53 min

Analyzing The Impact of Revenue Sharing on College Sports and Ohio State Real Pod Wednesdays

    • Futebol americano

College sports are about to change in a big way.
As part of a settlement of three antitrust lawsuits last week, the NCAA committed to allowing schools to share revenue with their athletes beginning in 2025, ending the NCAA’s longstanding ban on schools paying athletes.
We spend this week’s episode of Real Pod Wednesdays discussing why it was time for the NCAA to embrace revenue sharing, how the change could impact Ohio State, the lingering questions that remain unanswered and why the model created by the settlement is more likely to be a temporary fix than a permanent solution.
The full rundown for this week’s conversation:
1:57: We didn’t necessarily expect it to come this quickly, but revenue sharing was inevitable5:45: It’s both a huge change for the NCAA and a natural evolution of what was happening with NIL9:43: Players’ “salaries” should be coming from school revenues, not fan donations12:26: Bringing collectives in-house could give the NCAA another chance to regulate NIL15:58: Like it or not, college sports are gradually becoming more and more like professional sports19:10: Ohio State will have to share a far smaller piece of its pie than most other schools21:37: From a roster-building standpoint, Ohio State would benefit if there was no sharing cap23:29: Revenue cap could increase gap between OSU basketball and basketball-first schools30:28: Should OSU keep all 36 sports if it can’t fund all 36 at a championship-contending level?33:37: OSU will need donors to fund smaller sports, but football can’t subsidize 34 sports anymore35:43: Should Title IX apply to revenue sharing when football, men’s basketball make most of the money?40:12: Ohio State should look for ways to generate more revenue from other sports42:12: Will the NCAA’s efforts to regulate revenue sharing be more successful than it’s been with NIL?45:10: The new revenue-sharing model isn’t likely to be a permanent solution46:14: Collective bargaining is necessary to create a long-term system that works for everyone

College sports are about to change in a big way.
As part of a settlement of three antitrust lawsuits last week, the NCAA committed to allowing schools to share revenue with their athletes beginning in 2025, ending the NCAA’s longstanding ban on schools paying athletes.
We spend this week’s episode of Real Pod Wednesdays discussing why it was time for the NCAA to embrace revenue sharing, how the change could impact Ohio State, the lingering questions that remain unanswered and why the model created by the settlement is more likely to be a temporary fix than a permanent solution.
The full rundown for this week’s conversation:
1:57: We didn’t necessarily expect it to come this quickly, but revenue sharing was inevitable5:45: It’s both a huge change for the NCAA and a natural evolution of what was happening with NIL9:43: Players’ “salaries” should be coming from school revenues, not fan donations12:26: Bringing collectives in-house could give the NCAA another chance to regulate NIL15:58: Like it or not, college sports are gradually becoming more and more like professional sports19:10: Ohio State will have to share a far smaller piece of its pie than most other schools21:37: From a roster-building standpoint, Ohio State would benefit if there was no sharing cap23:29: Revenue cap could increase gap between OSU basketball and basketball-first schools30:28: Should OSU keep all 36 sports if it can’t fund all 36 at a championship-contending level?33:37: OSU will need donors to fund smaller sports, but football can’t subsidize 34 sports anymore35:43: Should Title IX apply to revenue sharing when football, men’s basketball make most of the money?40:12: Ohio State should look for ways to generate more revenue from other sports42:12: Will the NCAA’s efforts to regulate revenue sharing be more successful than it’s been with NIL?45:10: The new revenue-sharing model isn’t likely to be a permanent solution46:14: Collective bargaining is necessary to create a long-term system that works for everyone

53 min