President to the Rescue: Saving College Football from Total Meltdown
Published Date: 4/9/2026
Presidential Document
Summary
College sports, especially football and basketball, are in big trouble because of confusing rules and costly pay-for-play battles. This order steps in to create clear, fair rules to protect all athletes, keep schools financially healthy, and save women’s and Olympic sports. Changes start soon, aiming to stop the chaos and keep college sports alive and thriving for everyone.
Analyzed Economic Effects
12 provisions identified: 7 benefits, 2 costs, 3 mixed.
Five-Year Participation Limit in College Sports
The interstate athletic governing body is asked to adopt age-based eligibility rules under which participation in college athletics is permitted for no more than a five-year period, with limited exceptions for military service, missionary service, and similar public-interest absences, and a rule that professional athletes cannot return to college athletics.
Federal Grants May Be Withheld for Violations
Federal agencies that give contracts or grants to colleges will evaluate violations of interstate athletic governing-body rules in effect on August 1, 2026 to decide whether such violations are a reason to affect a recipient's present responsibility, which can influence suspension, debarment, or federal contracting and grant decisions.
Federal Funds Prohibited for NIL and Pay
The order prohibits the use of Federal funds by federally-funded higher education institutions for name, image, and likeness (NIL) or revenue-sharing payments or for coaching or athletic compensation, effective for the operative sections commencing August 1, 2026.
New Transfer Limits and Immediate Eligibility
The order asks the interstate governing body to set transfer rules allowing one transfer during the five-year period with immediate playing eligibility and one additional such transfer if the student-athlete obtains a four-year degree, while prioritizing academic development and preventing transfer timing that undermines seasons or academic years.
Required Medical Care for Athletic Injuries
The order asks the interstate governing body to require medical care for student-athletes for intercollegiate-athletics-related injuries during their enrollment and for a reasonable period afterward.
Revenue Sharing Must Protect Women's Sports
The governing body should implement revenue-sharing between institutions and student-athletes in a way that preserves or expands scholarships and opportunities in women's and Olympic sports, including rules to prevent revenue-sharing allocations from reducing those scholarships or opportunities.
Ban on Improper Financial Activities and Collectives
The order defines 'improper financial activities' and directs a prohibition on improper financial activities regarding student-athletes, including collectives or other entities or methods used to facilitate third-party pay-for-play payments.
Federal Suits to Invalidate Conflicting State Laws
The Attorney General is directed to pursue meritorious legal actions to invalidate State laws that conflict with interstate athletic-governing-body rules, including laws that discriminate against out-of-state commerce or impair contractual relationships, as measured under federal constitutional or statutory standards.
Which Colleges Are Covered ($20M Threshold)
The order defines a "higher education institution" for its purposes as one that reported at least $20,000,000 in athletics-derived revenue in the preceding academic year (with that $20,000,000 adjusted each July 1 by the Consumer Price Index).
National Agent Registry and Commission Limits
The order calls for a national student-athlete agent registry and reasonable protections for student-athletes from excessive agent commissions.
Education Department Reporting Requirements
The Secretary of Education is directed to consider rulemaking to require regular reporting by institutions that includes (i) total roster spots by varsity team as of the team's first scheduled contest, and (ii) the total amount spent on athletically related student aid or other payments, reported separately for men's and women's teams.
FTC Enforcement Against Bad Agents
The Chairman of the Federal Trade Commission is directed to take appropriate action to enforce federal consumer-protection statutes (15 U.S.C. 45 and 15 U.S.C. 7801-7807) with respect to violations by student-athlete agents and related individuals or entities.
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