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Trump takes into account the order of the executive in relation to payments to College athletes


Trump's review of the matter takes place after a conversation that he conducted with the former Alabama football coach Nick Saban at the beginning of this week.

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  • Senator Richard Blumenthal, in the middle of talks with Senator Ted Cruz for Bill, says Trump, “I have no authority to rule through decree – especially to give the NCAA handouts.”

Washington – President Donald Trump gives the signing of an executive regulation that indicates payments to College athletes, “serious considerations”, a person familiar with the matter who was confirmed on May 2 to the USA.

The person asked for anonymity because she was not justified to speak publicly about the matter.

Trump's review of the matter takes place after a conversation that he had conducted with the former football coach of the University of Alabama on May 1, Nick Saban, when Trump was in Tuscaloosa to speak at the opening ceremonies of the university.

The order could potentially supervise the name, the image and the similarity or the Nile, which exploded with a few regulations on College's lighting athletics, although the way the order would be addressed was not immediately clear.

The Wall Street Journal first reported on Trump's consideration of the campaign, which signed a number of problems for the more than 140 executive commands that Trump signed in his first 102 days.

Saban was critical of the current status of college sports, including a circular table event in Washington, which in March 2024 by Senator Ted Cruz, R-Texas, as part of the ongoing efforts of Cruz, College Sports Laws that could exist, as part of the ongoing efforts of Cruz.

At the time, Saban said that the “personal development” of the athletes would be hindered by the combination of practically non -regulated opportunities for athletes to earn money with zero and their ability to transmit several times in their college career. He also called for “rules that create a kind of competitive balance that we currently do not have in College.

US Senator Tommy Tuberville, R-Alabama, said that he had a “big conversation” with Trump in Air Force One about “the importance of determining the national standards for Nile” during the President's trip.

“College football is the heart and soul of America – but it is in danger if we do not compensate for the competitive area,” said Tuberville, former football coach at Auburn University and other schools.

Trump's potential entry into this area is lawyers for the plaintiffs who have NCAA and the power that have five conferences in order to revise one aspect of the proposed settlement of three athletes compensation cartel cartel cases that the US district judge Claudia Wilken said that she was otherwise ready to provide final approval.

As part of the agreement, damages of $ 2.8 billion would be paid for over 10 years to current and former athletes and their lawyers, and the schools in the department I would be able to pay athletes directly for the use of their zero, subject to a preschool that increases over time and based on a percentage of certain athletics income. Athletes may still not have any offers with non-school companies, but all offers worth $ 600 or more are subject to a checked than now.

While the proposed settlement would solve some problems for the NCAA and its conferences and schools, they continued to use the congress for laws that, among other things, enter into the zero rights of federal rights athletes in connection with the Nica rights of Nica rights of the NCAA and have passed the NCAA measures against legal protective measures against legal protective measures. Trump could occur here.

Trump instructed helpers from the White House to examine what an order would look like, according to Wall Street Journal.

Senator Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., On the night of May 2, in a statement to USA Today of Trump's potential commitment: “The reform of university sports can only be done by congress laws on the basis of cross-party negotiations that put the negotiations of the college athlete in the first place. The President is welcome to support Senate negotiations.

One of the leading lawyers for the plaintiffs in the event of an ongoing antitrust case, Steve Berman, has blown up the prospect of Trump's participation in any way in a statement to USA Today, which would restrict the athletes.

“The President says he is the greatest businessman ever,” wrote Berman. “Why should he do something to restrict the business qualifications that students negotiate for their zero. He was an advantage of the free market, why not these young athletes[.]

“As for Saban, what kind of hypocrite. He was an opponent of Nil from the start, while he made tens of millions of the backs of these athletes. Even [J]Ustice Kavanaugh, one of the judges appointed by (Trumps), said in his [A]Lston decision that this was wrong.

“Trump should speak to Coach (Jim) Harbaugh, who is a fan of the emerging zero market[.]””

BERMAN described the agreement of Justice Brett Kavanaugh on the unanimous judgment of the Supreme Court in the case of Alston against NCAA Antitrust, in which the High Court ended the borders of the Association for Education services that can receive athletes for playing university sports. Kavanaugh strongly criticized the limits of the NCAA for the compensation of the athletes and wrote, among other things: “The business model of the NCAA would be completely illegal in almost any other industry in America.”

Harbaugh, now with the Los Angeles Chargers of the NFL, was repeatedly committed to greater compensation for College athletes in his nine seasons as football coach at the University of Michigan.

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