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Biden Administration

Biden Makes Last-Ditch Pass at Interfering in College Sports

Even if the Trump administration quickly undoes it, it’s a precedent for future administrations.

Jason Russell | 1.17.2025 4:51 PM

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An overview of Hard Rock Stadium during a football game, with many Notre Dame football players on the ground in white jerseys and gold helmets, and a large videoboard in the right side of the stadium. | Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire 573/Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire/Newscom
(Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire 573/Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire/Newscom)

On President Joe Biden's way out the door, his Education Department has thrown a wrench into plans for universities to pay student-athletes directly. The payments will almost certainly still happen, but instead of schools using the vast majority of the payments on athletes in big-revenue programs (i.e. football), the Education Department says under Title IX the payments must be "proportionate" between male and female athletes.

The news probably gave some college football coaches and administrators a small heart attack—would they be able to keep the promises they made to a star recruit about how much money he'd make?—until they realized this is far from settled law.

The idea that Title IX applies here comes from a fact sheet published by the department's Office for Civil Rights. The incoming Trump administration's Education Department staff can just as easily publish their own fact sheet that says otherwise (as predicted by Sen. Ted Cruz (R–Texas)). Even if the Trump administration leaves the issue alone, the fact sheet is not a formal regulation and didn't go through any kind of rule-making procedure. It doesn't carry the force of law and probably wouldn't have much weight in court.

But the fact sheet still serves as a warning to college athletic departments: Next time there's a Democrat in the White House, be ready for this possibility.

The fact sheet says payments must be "substantially proportionate to the number of students of each sex participating in interscholastic or intercollegiate athletics at that school." Data vary, but the NCAA seems to have a slight majority of male athletes. If that ratio holds up across most schools, then it would upend plans to spend the vast majority of the money on football teams, which often generate the vast majority of athletic department revenue. Instead, almost half of the payments would have to go to women's sports. (Presumably, within the sexes, schools could still spend the vast majority on one sport, such as football or women's basketball.)

The controversial justification is that the payments are "athletic financial assistance," and thus subject to Title IX rules. "The basis for the Title IX guidance is that it classifies revenue sharing as financial assistance (similar to athletic scholarships) which appears to be highly questionable," Patrick O'Rourke, an accountant who compiled possible revenue-sharing estimates, wrote. But others think the application of Title IX to the payments is more clear. "Of course it applies to Title IX, it applies to higher education and has for all sorts of other things," says Mark Owens, an associate professor of economics at Penn State University. "I don't know why this is any different."

Either way, future presidential administrations could just as easily put out a fact sheet like this one, and even go further and put a less-ambiguous interpretation through the formal rule-making procedure.

Or, since the original 1972 law that included Title IX did not address how schools distribute revenue-sharing payments (since such payments did not exist), courts may not defer to the Education Department's interpretation of the law. The Supreme Court's recent overturning of Chevron doctrine may play a role here. "Per the Court's ruling in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, judges may no longer defer to an agency interpretation because the statute is ambiguous," University of New Hampshire Law Professor Michael McCann wrote in a Sportico column. This "could play an instrumental role in diminishing the [name, image, and likeness] fact sheet's importance."

Starting next school year, universities will likely be allowed by the NCAA to start directly paying student-athletes under revenue-sharing agreements. The new payments will be allowed under a new legal settlement that's expected to be finalized in April. Schools will be allowed to spend up to $20.5 million in that school year, with the number set to grow every year. Some coaches have already told the media they expect to have somewhere between $12.5 million or up to $17 million to spend on their football rosters—which would clearly not be compliant with Title IX.

If enacted, the new rule would further burden athletic departments with another regulation to keep track of. "That's kind of another layer that, within these institutions, you have to make sure that everything is, you know, Title IX compliant," Owens says. Throw that on the pile along with a complex web of recruiting rules, NCAA student-athlete rules, and all state and federal laws that affect athletic departments, and it's hard to see how any college sports teams manage to get through a season without breaking anything.

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NEXT: Biden Attempts To Ratify the Equal Rights Amendment by Blog Post

Jason Russell is managing editor at Reason and author of the Free Agent sports newsletter.

Biden AdministrationSportsTitle IXFootballCollegeHigher EducationGenderJoe BidenFederal governmentDepartment of Education
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  1. A Thinking Mind   4 months ago

    Maybe all athletes should be given money proportionate to the profitability of the programs. In which case, women's athletes will owe money to the school while football players are getting paid.

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   4 months ago

      Yup. Calculate proportions on viewership, TV rights contract fees, advertising revenues, or final scores of male-female games in each sport.

    2. JFree   4 months ago

      Maybe state universities shouldn't be in the business of running sports programs with media contracts serving as the anti-trust exemption for professional sports. Or having the highest paid state employees be football coaches

      1. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   4 months ago

        Maye you should mind your own business, JFucked.

        1. Roberta   4 months ago

          What, like anti-trust isn't a matter of public policy?

          But that's not the most serious problem. Tax exemption is.

          1. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   4 months ago

            No, anti-trust should not be a matter of "public policy".

          2. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   4 months ago

            BTW, please address your (and JFucked) claims of "tax exemption". Guessing you (like JFucked) are full of shit.

      2. Ben of Houston   4 months ago

        I have to agree. There is no reason that our publicly funded school systems should be funding the minor leagues for the NFL and NBA. While some programs do make money hand over fist, most lose the schools money.

    3. snarling_dog   4 months ago

      Have you heard of Only Fans? Women make waaaay more money than men on Only Fans.

  2. Stupid Government Tricks   4 months ago

    Oh, Jason, you're straying from the plantation.

    But the fact sheet still serves as a warning to college athletic departments: Next time there's a Democrat in the White House, be ready for this possibility.

    Or did /sarc donate a big pile of loot and this is is your payback?

  3. Rick James   4 months ago

    Man, did anyone read or hear of that 'mean girls' exit interview that the President... I mean Jill Biden gave to the Washington Post? Holy crap. I mean, I'm never interested in listening to a politician rail on the other team, but I admit I do find it fun (in the cattiest of ways) to listen to them rag on their own side.

    Man, that whole Biden stepping down thing was some serious Shakespearian shit. And Jill Biden is fucking pissed...

    1. Don't look at me!   4 months ago

      She might have to start cooking dinner again.

      1. Stupid Government Tricks   4 months ago

        She can ask Obama for chef recommendations.

  4. Public Entelectual   4 months ago

    Precedent? Theodore Roosevelt famously convened a White House meeting to read the good sportsmanship riot act to ivy league quarterbacks and coaches after a flurry of un-helmeted fatalities

    1. Roberta   4 months ago

      The result, indirectly, was the NCAA. But if that compromise hadn't been reached, football (sportsball generally) would've gone off-campus and wound up severed from the institutions. Which at least arguably would've been a good thing, helping the development of both pro and amateur football.

      1. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   4 months ago

        Maybe you should mind your own business, twit.

        1. Restoring the Dream   4 months ago

          Good gracious, hit a sore spot, did he? How much do you make off all this?

  5. Longtobefree   4 months ago

    " . . . the Education Department says under Title IX the payments must be "proportionate" between male and female athletes."

    But since Biden enshrined the ERA amendment, there no longer are male and female athletes, just athletes.

    1. mad.casual   4 months ago

      I was going to say that with the ERA it actually completes the 180-degree turn to a 360, and is a return to normalcy unless "Dear Colleagues" specifically interpret it in a sexist manner.

      Fans know no gender and the smaller softball and field hockey teams with the shorter, less muscular athletes that draw fewer fans get "proportionately" less money than the larger, faster, stronger football, basketball, and baseball teams that draw more.

  6. TJJ2000   4 months ago

    Nothing is untouchable by the KING! /s

    ?free? ponies EVERYWHERE! /s

  7. AT   4 months ago

    the Education Department says under Title IX the payments must be "proportionate" between male and female athletes.

    Haha, "male" and "female" athletes aren't a thing anymore. Any male can just call himself Sally and declare himself a "female athlete."

    I continue to look forward to the utter destruction of women's sports.

  8. JasonT20   4 months ago

    I think all of this is just showing how much of a farce the idea of "student-athletes" is for any sport that gets significant TV revenue. If there is enough money coming to the school for this to even be something to worry about, then those athletic programs are professional minor leagues, not the college, amateur athletic competitions of yesteryear.

    1. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   4 months ago

      ^ This is the steaming pile of lefty shit who supports murder-by-cop as a preventative measure for, well, he really doesn't know:

      JasonT20
      February.6.2022 at 6:02 pm
      “How many officers were there to stop Ashlee Babbitt and the dozens of people behind her from getting into the legislative chamber to do who knows what?...”

      Fuck off and die, you pathetic excuse for a human being. And I truly wish you get shot to death by a cop for, well, pretty much nothing, as did that woman.

      1. Restoring the Dream   4 months ago

        You must bet a lot on college sports.

  9. Bipedal Humanoid   4 months ago
  10. Bipedal Humanoid   4 months ago

    I just skimmed through because Reason is the 21st Century equivalent of bird cage liner, but I saw no mention of chicks with dicks. When are compassionate and non-sociopathic people going shut that nonsense down?

  11. Mockamodo   4 months ago

    Well at least the student athletes will have income the government can tax.

  12. diver64   4 months ago

    This is emblematic of the entire Biden Administrations grip on our government the last four years. Biden hasn't done anything, the Obama people infesting his WH and the interns behind the scenes as well as DR JILL have been running everything. Just decree stuff and let the courts overturn it. I am so glad only a day is left in this total disaster that was the worst Presidency in history doing damage to our country only matched by Obama and Wilson's reign of terror.

  13. Anastasia Beaverhausen   4 months ago

    Reason # 862,326 that I'm a Libertarian. The left wants to interfere in college sports, but so does the right. Both sides want to mandate who can or can't play, when and where. How about letting private sports leagues make their own decisions?

    1. TJJ2000   4 months ago

      I guess school-choice has ZERO to do with 'private sports'.?
      BOAF SIDEZ!
      In the land where the elephant and the mouse are of SAME SIZEZZZ.

  14. Vesicant   4 months ago

    Last pass and interfering. You so funny. But I suppose that's high concept at 'reason.'

  15. vanessaa   3 months ago

    I understand the frustration that many sports fans face when it comes to finding reliable streams for live events. In my experience, platforms like livetv691.me have been a game-changer. With its extensive coverage of sports like football, basketball, motorsports, and more, LiveTV ensures I never miss a match, regardless of where I am. The best part? It's completely free to use, which is a relief compared to the high costs of paid subscriptions. The streaming quality is solid, and the site also offers replays and schedules to help plan ahead. While ads can be a bit disruptive at times, they’re a small price to pay for access to high-quality, real-time sports streams. If you’re a sports fan, LiveTV offers a convenient and affordable way to stay updated without the hassle.

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