President Donald Trump urged Congress to reach agreement on bipartisan college sports legislation now under discussion on Capitol Hill.
The Protect College Sports Act, introduced by Sens. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., was discussed Wednesday during a Senate Commerce Committee hearing. The bill is being negotiated by congressional leaders and college athletics officials.
Among the issues facing college athletics is whether schools can keep pace financially with Big Ten and Southeastern Conference programs. The bill says pooling media rights with other conferences would be optional, but some remain skeptical about how much revenue that would generate for schools.
Former Alabama coach Nick Saban told senators the current system has become unsustainable. He said Alabama’s name, image and likeness collective had $2.7 million in its first year and $24 million this past season, while some schools are already spending more than $40 million this season.
“But that is not the same thing as turning NIL into a pay-for-play system. It is not the same thing as using collectives and outside entities to create a bidding war for recruits and transfers. When the system becomes whoever raises the most money gets the best players, then we are no longer talking about college athletics as millions of fans and I have known it,” Saban said.
Trump, who has signed two executive orders since last summer aimed at college athletics, said on Truth Social that lawmakers should send him a final bill this summer.
“College sports are turning into pro sports, except with absolutely no rules, a result no one wants,” Trump said. “University presidents, conference commissioners, student-athletes, coaches, and athletic directors all complained to me that it has become a disaster, after years of no action, and that schools were losing hundreds of millions of dollars a year.”
House Majority Leader Steve Scalise said the House still had concerns. “I’m glad they’re doing some work on the Senate side, but for the House to be able to take anything up, you got to prevent employment status of the student athletes,” he said. “You also don’t want to open up all the schools to lawsuits from trial lawyers that would make a much more litigious environment. Those are things that have been big problems on the House side.”
The Senate has completed its first hearing and now moves to the amendment stage, which could lead to a vote.