HomeNewsWhite House Hosts Roundtable to Tackle Challenges Facing College Sports Legislation

White House Hosts Roundtable to Tackle Challenges Facing College Sports Legislation

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On Friday, President Donald Trump convened a “Saving College Sports Roundtable” in the White House’s East Room.

The session gathered a diverse group, including members of the Trump administration, House Speaker Mike Johnson from Louisiana, state leaders, along with representatives from college and professional sports, as well as the U.S. Olympic Committee.

Kicking off the event, the president highlighted a pressing issue facing collegiate athletics across the nation:

He emphasized the need for a nationwide standard to address what many view as persistent challenges—specifically, the eligibility, transfer rules, and Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) rights of college athletes.

He said they have been hoping for some kind of standard nationwide for regulating what many of them see as ongoing issues: the “eligibility, transfers, [and] Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL)” rights of athletes who take part in college sports.

The president continued, explaining that this would be accomplished by a “permanent fix” through Congressional action, instead of what he says is happening now—judges making the call on the field:

“Federal legislation must allow college athletic programs to set simple common sense rules without endless litigation, and establish a fair Name, Image, and Likeness standard that eliminates the patchwork of conflicting state laws, while allowing the full spectrum of athletic programs to thrive.

If Congress does not take action fast, it could destroy college sports, and destroy the colleges that play these sports.”





The University of Notre Dame’s Athletics Director, Pete Bevacqua, warned that this is becoming a “runaway finanacial train” for educational institutions like his, and federal guardrails are needed:

“I think everybody around this table knows that we need help to straighten this out; we need the help of Congress. It’s [college football] has become a runaway financial train, and if it continues to be that way, even the healthiest of universities are going to have to make incredibly difficult decisions—decisions that are going to impact women’s sports and olympic sports. There’s simply no way around that. So we need regulations… we need financial transparency and we need repercussions. People’s feet need to be held to the fire.”

Bevacqua also thanked Pres. Trump for the kind condolences the president made about a longtime friend, Notre Dame’s legendary coach, Lou Holtz, who passed away this week.


READ MORE: Legendary Notre Dame Coach and American Patriot Lou Holtz Dies at 89, Leaves Behind Powerful Legacy


Former Alabama football coaching icon, Nick Saban spoke about his issues with the current system:





My goal as a coach for my players, for our players, was to help them be more successful in life, that we would create an atmosphere and an environment that would help them through personal development…668 degrees and 17 years at Alabama, and help them with a career as a football player…We were preparing them for their future past athletics.

But Saban said that the way the current system is, that became “impossible to do.” The NCAA’s president, Charlie Baker, pointed out that all of the U.S. and Canadian Olympic hockey teams’ players, men’s and women’s, were all former college athletes:

U.S. Olympic Committee CEO Sarah Hirshland called for this new “partnership” to get some much-needed “stability” from Congress: 





Republican FL Governor Ron DeSantis said that “with the collectives and how much it’s costing,” the juggernaut of college football especially is “threatening” the viability of other Division I sports:

Based on the way one of the panelists was talking, it appears this roundtable is just a springboard for a series of discussions on how college sports will work over time, as New York Yankees president, Randy Levine said:

“These issues have been in professional sports for a long time…This group, as we move on, you can be assured will be talking to the student athletes and all of their representatives to make sure their voices are clearly heard. Time is of the essence.”

This was for sure a weighty topic, but there was a fun moment to lighten things up, when the president joked that Secretary of State Marco Rubio taking part in the roundtable might be illegal:





You can watch the full roundtable event below:


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