Film Room: third-party NIL fundamentals, public company considerations, and today’s institutional actions that preserve tomorrow’s opportunity
March 12, 2025
Film Room: third-party NIL fundamentals, public company considerations, and today’s institutional actions that preserve tomorrow’s opportunityMarch 12, 2025 We’ll take the opportunity offered by a (rare) slow week in college athletics legal and regulatory news to further examine public company third-party NIL, assuming House settlement. For the highest-resourced institutions planning to offer institutional benefits up to the cap limit, third-party NIL will be the space in which programs and institutions compete. Third-party NIL fundamentals In an earlier edition of Film Room, we noted key aspects of the settlement’s proposed structure for third-party NIL:
We’ll now invite you to walk through the Associated Entity/Individual definition with public company NIL in mind. “Associated Entity or Individual” means:
Public company considerations By its terms, sub-parts (a)-(c) and (e) shouldn’t apply to public companies:
That leaves sub-part (d), which includes entities that have been directed or requested by a member institution to assist or that have actually assisted in the retention or recruitment of student-athletes or recruits. Current NCAA rules generally limit recruiting contacts to specific permissible recruiters (certain coaches, essentially). What does it mean to “assist” recruiting or retention? This audience is familiar with arguments advanced by member institutions that even public apparel companies closely aligned with athletics departments are not its “boosters.” Sub-part (d) picks up that same “assist” language in the booster definition and invites varying interpretations of what that means (at best). Today’s institutional actions that preserve tomorrow’s opportunities Yes, there’s confusion regarding what NIL activity is currently permitted – or at least what activity is shielded from enforcement by the Tennessee v. NCAA injunction. Speaking of which, be on the lookout for the terms of the Tennessee v. NCAA settlement, which the parties indicated will be finalized by next Monday, March 17, 2025. Regardless of the current state of play, now is the time for institutions to actively consider and align approaches with the expected rules of tomorrow. Clumsy actions in this interim period can rob an institution of a tremendous compliant opportunity under the expected rules of tomorrow. In other words, don’t let your public company support stumble into sub-part (d) territory now. There are many ways in which public companies can support institutional efforts short of assisting in recruitment or retention of student-athletes and recruits. Curate that activity now to maximize the impact of public company support in a post-House world. __________ Key contacts
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