• Loading stock data...
Sunday, December 14, 2025
Law

Another Court Sides With Zion Williamson’s Years-Old Firing of Unregistered Agent

  • The Pelicans forward won an appeal by his former marketing agent.
  • It’s a deal he signed while still at Duke, which reignites questions about agent standards in college sports.
Stephen Lew-USA TODAY Sports

Zion Williamson won a legal battle Monday over his former marketing agent, Gina Ford, who wanted $100 million from the Pelicans’ forward for breaching their contract. A federal appeals court upheld an earlier ruling that said Williamson was allowed to exit their five-year agreement—signed in 2019 while he was still at Duke— because Ford wasn’t registered as an agent in North Carolina, and failed to include a legally required clause to alert the player that he would forfeit his college eligibility by signing.

Williamson signed with Ford’s agency, Prime Sports Marketing, in April 2019, when he had already declared for the NBA draft. Those were the days before NIL, when college athletes weren’t allowed to do marketing deals. Williamson signing with an agent while still in college would’ve killed his eligibility—even though he didn’t intend to come back, going No. 1 in the draft.

“Prime concedes that Ford wasn’t registered as an agent in North Carolina, and under the Act, any agency contract between a student-athlete and an agent who fails to register in North Carolina is automatically void,” Judge Albert Diaz wrote for the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. “Likewise, it’s undisputed that the Prime contract didn’t contain the requisite warnings. So even if the contract weren’t already void, Williamson was free to void it, which he did both via email and through counsel.”

The college sports scene has dramatically changed in the half decade since, but unregistered and unregulated agents have only become more of a problem for college athletes. In the pros, players’ unions like the NFL Players Association and National Basketball Players Association make agents undergo background checks, attend seminars, and take exams. But becoming an NIL agent doesn’t call for any kind of background check or certification by the NCAA.

Most states require registration, which means completing a short form and submitting a check (it costs $100 in New York), but agents don’t have to pass an NCAA rules test or any kind of licensing exam, and they largely fly under the radar of prosecutors. In some cases, NIL agents have even started repping high school athletes. All NCAA rules around NIL were deemed unenforceable by a federal ruling earlier this year, leaving it up to states to enact legislation, and making nationwide NIL agent certification possible only through Congress. College athletes are signing deals, but those offering to help them understand those deals aren’t subject to any oversight, leaving those athletes unprotected.

But the absence of an agent can also lead to problems. Former Florida football player Gervon Dexter signed away 15% of his pretax NFL earnings for the next quarter century to an investment firm and had to fight for it back in court.

For Williamson’s part, he signed with CAA in May 2019, a month after his initial deal with Prime.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

How Pickleball Became One Massive Private-Equity Rollup

Pickleball roads lead back to billionaire Tom Dundon.
Carlos Alcaraz
opinion

Why Bid for Sports Media Rights When You Can Buy Them?

Paramount’s hostile takeover bid for WBD could signal a new sports strategy.
Dec 9, 2025; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson (11) dribbles against Toronto Raptors guard Jamal Shead (23) during the first half at the 2025-26 NBA Emirates Cup at Scotiabank Arena

The Lucrative NBA Cup Is Here to Stay

The in-season tournament, launched in 2023, is turning into a staple.

Big 12 Closing In On Potential $500M Private Capital Deal

The era of private capital in college sports has fully arrived.

Featured Today

The Los Angeles Chargers host executives from UCLA Health on Wednesday, August 7, 2024 at The Bolt in El Segundo, CA.

The Multibillion-Dollar Business of Pro Athlete Recovery

What started as ice baths has evolved into a multibillion-dollar industry.
Big League Wiffle Ball
November 29, 2025

Celebrity-Backed Wiffle Ball Has Big-League Aspirations

Big League Wiffle Ball team owners include Kevin Costner and David Adelman.
November 24, 2025

How NBA Arena Experiences Went Ultra-Luxe

For the most connected guests, the game has become a secondary attraction.
Nov 23, 2025; Inglewood, California, USA; Los Angeles Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford (9) throws a pass against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers during the fourth quarter at SoFi Stadium.
November 24, 2025

Stafford, Rams Rise From the Pack to Super Bowl Contention

The NFL team now has the top odds to win Super Bowl LX.
December 4, 2025

Ali-Named Boxing Reform Bill Gains Momentum in Congress

A bipartisan bill proposing further reforms to the sport garners support.
December 11, 2025

Jordan’s 23XI, Front Row Settle Antitrust Fight With NASCAR

The surprise deal includes the establishment of “evergreen” team charters.
Sponsored

20 Years of Coastal Cool: How Johnnie-O Became a Force in Golf,..

A style movement powering one of the fastest-growing brands in sports and lifestyle.
Jun 9, 2023; Miami, Florida, USA; MMA fighter Conor McGregor during halftime in game four of the 2023 NBA Finals between the Miami Heat and Denver Nuggets at Kaseya Center.
December 4, 2025

McGregor Escapes Suit Over Alleged Sexual Assault at 2023 NBA Finals

The anonymous woman who sued has voluntarily dropped her case.
Jan 19, 2024; Miami, Florida, USA; Udonis Haslem speaks after his jersey was lifted to the rafters during the retirement ceremony during halftime of the game between the Miami Heat and the Atlanta Hawks Kaseya Center.
exclusive
December 1, 2025

Udonis Haslem Settles Out of FTX Litigation

He follows his former teammate Shaquille O’Neal in settling.
Oct 22, 2025; Portland, Oregon, USA; Portland Trail Blazers head coach Chauncey Billups talks with Portland Trail Blazers forward Deni Avdija (8) in a game against the Minnesota Timberwolves at Moda Center
November 24, 2025

Chauncey Billups Pleads Not Guilty to Rigged Poker Scheme Charges

The Basketball Hall-of-Famer was released on a $5 million bond.
Nov 21, 2025; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Phoenix Suns former player Charles Barkley (left) and team owner Mat Ishbia sit courtside against the Minnesota Timberwolves during an NBA Cup game at Mortgage Matchup Center.
November 24, 2025

Suns Minority Owners Accuse Mat Ishbia of Fraud, Self-Dealing

The Suns say the minority owners want to “drag the organization backward.”