College athletics has gone through unprecedented change in recent years and will continue to evolve. Will college athletics find a happy place? Or will greed and consolidation of wealth burst its bubble?
College athletics has gone through unprecedented change in recent years and will continue to evolve. Will college athletics find a happy place? Or will greed and consolidation of wealth burst its bubble?
After a lengthier than anticipated wait, the House settlement was approved by a federal judge on Friday night. It is a landmark decision that changes the course of college athletics.
At long last, Indiana has a mascot. Hoosier The Bison doesn’t end or threaten any existing Indiana traditions, so he should be able to fit in something a new generation of fans can embrace.
Football and basketball might drive the revenue, but the college athletic experience is supposed to be about something bigger than just return on investment.
In the last half-decade, the college athletics landscape has undergone a radical makeover. Many of the consumers of college sports are alienated by the changes.
It seems far-fetched, but some have surmised that college athletics could evolve into being an entity not directly aligned with the university itself. Would you support that at Indiana?
U.S. District Court Judge Claudia Wilken ruled on Wednesday that the landmark House settlement will not be approved unless athletes with roster spots have their spots grandfathered in.