• Loading stock data...
Friday, May 9, 2025
Join us May 14 at 1 p.m. ET for Future of Sports: Leagues of Their Own Register Now

‘Sour Grapes’: Lawyers Battle Over Landmark Settlement to Pay College Athletes

  • Attorneys from the O’Bannon v. NCAA case challenged the House settlement terms with a formal objection.
  • The filing, which seven current and former athletes signed, says the terms range from unfair to flat-out illegal. 
Former Iowa basketball player Jordan Bohannon
Andrew Wevers-Imagn Images

The landmark House v. NCAA settlement—already arguably on the rocks—is facing yet another objection.

This time, it’s from the lawyers who won the O’Bannon v. NCAA case that paved the way for college athletes to be paid for their name, image and likeness.

On Thursday, a group of seven current and former athletes represented by attorney Michael Hausfeld filed an objection arguing that the terms in the proposed House settlement range from unfair to flat-out illegal. 

Those terms include $2.8 billion in damage payments to current and former college athletes, a revenue-sharing model where schools would pay athletes directly, and new restrictions on NIL collectives.

Among the athletes are Iowa men’s basketball player Jordan Bohannon, known for advocating for NIL rights during his time as a player, and former Vanderbilt and Georgetown sprinter Kaira Brown, another outspoken athletes’ rights advocate.

House plaintiff lawyers Steve Berman and Jeff Kessler dismissed the objections in comments Thursday to The Athletic. “We have negotiated an almost $3 billion settlement for college athletes. The Hausfeld firm never obtained anything for damages class in the case brought against the NCAA,” Kessler said. Berman called it “sour grapes,” noting he and Kessler were the attorneys on NCAA v. Alston, a case over athlete educational benefits that, while not about NIL directly, also helped pave the way for the current era. 

The new objection echoes several already raised in written objections, as well as concerns voiced by Northern District of California Judge Claudia Wilken during a Sept. 5 hearing. 

It argues the damage payments for athletes who weren’t allowed to participate in NIL before 2021, which amount to about $2.8 billion, are too low. It also suggests that the payment structure, highly controversial among non-power conference commissioners and schools, is “unfair to smaller member institutions.”

The objection takes issue with the revenue-sharing proposed in the injunctive relief portion of the settlement, which would allow schools to share revenue with players up to only about 22% of revenue. The revenue-sharing cap is arbitrary and much lower than the percentage that pro athletes receive—around 50% in the collective bargaining agreements in major U.S. men’s leagues—the objection says, and could limit the money athletes earn in the future. It binds future athletes to an agreement in which they not only have no say, but also would be “worse off.” (Berman and Kessler have argued athlete compensation would equal 50% when the House settlement revenue-sharing deal is added to scholarships and other existing benefits.)

The objection also says the restriction on NIL deals is illegal. The restriction would allow a third party to prohibit NIL collective and booster deals over $600 if they appear to be “pay-for-play” deals rather than “fair-market value.” Judge Wilken took issue with this as well, but the NCAA’s lawyer, Rakesh Kilaru, said the governing body likely wouldn’t agree to a settlement without it.

Finally, the objection points out the NCAA wants to use the settlement to get a federal law passed that would block college athletes from being legally declared employees. The NCAA, for its part, has said multiple times that that’s exactly what it intends to do with the settlement.

The parties filed an amended complaint with limited changes last week. Wilken will decide on whether to grant preliminary approval to the amended settlement, or whether the parties should prepare for a trial that would likely begin early in 2025.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Apr 26, 2025; Miami, Florida, USA; Miami Heat center Bam Adebayo (13) dribbles the basketball as Cleveland Cavaliers forward Evan Mobley (4) defends in the third quarter during game three for the first round of the 2025 NBA Playoffs at Kaseya Center.

Jared Kushner’s Brother Bought Small Stake in Miami Heat Last Year

Kushner reportedly sold his Grizzlies stake to buy an interest in the Heat.
Curry

Brady, Curry, Ohtani Get Most Claims Dropped in FTX Endorser Suit

The judge did call the endorsers “uninformed, negligent, or even reckless.”
Mar 26, 2025; New York, New York, USA; Actor and filmmaker Spike Lee (l) greets former professional boxer Floyd Mayweather Jr. during the game between the LA Clippers and the New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden.

‘Friends of the Garden’: Inside the NBA’s Most Exclusive Celebrity Suite

“Among the titans of industry, deals are done at Suite 200.”

Featured Today

exclusive

Shams Charania on Draft, Breaking Dončić Trade, ‘Whirlwind’ ESPN Tenure

Charania will work on his first NBA draft lottery for ESPN on Monday.
Fat Perez reacts after hitting his shot on the 16th tee during the WHOOP Shot at Glory on the 16th hole at TPC in Scottsdale on Feb. 5, 2025.
May 7, 2025

Golf Influencers Are the New Currency for PGA Tour and LIV

YouTube golf is big business. The rival tours are staging formal events.
Feb 8, 2025; New York, New York, USA; New York Knicks assistant coach Rick Brunson talks with New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson (11), forward Mikal Bridges (25), and guard Josh Hart (3) during a timeout in the third quarter against the Boston Celtics at Madison Square Garden.
May 6, 2025

Before the Villanova Knicks, There Were the Kentucky Celtics

Three decades ago, Boston tried its own version of the college-teammate experiment.
Mar 22, 2025; Miami, FL, USA; Joao Fonseca (BRZ) reacts after winning a point against Ugo Humbert (FRA)(not pictured) on day five of the Miami Open at Hard Rock Stadium.
May 6, 2025

João Fonseca Is a Teen Tennis Phenom. His Parents Are Overseeing His..

The Brazilian is forgoing a management team in favor of his parents.
Bill Belichick

UNC Denies Report Jordon Hudson Was Barred From Football Facility

Pablo Torre stood by his reporting on Bill Belichick’s girlfriend.
Football
May 7, 2025

Big Ten Beating SEC in Race to $1 Billion in Revenue

The Big Ten is winning the revenue battle, reporting $928 million in 2023–24.
Jan 6, 2024; Tempe, Arizona, United States; Arizona State Sun Devil Emma Gehlert competes in the 200 yard medley relay against Grand Canyon University at Mona Plummer Aquatic Complex in Tempe on Jan. 6, 2024.
May 7, 2025

Parties in House v. NCAA Settlement Submit Solution to Roster Limits Issue

Fixing the roster limits issue was a condition of approval.
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.
May 6, 2025

Big 12 Re-Ups With Brett Yormark As Chaos Reshapes College Sports

Yormark is unafraid to lean in to the professionalization of college sports.
NCAA Football: Oregon State at California
April 29, 2025

Pac-12 Gets One-Year Test-Run Media Deal Before Expansion

It’s the next step in the league’s rebuild.
Shaquille O'Neal
April 28, 2025

Shaq Taking GM Role at Sacramento State

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