📡 College Sports Commission CEO says system struggling with volume of ‘manufactured’ NIL deals - The Athletic

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The CEO of the College Sports Commission, the new body charged with approving athletes’ outside name, image and likeness (NIL) deals, said Tuesday the organization is running into unexpected challenges due to a surge of school-affiliated deals it believes do not comply with the rules the schools themselves established.
Bryan Seeley, a former Major League Baseball executive hired to oversee compliance with last year’s House settlement, said the system was not designed to handle so many deals in the recent football portal window that were made by “associated entities” like schools’ NIL collectives, multimedia partners and apparel providers. Some of those deals guaranteed players millions of dollars without having yet received approval through NIL Go, the clearinghouse used by the CSC.
“The massive increase in associated deal volume of this kind of manufactured NIL is leading to some increased review times in NIL Go,” Seely said during a call with reporters on Tuesday. “I don’t think the system was designed with this amount of associated deals in mind.”
The CSC was established to enforce the new college sports revenue sharing model under the House settlement. Under the terms of the settlement, college athletes are required to submit any NIL deals from third-party entities — those outside of a school’s direct revenue sharing cap — that are over $600 through the NIL Go platform for review. Those deals do not count toward a school’s annual revenue sharing cap, which is roughly $20.5 million for the 2025-26 academic season.

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CSC’s latest data published Tuesday, including deals submitted in January and February, showed an increase in the amount of submitted deals, which Seely said coincides with the college football transfer portal window. Seely added that’s an encouraging sign because it suggests athletes are reporting deals and utilizing the system as intended. But he also noted an increase in third-party deals from associated entities, which the CSC considers “subject to increased scrutiny” regarding approval. That increase has caused longer reviews for many of those deals and made CSC guidelines more difficult to enforce.
A person working in the NIL space told The Athletic those deals are taking at least several weeks to process and even then often get sent back seeking more information.
CSC reported that through the end of February, NIL Go has cleared more than 21,000 deals worth a combined $166.5 million and has not cleared 711 deals worth a combined $29.3 million. Through January and February 2026, more than 3,700 deals worth a combined $39.29 million were cleared, while 187 deals worth a combined $14.36 million were not cleared.
Since the NIL Go platform launched last June, 50 percent of submitted deals have been resolved (either cleared or not cleared) within 24 hours, and 70 percent reached resolution within a week of all required information being submitted, according to the report. But the report also stated that the number of third-party deals specifically from associated entities submitted by power-conference athletes over the past two months has increased by 65 percent.
According to Seely, the CSC defines an associated entity as, essentially, “an entity that’s either controlled by a donor or is working on behalf of the school to help retain and recruit student athletes.” Ole Miss quarterback Trinidad Chambliss’ national AT&T commercial or Arch Manning’s Warby Parker ad don’t involve associated entities, but a deal from a booster-led NIL collective does. Many third-party NIL deals also originate from multimedia rights (MMR) partners such as Learfield or Playfly that manage a school’s sponsorships, or apparel partners (such as Nike or Adidas), and the CSC treats those as associated entities as well. Hence the increase in review times and accompanying challenges.
“What I’ve been told is that there was a belief among many that perhaps up to 90 percent of deals flowing through the system would do so automatically, that would not need any kind of human review,” said Seely. “So the bottom line is, there are changes we need to make in the system that we are working on making that I think will improve things.”
Third-party NIL deals, which provide over-the-cap dollars, have become crucial to the ongoing financial arms race in college sports, particularly football and basketball, with top programs efforting to spend above their revenue sharing allotment. There are those in the industry claiming that some football programs will spend north of $40 million on their rosters for the 2026 season, which is more than double the full revenue share pool for every sport in the entire athletic department, meaning a lot of that money — a majority, for some schools — would be earmarked from third-party, over-the-cap deals.
If a star quarterback or top player is reportedly earning $4 million this season, there’s a high likelihood that some or most of it is budgeted outside of revenue sharing. And a lot of it is reportedly coming in the form of front-end guarantees through MMR and apparel agreements, big-money deals that Seely says run counter to House settlement rules.
“There’s no question that during the portal, agents were demanding guaranteed NIL for student athletes and schools felt pressure to guarantee those things, even though such guarantees are not within the rules,” said Seely. “I think any athletic director would tell you that.”
Challenges with NIL Go and third-party deals are just some of the persistent obstacles the CSC has faced since the settlement went into effect last summer. Another is the participant agreement, which would require participating schools to cooperate with investigations and enforcement decisions made by the CSC and prevent them from filing lawsuits that challenge those rules, but has not yet been signed. The CSC’s enforcement arm has quietly made investigative inquiries into various programs, but there have yet to be any known violations or penalties handed down, which has sparked some criticism within the industry.
“Until we build a structure to enforce the rules that are in place, we are constantly just putting bandages over issues,” Ohio State football coach Ryan Day said Tuesday. “My concern, more than anything, is that we are raising a young group of college coaches that see it that way, it’s becoming their normal. … Once we get that addressed, we can deal with everything else, but until then we are going to have a situation where people will try to get around the rules.”
Seely acknowledged Tuesday that the pushback from certain factions against signing the participant agreement has contributed to the lack of enforcement.
“The participant (agreement) is a key tool to giving the CSC the enforcement powers and needs,” Seely said. “That doesn’t mean without the participant agreement, it’s impossible, but I don’t think you’re going to see enforcement at the speed with which the schools want it.”
He added that there are currently 15 people on staff with the CSC, but that a lack of staff is “not a large contributing factor” to the enforcement challenges.
“I would say a lot of this is problems with the system just not being designed to handle this,” Seely said.
As the CSC aims to adapt and improve its operations, the tests will continue. Both the men’s and women’s college basketball portal windows open in early April, less than a month away.
 
I know that lsu has somewhere between 25 and 40 million of “unapproved” nil deals, they are paying anyway. Whether they’re approved or not. At least according to Gayle bensons niece, her husband is a buddy of mine.
Also Texas tech booster supposedly thumbed his nose at them also.
 

The onset of $30 million football rosters funded mostly by companies providing third-party payments to players on behalf of their schools is within the rules but "has not sort of matched" the system some of its founders intended, the head of the College Sports Commission said Tuesday.

Bryan Seeley delivered an update on the CSC's progress over the last two months. While he was bullish about the new agency's ability to analyze deals quickly, he said the influx of third-party deals that help schools blow past the $20.5 million salary cap they're allowed to pay players directly has led to increased review times.

The CSC's new numbers, updated through February, included a 65% increase over the preceding two months in the volume of the third-party deals, which are sometimes known as associated deals, among schools in the Power 4 conferences.

Seeley said those figures led him to believe that most schools are trying to follow the rules by submitting their deals for review to the CSC, which is tasked with making sure they are not simple pay-for-play contracts but have a "valid business purpose" and are priced fairly.

He also said he had been told that "there was a belief that perhaps up to 90% of deals flowing through the system would do so automatically that would not need any kind of human review.

"It must have been based on an assumption that this would be a somewhat organic market with a lot of not associated deals," he said. "And that is turning out to be not the case."

Those associated deals have brought the CSC under scrutiny for lag time in approving contracts. More importantly, they speak to wider concerns that the cost of populating competitive college rosters has spiraled out of control less than a year into the system that was activated by the House settlement -- the endgame in a lawsuit that allows schools to share revenue directly with players, then augment that through third-party deals.

The discussion has reached as far as the White House, where last week President Donald Trump held a "summit" with sports leaders to discuss ways of reining in costs.

Trump has promised an executive order this week that will address issues in an industry where, he said, "the amount of money being spent and lost by otherwise very successful schools is astounding, just in a short period of time. And it's only going to get worse."

Seeley, still focused on standing up an agency that will play a massive role in policing college sports, said he did not want to delve into whether the current system is sustainable.

"I read the same things you read. I see the same public comments in the media and I talk to schools," Seeley said. "And I do get the sense that some schools had the belief that the settlement as implemented had not sort of matched what they expected. I think that's a fair thing to say."

Important 'participation agreement' remains unsigned

Seeley also acknowledged that the very existence of his 8-month-old agency could be in jeopardy if a "participation agreement" that vests enforcement power in the CSC isn't signed by all 68 of the Power Four schools.

Shortly after the CSC distributed the document, a handful of states and schools said they wouldn't sign; some were concerned about language that forbid suing the commission.

Parties have spent month reworking language. In an impassioned plea at NCAA meetings in January, Seeley urged schools to sign the deal. Nearly two months later, he said he is still waiting.

"I have seen some edits proposed by schools of late that weaken the document," Seeley said. "There comes a point where the document is not strong enough to justify it being in place and the CSC signing it."

He said the CSC could still function without the measures placed into the agreement "but I think those tools are really important."
 
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