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‘Time to stick out your neck,’ college CEO tells schools on contract that regulates paying players

OXON HILL, Md. (AP) — The head of the new regulatory body for college sports said “if there was a time to stick out your neck, it’s now,” in urging schools to sign an agreement sent out nearly two months ago pledging to abide by new rules that govern how to pay players.

Bryan Seeley, the CEO of the 7-month-old College Sports Commission, used his presentation at the NCAA convention Wednesday to thank leaders from four schools who put out a statement backing the agreement, while urging others to sign on.

“My sense is that the vast majority of schools want to sign this. but I suspect if a school wants this, you’re thinking, ‘Why am I going to stick my neck out?’” if other schools won’t also sign, Seeley said. “If there was a time to stick out your neck, it’s now.”

In late November, the CSC sent Division I schools its “University Participation Agreement,” an 11-page document that all 68 schools from the four largest conferences need to sign for it to go into effect. It outlines the CSC’s role in monitoring how schools pay out the $20.5 million they’re allowed to spend on players’ name, image and likeness and also looks at how the CSC regulates third-party payments to players.

But the most contentious part of the agreement was language that forbid schools from suing the agency.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton called the agreement a “power grab” in directing that state’s schools not to sign. Other state AGs followed suit.

On Tuesday, school presidents at Arizona, Washington, Virginia Tech and Georgia released a statement urging their colleagues to sign on.

“Stability is not created by new rules alone, but by a willingness to live by them,” the statement said.

Seeley latched onto that with a plea of his own.

“I’m not of the belief that college sports is fundamentally broken and the sky is falling. but there are definitely problems,” he told a room full of college sports administrators. “No one from the outside is coming to fix those problems. We’ll either collectively come together to fix those problems or they won’t be fixed.”

Seeley said the CSC is talking to the conferences about tweaking some of the language — “fair feedback,” he called it — while cautioning that other proposed changes “would water the document down such that it has no enforcement … and would make it meaningless.”

Debate over the consequences of all 68 schools not signing the agreement has run the gamut, from those who believe the CSC could enforce its rules anyway to others who think it would eventually shutter the entire system.

Seeley gave a nod to proposals, now stalled in Congress, that could add muscle to many of the CSC’s functions.

“But we don’t know when that help is coming, and in the interim, we should be working hard collectively to try to fix some (of the issues). One way to do that is to sign this participatory agreement,” he said.

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Ohio State trustees OK $100M settlement with hundreds of former students abused by doctor

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ohio State University agreed Wednesday to pay approximately $100 million to settle legal claims from hundreds of former student athletes who said they were sexually abused decades ago by a doctor at the university. The school has fought lawsuits in federal court since 2018 brought by former student athletes against the university over its failure to stop abuse by Dr. Richard Strauss. Strauss worked at the school from 1978 to 1998 and also ran an off-campus clinic. He died in 2005. During a meeting Wednesday, the school's Board of Trustees approved a preliminary agreement with all but one of the 280 survivors with claims still involved in pending litigation. Once finalized, the settlement could mark the end of a lengthy legal battle and close a painful chapter in the school's history. “The survivors of the Strauss abuse are all Buckeyes, will always be a part of our family and our community, and I firmly believe that,” the school's president, Ravi Bellamkonda, said during the meeting. “We continue to be very grateful to them for their courage in coming forward, and reaching a final resolution is very important to us and is an important step forward.”
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