The NCAA settlement is a big win for football players. For other athletes, the picture is murkier.
The Belmont University student said she was standing next to a volleyball player and two football players when the news came out. One of the football players reacted positively and then turned to the volleyball player to get her take.
"It's good for you because you're going to get paid, but some of your female athlete friends might get cut," Oostburg recalled the volleyball player saying.
The recent settlement, which ended multiple antitrust cases against the NCAA, sets up a system in which football players will likely get the lion's share of the money. The settlement's back-pay portion, for example, allocates 75% to football, guided by how much revenue the sport brings in.
Colleges that opt into the settlement can pay up to $20.5 million to their athletes for the year starting July 1 (with increases in subsequent years).
"It's going to be focused on football, basketball," Craig Weiner, a partner and litigator at Blank Rome, told Business Insider.
While schools are free to distribute the money to different teams as they wish, there is a clear incentive for them to want to remain competitive in football to generate revenue. That could mean some athletic programs — if we take that 75% figure as guidance — will need to cover $15 million in new expenses to pay football players.
Where is the money going to come from? Oostburg said she's worried about cuts to her team and others that don't make money for the college. She fears they could lose roster spots, places where they practice and train, or even snacks.
"I think you're going to see cuts potentially in the non-revenue sports," Weiner said. "As far as support, athletic facilities, athletic support. Money that is that is earmarked to help the non-revenue producing sports, because they're going to focus on the money makers."
The settlement ruling could create Title IX issues
The skew toward football and men's basketball in the $2.8 billion back-pay part of the settlement has already attracted a legal challenge.
Dan Ain, an attorney at Reavis, Page, Jump, noted that current and former DI female athletes had filed an appeal. They argued that 90% of the back pay going to former football and men's basketball players was a violation of Title IX, which requires schools to give male and female athletes equitable opportunities.
Ain also pointed out that Judge Claudia Wilken, who oversaw the case, said that athletes could sue if they felt there was any infringement on Title IX due to the nature of the revenue share model.
"This is new territory for schools," Ain said. "Schools, for the first time, will be deciding how to allocate tens of millions of dollars in revenue share to individual athletes. The expectation right now is that the distribution is going to be grossly unequal between men and women, and that will open schools up to Title IX litigation."
Athletes have to run their deals through a clearinghouse
Oostburg said she also had concerns about a new clearinghouse that will oversee deals athletes strike on their own with brands, called NIL deals (short for "name, image, and likeness").
Athletes with deals of over $600 will have to report them to the clearinghouse, operated by Deloitte, which will determine the athlete's value. If the deal is higher than their assessed value, it can't go through. Athletes who don't report deals or violate them by taking something of a different value could have their eligibility taken away.
For athletes like Oostburg in "non-revenue" sports, NIL deals — often driven in part by their social media footprint — are the biggest money-making opportunity.
"That does concern me," Oostburg said. "If I get a deal over $600 and they decide, no, that doesn't make sense for someone like a track athlete like me to get a $1,000 deal."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
If you're playing golf on the Fourth of July, here's one rule you need to remember
If you're playing golf on the Fourth of July, you might be on a course where all 18 pin flags have an American flag on them. This is one of the great gestures golf courses can do as we celebrate our independence. A tournament official holds a flag stick with the American flag on it on the ninth green during the 2021 NCAA Men's Golf Championship at Grayhawk Golf Club. Often, golf courses will also provide special holders called flag stands near each green. Advertisement So remember, there is one essential rule that everyone should follow: Happy Fourth of July, everyone, and hit 'em straight. This article originally appeared on Golfweek: Fourth of July golf rule to remember about American flag
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Former Oregon star Jessica Hull returns to Hayward Field for the Prefontaine Classic meet
Jessica Hull was out on an easy run recently when her mind wandered to her upcoming return to Hayward Field for the first time as an Olympic medalist. The former Oregon track and field standout and NCAA champion from Australia has long been a fan favorite in Track Town, but now she's coming back to Eugene as one of the best middle-distance runners in the world. Advertisement Hull is entered in the 1,500 meters on July 5 for the 50th edition of the Prefontaine Classic Diamond League meet. Australia's Jessica Hull celebrates after finishing second in the women's 1,500-meter final at the 2024 Paris Olympic Summer Games. The former Oregon star returns to Hayward Field July 5 to compete in the Prefontaine Classic. 'Very special,' Hull said July 3 during an interview at the Graduate by Hilton hotel in downtown Eugene. 'I don't think the Eugene public or the Hayward faithful would understand how much they've played a part in the journey and I can kind of show them that in that moment how much I appreciated them. I'm really excited.' Hull, whose last race at Oregon came in 2019, is coming off the best season of her professional career that included a silver medal at the Paris Summer Games to become the first Australian — and Duck — to medal in the women's 1,500. Advertisement In the leadup to the Olympics she also ran a personal-record 3 minutes, 50.83 seconds to reset her own Australian record and become the fifth-fastest performer of all time. 'It makes me appreciate and almost validate the work that I've put in,' Hull said of her performance in Paris. 'All of it was worth it. Spending so much time on the road, and traveling, and being away from home, every decision that I've made, each step that I've taken, it suggests I was on the right path. 'It's opened my eyes to wanting more medals. That's the standard now and my own expectation.' Saturday's race will also include Kenya's Faith Kipyegon, who won her third Olympic gold medal last summer. Advertisement Kipyegon is the world record-holder at 3:49.04 and is coming off an attempt to become the first women to break the 4-minute barrier in the mile when she ran 4:06.42 June 26 in Paris in an event orchestrated by Nike. Hull said she didn't know yet what the pace was expected to be for Saturday's race but a world-record attempt was certainly possible. 'Oh definitely,' Hull said. 'I think if you watched Faith in Paris you know she's in that kind of shape. I was just in the elevator with her and she's in great spirits. If she's ready and she's positive I think it could be pretty awesome. I just expect now that if Faith is on the start line we're gonna run fast.' The meet schedule for the Pre Classic was shuffled a bit Thursday to make the women's 1,500 the final event, no doubt a nod to the presence of Kipyegon and the quality of a field that also includes Great Britain's Georgia Bell, who won Olympic bronze, former Duck Susan Lokayo Ejore of Kenya, who was sixth in the Olympic final, and Americans Nikki Hiltz, Elise Cranny, Shelby Houlihan, Sinclaire Johnson and Heather MacLean. Advertisement 'When I saw (the schedule change) this morning I was like, 'Whoa, Faith must be ready to run fast,'' Hull said with a laugh. '… She deserves to be in the spotlight. Faith is leading us but other women are bubbling up, too.' Including Hull, who is also ready to run fast in front of fans and in a stadium that have meant so much to her. 'I always dreamt of being an Olympian and when I got to Oregon and you're around that standard of excellence that's when you start to dream of medals or winning,' she said. 'They opened my eyes to what was possible, and I hope to put on a show Saturday to say thank you.' How to watch the Prefontaine Classic track and field meet TV: NBC (1-3 p.m.) Stream: Peacock (1-3 p.m.), (10 a.m.-1 p.m.) Advertisement Chris Hansen covers University of Oregon football, men's basketball, track and field, cross country and softball for The Register-Guard. You can reach him at chansen@ and you can follow him on X @chansen_RG This article originally appeared on Register-Guard: Former UO star Jessica Hull expects a 'special' Hayward Field return
Yahoo
7 hours ago
- Yahoo
Where Oregon football stands in 2026 recruiting rankings after latest commitment
With Dan Lanning at the helm, the Oregon Ducks are used to finishing among the top schools in the nation when it comes to recruiting, routinely bringing in top-five and top-10 ranked classes year after year. The Ducks are well on their way to doing so again, but they have some work to do from now until signing day to get it done. Advertisement The first step of that came on Friday with the announcement that 4-star wide receiver Messiah Hampton was committing to the Ducks. Hampton, the No. 102 player and No. 11 WR in the 2026 class, chose Oregon over the likes of Syracuse, Ohio State, Penn State, and Miami. Before the commitment, Oregon ranked No. 42 in the 2026 recruiting cycle, but with the addition of the blue-chip player, they moved up to No. 33 in the nation. That is still a far cry from where the Ducks plan to be by the time the cycle is over, but it's a step in the right direction. Oregon is in the midst of massive recruiting months, with big-name players coming to Eugene on official visits. Last weekend saw a total of six 5-star players on campus, and a pair of 5-stars and a handful of 4-stars are on campus this week for visits. The next couple of months could be eventful for the Ducks on the recruiting trail, and the addition of Hampton was a good way to kick things off. Advertisement Contact/Follow @Ducks_Wire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oregon Ducks news, notes, and opinions. This article originally appeared on Ducks Wire: Oregon Football 2026 recruiting ranking following latest commitment