collectives, and some staffers have even left their posts with the school to take leadership roles with their program’s corresponding collective.

Collectives can pay athletes, but for athletes to remain NCAA-eligible, they must prove they completed a deliverable service in return for the payment. This can be through autographs, appearances at events for donors, appearances in commercials or participation in content the collective may distribute privately or publicly.

However, according to guidance issued by the NCAA in May 2022, 10 months after NIL activity was first allowed, collectives are banned from recruiting activity in the same way that school boosters have long been banned from recruiting activities. Under even more recent guidance, collectives cannot contact prospects about NIL opportunities before an athlete has signed with the school, and players can’t announce or enter into agreements with collectives before they’re enrolled in school.

How collectives and college programs work together

In the early days of NIL, athletic departments could not have formal discussions with collectives, though it was widely accepted that off-the-books conversations happened. The NCAA has since loosened those guidelines and lowered the walls between collectives and athletic departments, and coaches and athletic department employees can now promote collectives and help them fundraise. They can arrange for donors to give to collectives, but not to specific athletes or sports. Coaches and athletic department personnel can sign autographs or assist in fundraising but cannot donate directly to a collective.

Like much of the NIL world, proving that athletic departments and collectives are only discussing what they’re allowed to discuss, and not broader roster strategy and player acquisition goals, is difficult if not impossible.

Where does the NCAA stand on NIL?

One of the NCAA’s first pieces of official NIL guidance, sent to schools in May 2022, stated that collectives count as boosters and are subject to the same, long-applied recruiting rules. In short, collectives cannot be involved in recruiting, and they can’t entice a recruit to sign with a particular school with the promise of payment. This murky line has been the focus of most of the organization’s enforcement efforts on a market that has proven difficult to wrangle.

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The NCAA has said for months it was looking into potential NIL violations, but information on cases had not bubbled up publicly until recently.

In January, the NCAA’s Division I Council approved a set of consumer protection rules around name, image and likeness. Among them: Athletes will be required to report to their schools NIL deals worth more than $600, including term details, compensation and service providers. (Some state laws already require this.) From the aggregated data, the NCAA will create an anonymized database of that information as a way to get a more accurate sense of the market. How specific the database will be, such as listing an athlete’s sport or position, is yet to be determined. The NCAA also plans to create a voluntary registry of NIL service providers and agents, meant to provide a pool of credible options for athletes.

The NCAA is also working through proposals that would allow schools themselves to have more of a direct role in NIL negotiations and deals.

Which schools’ NIL activities are under investigation right now and why?

The first program punished by the NCAA’s Division I Committee on Infractions (COI) was Miami women’s basketball, which received one year of probation and recruiting sanctions through a negotiated resolution with enforcement staff in February 2023. The resolution detailed that Miami coach Katie Meier facilitated impermissible contact between prospective transfers Haley and Hanna Cavinder and booster John Ruiz before the Cavinders’ commitment to the school.

Last month, Florida State football agreed to penalties after assistant coach Alex Atkins gave a prospective transfer a ride to a meeting with a collective during a recruiting visit. The Seminoles were given two years of probation; scholarship and official visit reductions and limitations on recruiting communication over the next two academic years. Atkins was given a two-year show-cause order and suspended for the first three games of the 2024 season. The athlete, identified as Georgia offensive lineman Amarius Mims, later removed his name from the transfer portal.

Florida is currently under investigation for its widely publicized 2022 pursuit of high school quarterback Jaden Rashada, who signed with the Gators after a wild NIL bidding war involving boosters at Florida and Miami. However, Rashada then asked for a release from his letter of intent when a Florida collective reneged on a deal it had signed. Rashada landed at Arizona State.

Additionally, the NCAA’s ongoing investigation of Tennessee for alleged name, image and likeness violations in multiple sports has recently spilled into public view via scathing statements from university brass and a lawsuit filed by the attorneys general of Tennessee and Virginia challenging the NCAA’s ban on using NIL in recruiting. The investigation reportedly is focused in part on Spyre Sports — a collective unofficially associated with the University of Tennessee — and its activity in recruiting, specifically around Volunteers starting quarterback Nico Iamaleava, who committed to Tennessee in March 2022 within 10 days of The Athleticreporting on afour-year, $8.1 million NIL contract between a five-star recruit and a school’s collective.

GO DEEPERMandel: NCAA takes on Tennessee, but it's likely a case of too little, too late

At the heart of all of these cases, the line where NIL information becomes a recruiting tool is the subject of debate. Where does education about potential NIL opportunities for a prospect end and inducement begin? And how does the NCAA prove an athlete was induced by an NIL deal and didn’t sign with a school for other reasons?

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What’s next?

The normalization of NIL has spurred record activity in the transfer portal and multiplied the stress coaches face in putting together a roster year to year. Coaches have lamented the need to constantly re-recruit their players, protecting stars from being lured away by schools touting more lucrative NIL opportunities, all while trying to sell potential newcomers on the strength of your school’s NIL situation.

Proposals working their way through the NCAA governance model would allow schools themselves to have more of a direct role in NIL negotiations and deals.

But the one thing everyone agrees on is that the current system is unsustainable.

GO DEEPEREmerson: Did college sports just reach an inflection point?

(Photo: Isaiah Vazquez / Getty Images)

What is NIL, how has it changed college sports and why are schools under investigation? (2024)

FAQs

What is NIL, how has it changed college sports and why are schools under investigation? ›

NIL stands for “name, image and likeness” and has become the universal shorthand for college athletes' ability to become paid endorsers and monetize their success outside of their school-funded scholarships and benefits.

How have NIL deals changed college sports? ›

Essentially, NIL allows college athletes to monetize their personal brand by profiting from their name, image and likeness through various opportunities, such as endorsem*nts, sponsorships, social media posts and more.

What is a nil deal in college sports? ›

NIL is short for "name, image and likeness." Basically, a student athlete being able to sign NIL deals means they are able to enter into contracts to endorse products and make money off their personal brand. They can do commercials for TV, post branded ads on their social media channels and have companies do the same.

What is the NIL landscape in college sports? ›

Recent Changes and the NIL Era

The new revenue-sharing model allows schools to compensate athletes directly for the use of their Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL), aligning with the broader trend of athletes monetizing their personal brands. Athletes are now allowed to be social influencers - for their own school.

Is the NIL ruining college sports? ›

Teams are built and destroyed by the transfer portal/NIL system. Over 1,800 players entered the transfer portal for men's basketball last year. There are 351 Division I basketball teams. On the average transfers affect almost half of a team's roster without accounting for graduation or other attrition.

Why are people against NIL deals? ›

A primary reason against the induction of NIL in NCAA sports is the fact that many student athletes already enjoy the benefit of free college tuition. Scholarships awarded to these athletes often cover, not just tuition, but also room and board, textbooks and other fees.

Can schools pay NIL money? ›

The new law, which is scheduled to take effect July 1, is the first in any state to make it illegal for the NCAA to punish a school for compensating athletes for their NIL rights. Current NCAA rules prohibit schools from signing NIL deals with their own players.

Why did NIL become a thing? ›

However, NIL is the workaround for athletes to get paid without technically being considered professional athletes who make a living playing their sport. NIL can trace its origins to a class-action lawsuit filed in the late 2000s that marks the beginning of the “should college athletes be paid” debate.

Who is the highest paid college football player, NIL? ›

Alabama quarterback Bryce Young sits atop this list as one of the highest-paid current college athletes. It helps that he's among the most popular names in college football. Last year's Heisman Trophy winner had reportedly already earned close to $1 million in NIL deals coming into 2022.

What is not allowed under NIL? ›

First, it's important to understand that the NIL rules prohibit certain types of compensation and endorsem*nts. Specifically, student-athletes cannot receive compensation for their athletic performance or participation, such as payment for wins, statistics, or playing time.

Do you pay taxes on NIL? ›

Student-athletes should be mindful that NIL agreement income (including non-cash benefits or compensation) is reportable and is considered taxable income. For example, if a student-athlete receives free products or services in exchange for an endorsem*nt, it is still taxable income.

How do people feel about NIL? ›

Most feel that NIL has a positive impact on college athletics because it allows for fair compensation and allows the players to, through endorsem*nt deals and the like, profit off of the corporations that are trying to use their name rather than all of this money going into the hands of other businesses or university ...

How much money does Caitlin Clark make from NIL? ›

Caitlin Clark NIL money

Caitlin Clark's 11 known NIL deals are worth a combined estimate of $3.1 million, according to ON3. She ranks fourth among all NIL-eligible athletes and first in women's college basketball, recently surpassing LSU's Angel Reese and Flau'jae Johnson for the top spot.

What is happening with NIL? ›

NIL laws continue to change countrywide, with some blurring lines between NIL collectives and athletic departments. NIL collectives help facilitate deals for players in exchange for endorsem*nt opportunities, and several schools have launched collectives tied directly to their athletic foundation.

What are the NIL rules for 2024? ›

New NIL Rules

Slated to take effect August 1, 2024, the new rules allow athletes to pursue NIL opportunities without limitations imposed by the NCAA, conferences, or universities. These opportunities include endorsem*nt deals, sponsorships, and other commercial activities.

How many athletes benefit from NIL deals? ›

To date, there are more than 450,000 student-athletes across the United States who have earned NIL money by partnering with local businesses in promotions.

What is the history of NIL in college sports? ›

NIL can trace its origins to a class-action lawsuit filed in the late 2000s that marks the beginning of the “should college athletes be paid” debate. Former UCLA basketball player Ed O'Bannon argued that college athletes should be compensated for the use of their name and image in video games.

How has the transfer portal changed college football? ›

College football's transfer portal has become more hectic by the year since it launched in 2018, as it's been made more complicated by unlimited transfers and, of course, players being able to profit off their name, image and likeness.

How will NIL affect recruiting? ›

As a result, the larger programs in college sports continue to grow stronger, while smaller schools struggle to compete in a recruiting landscape dominated by money. NIL constraints would allow for a more balanced recruitment process that increases parity and competitiveness in collegiate athletics.

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