California will let college athletes hire agents and make money from endorsements, defying the NCAA and setting up a likely legal challenge that could reshape amateur sports in the US. Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom announced Monday he signed the law that would let athletes at California universities make money from their images, names, or likenesses. The law also bans schools from kicking athletes off the team if they get paid. The law will take effect on Jan. 1, 2023. It doesn't apply to community colleges, and it bans athletes from accepting endorsement deals that conflict with their schools' existing contracts. California is the first state to pass such a law. More from the AP:
- The NCAA Board of Governors had asked Newsom to veto the bill, saying it "would erase the critical distinction between college and professional athletes."
- The board also warned that the law would give California universities an unfair recruiting advantage, which could prompt the NCAA—which reported $1.1 billion in revenue in 2017—to bar them from competition.
- If that happened, powerhouse programs like the University of Southern California, University of California-Los Angeles, Stanford University, and the University of California-Berkeley, would be banned from NCAA competition.