• Loading stock data...
Sunday, June 15, 2025

House v. NCAA Settlement Doesn’t Address Biggest Question for Athletes

  • The case puts the NCAA and power conferences on the hook for billions in damages, but it’s not the biggest threat to the NCAA.
  • A settlement in the case would have no bearing on whether athletes should be considered employees.
Petre Thomas-USA TODAY Sports

On Monday night, ESPN reported that parties were making progress with settlement negotiations in the House v. NCAA case over name, image, and likeness—which many in the industry consider to be the most immediate threat to the NCAA’s financial stability, given that the governing body and Power 5 conferences are facing around $5 billion in damages. Front Office Sports can confirm that multiple college industry leaders expected parties to settle. (The main attorney for plaintiffs, Jeffrey Kessler, declined to comment when reached by FOS; the NCAA did not respond to a request for comment.)

Employment Status Unresolved

A settlement could allow players to receive a cut of the billions of dollars generated by television revenue for the first time in NCAA history. But it wouldn’t address college sports’ biggest existential question: athlete employee status. The House case doesn’t deal with employee classification at all; even its revenue-sharing mandates would apply to athletes only in power conference schools. 

The case, first filed in 2020 by named plaintiff Grant House, a former Arizona State swimmer, among others, would facilitate revenue sharing in a creative way. The defendants in the case include the NCAA, as well as the Pac-12, ACC, SEC, Big Ten, and Big 12 conferences. It argues that NIL’s definition should be expanded in multiple directions, most notably to allow athletes to receive a cut of TV revenue that would be considered “broadcast NIL rights.” Judge Claudia Wilken, who also presided over major antitrust cases O’Bannon and Alston, certified three damage classes last fall, hence the multibillion-dollar damages price tag.

Revenue-Sharing Dilemma

A settlement would mandate back-pay to damage classes, as well as force Power 5 conferences into a revenue-sharing framework that could provide $20 million per school to athletes, according to ESPN. But the reforms would stop there. There’s a growing sentiment across the NCAA that rich schools should share revenue with athletes, but the belief isn’t completely altruistic. They hope to pay players but still call them amateurs—that allowing revenue sharing will placate reformers who have been pushing for athletes to be deemed employees. 

The panic around paying damages in the House case has put it at the forefront of industry leaders’ minds. But employment classification is the NCAA’s biggest bogeyman—the real death knell to its amateurism model. Employee status would force schools to not only pay players salaries but also provide employee-related benefits and make schools and the NCAA potentially liable for workers’ compensation (something it has specifically fought against for decades). It would also allow athletes to attempt to formally unionize and collectively bargain with schools, conferences, and the NCAA, just like pro athletes do with their leagues. 

Multiple cases in federal court and at the National Labor Relations Board are already progressing toward at least some group of NCAA athletes being deemed professionals. The Dartmouth men’s basketball team’s unionization effort has perhaps progressed the farthest.

As for long-term consequences, the House case pales in comparison.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Dec 5, 2024; Miami, FL, USA; FIFA president Gianni Infantino presents the FIFA Club World Cup trophy during the Club Word Cup draw at Telemundo Studios.

Revamped Club World Cup Is FIFA’s Billion-Dollar Gamble

The revamped soccer event debuts amid controversy.

Caitlin Clark Return Draws Sellout 15 Hours After Pacers Finals Game

Fever TV ratings dropped significantly while Clark was out.
Jun 10, 2025; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; United States head coach Mauricio Pochettino stands during the anthem against the Switzerland during the first at Geodis Park

Gold Cup Is Complicated for USMNT—but U.S. Soccer Has Its Eyes on..

Uncertain tournament success isn’t fazing forward-looking U.S. soccer.

Thunder Win Sets Up First 6-Game NBA Finals in 4 Years

It will be the first Finals series of at least six games since 2022.

Featured Today

Jan 24, 2017; Davidson, NC, USA; The Davidson Wildcats student section cheers during the first half against the Duquesne Dukes at McKillop Court at John M. Belk Arena. Davidson defeated Duquesne 74-60.

Every College Wants a Flashy Basketball GM Hire Right Now

The role is more important than ever, and the definition is ever-evolving.
August 31, 2024; Columbus, Ohio, USA; The Goodyear blimp flies over Ohio Stadium during the first half of Saturday’s NCAA Division I football game between the Akron Zips and the Ohio State Buckeyes.
June 6, 2025

Why the Goodyear Blimp Is at Every Major Sports Event

The airship wasn’t built to cover sports. Now it’s a regular presence.
May 27, 2015; Paris, France; Mirjana Lucic-Baroni (CRO) knocks the clay off her shoe during her match against Simona Halep (ROU) on day four of the French Open at Roland Garros
June 4, 2025

Roland-Garros’s Iconic Red-Clay Surface Is a Precise Alchemy

The exact science behind maintaining the French Open’s red clay.
Alex Jensen introductory press conference on Monday, March 17, 2025.
June 3, 2025

Alex Jensen Started Utah Utes HC Job While Still Coaching the Mavs

How Jensen began building an NCAA program while patrolling the Dallas sideline.
UT

Zakai Zeigler Denied Injunction for Fifth Year at Tennessee

The former Tennessee guard sued the NCAA over potential lost NIL earnings.
Mar 7, 2025; Greenville, SC, USA; Vanderbilt Commodores guard Leilani Kapinus (5) looks to pass against the South Carolina Gamecocks during the second half at Bon Secours Wellness Arena.
June 11, 2025

Group of Women Athletes Files Appeal of House v. NCAA Settlement Approval

It’s the first appeal of the landmark settlement, which was approved Friday.
North Dakota Fighting Hawks guard Zach Kraft (1) shoots the ball on Friday, March 7, 2025, at Denny Sanford Premier Center in Sioux Falls, S.D.
June 12, 2025

House v. NCAA Settlement Is Here. Non-Power Conference Schools Still Have Questions

D-I administrators still have questions they haven’t gotten answered.
Sponsored

Game On: Portfolio Players Stories, Brought to You by E*TRADE from Morgan Stanley

Ted Leonsis unpacks basketball’s global rise, media rights, and portfolio ownership.
Ohio State
June 10, 2025

Men’s College Basketball Adds Coach’s Challenge, but No Quarters—Yet

The NBA adopted the challenge rule before the 2019–20 season. 
U.S. Rep. Lisa McClain (R-Mich.) asks a question during at a House Education and the Workforce Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary Education hearing on antisemitism in K-12 schools on May 8, 2024 in Washington.
June 10, 2025

House Reps Introduce Two Drafts of Pro-NCAA College Sports Legislation

Both bills would satisfy the NCAA and power conferences’ congressional wishlist.
Angela Suggs
June 10, 2025

Florida A&M Athletic Director Arrested For Credit Card Fraud 

Angela Suggs turned herself into authorities Monday.
Dec 31, 2024; Glendale, AZ, USA; Boise State Broncos wide receiver Latrell Caples (3) against the Penn State Nittany Lions during the Fiesta Bowl at State Farm Stadium.
exclusive
June 9, 2025

Boise State Expects Private-Equity Investment ‘Within the Next Six Months’

The Broncos are “actively considering” PE investment.