The debate over student-athlete employment intensifies as athletes consider unionizing and seeking compensation. Stanford athletes are contemplating an employment model, following Dartmouth's lead. NCAA players face new challenges, including legal battles and discussions on compensation.
Once the Dartmouth men’s basketball team officially voted to unionize, the proverbial floodgates have been expected to open around the student-athlete employment movement. Could Stanford athletes follow Dartmouth on the path to getting paid to compete? https://t.co/QDO4jPkYcn
Amid Dartmouth men’s basketball’s effort to unionize, Stanford administration and a Cardinal leadership group have opened talks over what treating student-athletes as employees could look like. https://t.co/bT5SNqcoq8
The issue of student-athlete employment draws many conflicting opinions among Cardinal athletes, but one shared sentiment: Whatever happens, Stanford will probably be slow to catch up. https://t.co/0vhXJQOUFH
An NCAA player accused of rape sued to be allowed to play in March Madness. @StepCarter explains how his case hinged on something new for college players: money https://t.co/i7YwJ0NGfP via @opinion
As Zach Edey's Purdue and Aaliyah Edwards' UConn begin their March Madness tournaments today, I wrote about how Canadian NCAA players aren't getting their fair share of the NIL pie. And what that means for other Canadian players coming up the pipeline: https://t.co/lCnWcfYNmE
Could Stanford athletes unionize the way Dartmouth did? AD Bernard Muir asked student athletes recently to begin thinking about what an employment model would mean, according to several athletes | @sfchronicle https://t.co/Sz7z7tZleI
An NCAA athlete accused of rape sued to be allowed to play in March Madness. @StepCarter explains how his case hinged on something new for college players: money https://t.co/y7jDfMIAZ7 via @opinion
From @Marisa_Ingemi Could Stanford athletes follow Dartmouth on path to getting paid to compete? https://t.co/VuR9YTPq0Z via @sfchronicle
Athletes' efforts to unionize are the latest challenge to the student-athlete model that has defined college sports. @johnyangtv explored what could happen next with @SportsLawGuy. https://t.co/twhSZnhBlN