Tennessee’s legal fight against the NCAA’s NIL rules has ended in victory, as a settlement permanently removes recruiting ...
The NCAA and the attorneys general of Tennessee and Virginia agreed to settle an antitrust lawsuit brought by the states in ...
The NCAA and a coalition of states led by Tennessee reached a settlement in their lawsuit against the NCAA, Tennessee ...
Court filings say the NCAA reached a settlement with the states, which will include a request for a permanent injunction ...
The NCAA policy prohibits the use of NIL contracts as a recruitment incentive, meaning athletes cannot negotiate NIL deals with collectives or boosters —coalitions of alumni that raise money to pay ...
Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti joined multiple states in suing the association over the NIL Recruiting Ban, ...
The lawsuit, filed one year ago today, claimed the NCAA violated federal antitrust law with its rules on name, image, and ...
The NCAA has settled the lawsuit with the attorneys general of Tennessee and Virginia and other states over its rules prohibiting name, image and likeness compensation for recruits.
The settlement, which must be finalized by March 17, prevents the NCAA from reviving its NIL recruiting ban and guarantees that college athletes will retain the ability to negotiate NIL deals as ...
On Jan. 31, 2024, Skrmetti sued the NCAA to loosen its stranglehold over NIL. That led to a showdown in a federal courthouse in Greeneville, Tennessee, two weeks later. A federal judge granted a ...
NCAA and the state of Tennessee have settled their lawsuit over the NCAA's NIL recruiting ban stemming back to last year.