N THE last day of September, California
governor Gavin Newsom officially
ushered college sports into a new era.
Signing into law Senate Bill 206, known as the
Fair Pay to Play Act, from a barbershop chair
on the set of LeBron James’s show, The Shop,
Newsom granted college athletes in his state the
opportunity to profit off their name, image and
likeness, beginning in 2023. They will be able to
sign with agents and earn endorsement money
as students, which is expressly forbidden by the
NCAA’s bylaws preserving amateurism.
But the Golden State is not alone. Legislators
in New York, Florida and Illinois have already
proposed similar bills while a half-dozen other
states plan to follow suit. Meanwhile, members
of Congress are eyeing a federal statute along the
same lines. There is bipartisan support.
The NCAA and the Pac-12 have unsurprisingly
released stern statements opposing the California
bill’s passage. “This is just a new form of
professionalism and a different way of converting
students into employees,” NCAA president Mark
Emmert told The Indianapolis Star.
In May the NCAA formed a working group to
examine issues related to compensating athletes.
The group is scheduled to present a report later
this month. Several administrators who spoke
to Sports Illustr ated on the condition of
anonymity do not expect the group to propose
a system that allows athletes access to the free
market, as the California bill does. Instead, the
report is expected to suggest a plan that focuses on
group licensing agreements—distributing money
from apparel sales and such to players.
“It’s like anything else—it’s never going to
be enough,” says an administrator with direct
knowledge of the working group’s discussions.
The administrator said that schools are
concerned that boosters, in an effort to convince
high-profile athletes to attend, will promise
lucrative endorsement deals to recruits. That could
severely exacerbate the gap between the haves and
the have-nots, says one administrator. “This is great
for us,” says an SEC staff member, “but if this thing
goes through, it’s going to destroy Conference USA,
the [Mid-American Conference], etc.”
Coaches are torn on the issue. Many have side-
stepped questions, offered partial support for the
movement or subtly denounced it. And then there’s
Washington State football coach Mike Leach. “The
state of California has trouble keeping [its] streets
clean right now,” he said. “So my thought is that
[it] probably ought to focus on that.”
Leach is set to make $3.75 million this season;
his players will, once again, make nothing.
Michael McCann contributed to this report.
CALIFORNIA’S LAW
ALLOWING COLLEGE ATHLETES
TO EARN MONEY OPENS
A NEW FRONTIER
WHAT’S
FA IR
16 SPORTS ILLUSTRATED | OCTOBER 21-28, 2019
I
SCORECARD
“
This is
great for
us,” says an
SEC staffer,
“but if this
thing goes
through,
it’s going
to destroy
Conference
USA, the
MAC, etc.
”
BY ROSS DELLENGER
UNINTERRUPTED
NEWSMAKERS