Luke Kromenhoek in Miami, Florida on Oct. 26, 2024 Credit: Photo via FSUfootball/X
TALLAHASSEE — Pointing to a need to avoid a disadvantage in recruiting athletes, Florida university-system leaders Wednesday made up to $22.5 million available for each state university to share revenues with athletes.

The systemโ€™s Board of Governors approved the funding, which will be available annually at that level as a loan or transfer for the next three years. It is designed to help carry out a new revenue-sharing model with athletes under a national legal settlement in a case known as House v. NCAA.

It comes amid massive change in college sports, in part because of athletes now being able to cash in through โ€œname, image and likenessโ€ deals. Traditionally, college athletes could not be paid.

Board of Governors member Alan Levine said the money approved Wednesday โ€œtakes some of the pressure off the donorsโ€ now funding name, image and likeness deals and ensures โ€œwe put our universities in as advantageous a position as possible to compete.โ€

The settlement, approved June 6 by U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken of the Northern District of California, in part establishes a 10-year model for NCAA Division I schools to expand rosters and directly pay athletes for their names, images and likenesses.

โ€œThey’re already out there trying to sign contracts with these athletes,โ€ Levine said. โ€œAnd if we don’t act, there’s a really good chance that our institutions will be severely disadvantaged. I don’t think anybody wants that.โ€

Payments, expected to go primarily to students who play football and menโ€™s basketball, would be in addition to currently allowed individual name, image and likeness deals, where money is often raised and distributed through what are known as โ€œcollectivesโ€ and other organizations tied to schools.

Under the settlement, schools that opt in to the plan could spend up to a capped amount on direct payments and roster-expanding scholarships. For the 2025-2026 school year, the cap would be set at $20.5 million per school.

Peter Collins, chairman of the Florida State University Board of Trustees, said not every Florida school will reach the cap.

โ€œI don’t know for sure everybody else around the table, but I know we will, because everybody that we play is spending in the cap,โ€ Collins said.

The cap is based on calculations involving media, ticket and sponsorship revenue at schools in what are known as the โ€œPower 5โ€ conferences — the Atlantic Coast Conference, Big Ten, Big 12, Southeastern Conference and Pac-12 — and at Notre Dame.

The additional $2 million being offered to schools would cover back-pay of certain athletes who played before name, image and likeness deals became legal in 2021.

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