Article 6YH6J How ‘oppressive’ FSU revenue-sharing deals show continued exploitation of college football players

How ‘oppressive’ FSU revenue-sharing deals show continued exploitation of college football players

by
Nathan Kalman-Lamb and Derek Silva
from on (#6YH6J)

New financial rules for college sports theoretically give football players newfound compensation, but the terms of the deals don't account for injury

Revenue sharing is now a feature of college athletics. Thanks to the house settelement signed in May, schools are permitted to spend $20.5m annually across sports, including through expanded scholarships and direct payments (of which it appears football will generally receive approximately 75%). This would seem to mitigate the longstanding problem of exploitation in college football.

However, in a sport still defined by extreme injury, recently disclosed provisions in the new Florida State University (FSU) revenue-sharing contract show that schools appear to simply be finding new ways to extract value from players, as ever at startling personal cost.

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