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Ohio State athletic director Ross Bjork addressed the changes coming to college sports following the settlement of the House ...
AD Ross Bjork said Ohio State will not cut any sports teams but $18 million will be shared between football, basketball and ...
Nearly all of the $20.5 million that Ohio State is allowed to share with athletes in the next academic year will be through ...
Over the past five years, college athletics has undergone a massive transformation, shifting from amateur ideals to a new era defined by athlete empowerment, NIL deals, and legal reckonings. On Friday ...
A seismic shift in the college sports landscape is underway following the final approval of a landmark settlement of three ...
College walk-on athletes are as much a part of the teams as scholarship members, but a reduction in roster size puts their ...
Ohio State's athletic department is teaming up with Learfield to launch a groundbreaking initiative designed to enhance NIL ...
Since 2021, when the NCAA lifted its ban on athletes receiving compensation for their name, image, and likeness from sources ...
The Big Ten is better equipped to thrive than other conferences in the aftermath of the House v. NCAA lawsuit settlement.
The House v. NCAA settlement caps NIL payments at $20.5 million and provides $2.5 million for additional scholarships. Ohio State will maintain all 36 of its varsity sports programs. OSU athletic ...
Two things will not change in college sports with the settlement of the House v. NCAA case, Ohio State athletic director Ross Bjork said: Athletes will still go to class in pursuit of a degree ...