• Loading stock data...
Monday, May 5, 2025

NCAA Increases Lobbying Spending in First Months of Trump

The governing body spent twice the amount of money on lobbying in the first quarter of 2025 than it did during the same period last year.

Charlie Baker
Jack Gruber-USA TODAY

The NCAA is doubling down on its federal lobbying efforts during the first months of the Trump Administration, paying hundreds of thousands of dollars to lobby the newly Republican-controlled Congress.

The governing body spent $450,000 on lobbying during the first quarter of 2025—almost double the amount it spent during the first quarter of 2024. 

The spending is a continuation of the NCAA’s yearslong federal lobbying effort to convince Congress to pass a law that would award it control over the amateurism rules that remain. 

And since last year, the NCAA has been attempting to convince Congress to codify the terms of the House v. NCAA settlement proposal. “The message I got when I showed up [in Washington] was: Clean up your own house, and then come talk to us,” NCAA president Charlie Baker told reporters during the men’s Final Four. The NCAA sees the settlement as proof that the NCAA has done everything it can to fix college sports—and that it’s now Congress’s turn to step in to protect the remainder of its rules and allow it to legally impose others, like transfer restrictions. To do so, the NCAA is asking for antitrust protections, preemption of state NIL (name, image, and likeness) laws, and a stipulation preventing college athletes from being reclassified as employees. 

In a statement last May, the NCAA and conferences called the settlement proposal a “road map” for Congress. A federal judge is expected to rule on final approval at some point in the next couple of weeks.

“The NCAA is making positive changes for student-athletes and confronting many challenges facing college sports by mandating health and wellness benefits and guaranteeing scholarships,” the NCAA SVP for External Affairs said in a statement to Front Office Sports. “But there are some threats to college sports only Congress can address, and the Association is advocating with student-athletes and their schools for a bipartisan solution.” Tim Buckley was referring to the NCAA’s inability to classify athletes as amateurs and regulate the transfer portal, among other issues, without congressional assistance.

Buckley did not comment on what specifically accounted for the uptick in spending this past quarter.

The NCAA is its own nonprofit entity, complete with a brick-and-mortar office in Indianapolis and dozens of employees tasked with putting on championships, enforcing rules, and, yes, lobbying. But the NCAA considers itself a “member-driven” organization—simply carrying out the will of the schools it represents.

Industry experts suggested Republicans may have been more amenable to the NCAA’s demands—potentially why they’ve decided to up their lobbying muscle in the hopes of getting legislation over the line. However, sources have since told FOS that some House and Senate Republicans are against at least the NCAA’s requested antitrust exemptions for a variety of reasons, including that they simply don’t trust the NCAA. 

Between January and March, the NCAA paid $90,000 to Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck, its longtime lobbying firm, according to a quarterly lobbying disclosure filed April 18. (The firm billed $67 million in 2024, making it the top-grossing lobbying firm last year, according to OpenSecrets.)

The NCAA also spent $90,000 on lobbying activities from theGroup DC, another heavy-hitter the governing body hired in January, which represents major clients such as PepsiCo and UnitedHealth Group. Three lobbyists are listed on the firm’s new client registration form. Two have backgrounds working for Democrats, while one has a background working for Republicans. 

The NCAA also paid $270,000 for its own in-house lobbyists. Since 2018, the NCAA has employed Dawn Buth full-time in government relations. Buth had operated solo for several years, until the governing body hired another in-house lobbyist, last July: Kevin McColaugh, a former employee of NCAA president Charlie Baker during his time as Massachusetts governor. The NCAA normally spends between $120,000 and $140,000 on its in-house lobbying efforts, a fact that didn’t change when McColaugh was added to the fold in the third and fourth quarters of 2024.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Kentucky Derby Sets Ratings, Betting Records Despite Attendance Dip

The crowd of 147,406 at Churchill Downs was down 6% from last year.
Athlos

Nike Wants to Pull Off the First Women’s Sub-4:00 Mile

Experts speak on whether Nike’s “moonshot” is realistic or a gimmick.
Apr 12, 2025; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; MLB umpire Ron Kulpa (46) calls a third strike during a game between the Cleveland Guardians and the Kansas City Royals at Progressive Field

Pro Refs Get Offered Free Lasik for Better Calls. Some Took It

Some pro officials have sprung for the offer for free corrective surgery.

Sovereignty Wins Kentucky Derby, $3.1M Purse

The total purse was raised to $5 million last year.

Featured Today

Mint juelps

Inside the 120,000-Cup Mint Julep Frenzy of Kentucky Derby Weekend

The official cocktail at Churchill Downs costs $22—or $5,000.
May 1, 2025

How Larry Collmus Became the Longest-Running Kentucky Derby Caller

Collmus will call his 15th straight Derby on NBC.
Apr 25, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; Pittsburgh Pirates starting pitcher Paul Skenes (30) pitches during the first inning against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium
April 30, 2025

The Pirates Are Struggling, But Paul Skenes Fever Is Still Spreading

The 22-year-old pitcher is (finally) giving Pittsburgh something to cheer for.
April 29, 2025

How DJ Adam Amin Mixes Baseball With Bangers

Amin is one of Fox’s top NFL and MLB voices.
April 28, 2025

Quinn Ewers Bet on NFL Over NIL—and Left Millions on the Table

The Dolphins picked Ewers in the seventh round of the NFL Draft.
Shaquille O'Neal
April 28, 2025

Shaq Taking GM Role at Sacramento State

The news comes amid the school’s push for FBS status.
Sponsored

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

Portfolio Players is our bi-weekly spotlight on the athletes and investors reshaping the business of sports. This week, venture capitalist Kai Cunningham unpacks why athletes land top deals and how the usual investing rules don’t always apply.
Mar 28, 2025; Indianapolis, IN, USA; Kentucky Wildcats guard Lamont Butler (1) dribbles the ball against the Tennessee Volunteers in the first half during a Midwest Regional semifinal of the 2025 NCAA tournament at Lucas Oil Stadium.
April 25, 2025

College Sports Has Become a Billion-Dollar Business. Kentucky Is Embracing It

Kentucky said its LLC would operate similarly to two hospitals run by the university.
Ole Miss
April 24, 2025

Coach Yo: Women’s College Hoops Are ‘Pay for Play’

Ole Miss coach Yolett McPhee-McCuin built a top transfer class this offseason.
Jan 21, 2025; Atlanta, GA, USA; College Football Playoff executive director Rich Clark speaks during the CFP National Championship Host Committee handoff press conference at The Westin Peachtree Plaza, Savannah Ballroom.
April 24, 2025

CFP Meetings End With No Major Changes to 12-Team Playoff—for Now

For now, the complicated seeding process will remain in place.
April 24, 2025

The House Settlement Is in Jeopardy. Here’s What It Will Take to..

The parties will try to salvage the settlement over the next two weeks.