Senators release draft of the College Athletes Protection and Compensation ActSenators release draft of the College Athletes Protection and Compensation Act
SOURCE: MIELLE ORGANICS

The GIST: Democratic senators Richard Blumenthal and Cory Booker and Republican senator Jerry Moran released an early draft of the College Athletes Protection and Compensation Act yesterday. The 50-page bipartisan bill looks to regulate name, image, and likeness (NIL) through universal standards. It’s giving Elle Woods.

The details: Under the legislation, the NCAA would write and enforce NIL regulations itself. It also proposes the creation of the College Athletics Corporation, a 15-person board (including five current or recent student-athletes) charged with enforcing NIL rules, undertaking investigations, vetting potential NIL agents, and deciding punishments for violations.

The background: Ever since the NIL era began in 2021, business has been booming — an estimated $917M was spent in its first year. In year two, that number increased to $1.14B. Get your game on…get paid.

Zooming out: In addition to protecting all student-athletes after they finish school, the proposed bill preserves NIL’s positive influence on women’s sports. Collegiate women athletes receive a fraction of the total funds allocated to sports, but some athletes have been able to find individual financial success through brand endorsements and social media savvy.

  • In the NIL era, women student-athletes’ sponsorship posts saw seven times (!!!) the engagement per deal compared those of male athletes. What? Like it’s hard.
  • Still, athletes’ individual business success won’t fill the extreme financial gap between men’s and women’s sports programs at the collegiate level. Codifying NIL regulations into law is a clear positive for women athletes, but there’s still a long way to go.