
ORLANDO, Fla. -- NCAA president Charlie Baker told hundreds of collegiate athletics administrators during a keynote address Tuesday that the recent multi-billion dollar House settlement approval creates "a far better future" for the organization, one that "comes with choices, instead of bankruptcy."
Baker made his first public comments since Judge Claudia Wilken approved the deal between the NCAA, its most powerful conferences and lawyers representing all Division I athletes, as he addressed the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics convention. The House v. NCAA settlement, reached last Friday, ends three separate federal antitrust lawsuits, all of which claimed the NCAA was illegally limiting the earning power of college athletes.
In front of a standing only room crowd, Baker told the assembled group, "No one in this room needs to hear me say that this is one of the biggest changes ever in college sports. I hope you also understand that it's a far better future than virtually every other alternative that could have been in front of us.
"Blame whoever you wish to blame. But the simple truth is clear. College sports' collective inability or unwillingness to change years ago put the entire enterprise at risk. Is the settlement disruptive? Very much so. But it is an opportunity for the DI community to pay for back damages over 10 years, instead [of] triple that amount all at once. And it creates a future that comes with choices, instead of bankruptcy."
As a result of the settlement, the NCAA will pay nearly $2.8 billion in back damages over the next 10 years to athletes who competed in college at any time from 2016 through the present. In addition, schools are now permitted to pay its athletes up to $20.5 million in revenue sharing beginning in 2025-26.
During a brief media availability with reporters after his public remarks, Baker said he was at a wedding in Indianapolis when the settlement was approved. He checked his phone to see whether one of his children had called and saw the news alert. He then began walking around the room to other NCAA officials at the wedding to spread the news.
"I ran around as the Pied Piper and told everybody," Baker said. "It is one of those things where I'll always remember where I was."
Schools have until June 15 to opt-in to participate in the settlement, though Baker said there has been discussion among conferences to push that date back to July 1 as they begin to read through a 50-page FAQ document that has been distributed to them.
In his remarks to the group, Baker acknowledged, "Change of this scale is going to be hard, and the transition will be rocky. No one gets everything they want in a settlement. ... College sports need stability as we modernize."
Indeed, schools have been preparing to pay players for over the last year and must make choices about whether to fully participate in the $20.5 million salary cap, how to come up with the extra funding and how to divide up the money among their players. Michigan, for example, recently announced a 10 percent athletic department staffing reduction as a result of the settlement.
Asked about schools having to make financial decisions like this one, Baker went back to his comments about schools having choices.
"I've talked to a lot of schools in DI, at every level. They all get the fact that it's better to be able to make choices than to have choices made for you, which is kind of what the alternative was," Baker said.
He also noted the Power 4 conferences, for the most part, have said they have no current plans to eliminate sports, and believe the elimination of scholarship limits are a positive.
"A lot of the people who are predicting what's going to happen here, good for them, but the bottom line is, we don't know. And, and I think it's important to let this play out and then make adjustments if people need to."