Fresno State has beaten UCLA twice in past four seasons and collected a total of $1.75 million in appearance money for those games.
Author: Steve Berkowitz, USA TODAY
Costly downside of guarantee games for Power Five emerges early in college football season
A span of less than 30 minutes Saturday night again revealed the potential downside of guarantee games in college football.
Analysis: If SEC adds Texas and Oklahoma, the conference could generate as much revenue as NCAA
A 16-team SEC with Texas and Oklahoma could have nearly $1.3 billion in revenue for its 2024-25 fiscal year, according to USA TODAY Sports analysis.
NCAA president Mark Emmert credited with $2.9 million in total pay for 2019 calendar year
NCAA’s new federal tax records show that President Mark Emmert received a base salary increase of just over $175,000 during the 2019 calendar year.
NCAA adopts temporary policy on name, image and likeness in seismic shift for college sports
The NCAA stands on the edge of the most fundamental change to the college sports landscape since Title IX, the gender-equity law implemented in 1972.
NCAA Council recommends name, image and likeness policies should be up to schools in states without law beginning Thursday
The NCAA Council’s recommendation goes to the Board of Directors for a Wednesday vote. NIL state laws go into effect Thursday.
NCAA takes another blow in court ruling on name, image and likeness
U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken denied the NCAA’s request for a dismissal of the lawsuit that also addresses compensation from TV rights fees.
NCAA changing outlook on name, image and likeness, moving toward temporary solution
NCAA considering temporary solution in which schools in states with NIL laws will follow them and schools in states without laws will make own rules.
Supreme Court ruling scrambling NCAA’s consideration of new name, image and likeness rules
New proposal offered by the ACC, Pac-12 and SEC would largely leave it up to individual schools to develop their own name, image and likeness rules.
NCAA indicates Supreme Court ruling won’t be the end of legal maneuvering in Alston case
NCAA President Mark Emmert and the association’s lawyers indicated Supreme Court ruling in the Alston case won’t be end of their legal maneuvering.