Can CU Buffs, CSU Rams afford payouts from House-NCAA settlement?

Chuck Neinas was hailed four decades ago for letting the beast out of the box. How was he to know darn thing would eventually start eating its own?

“At home, I’d been a hero because I was responsible for the Supreme Court (case) with the College Football Association,” the former Big Eight and Big 12 commissioner, now retired in Boulder County, told The Denver Post recently. “Now my son says, ‘Dad, you’re responsible for all that TV money.’ That I’m responsible for the whole damn thing!”

The grandfather of chaos had noble intentions when he helped spearhead the old CFA’s historic Supreme Court victory in 1984. That particular ruling freed up conferences and schools to negotiate their own television rights packages, which had previously been capped and commandeered by the NCAA.

Roll the clock ahead four decades, and you know how the rest of that particular story played out.

Without NCAA vs. Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma, there isn’t the same explosion of television revenue for collegiate athletic departments. And therefore no House vs. NCAA, which recently produced a settlement that figures to change the face of college athletics forever.

With the ghosts of ‘84 perhaps echoing in their lawyer’s ears, the NCAA agreed to a $2.77 billion settlement that will pay more than 15,000 Division I athletes who played from 2016 through 2021 rather than go forward with a January 2025 trial.

So, given the diversity of college athletic departments both inside and outside Division I in Colorado, what impact will the House vs. NCAA have across the Centennial State?

“From what you read, each institution determines how they want to handle it, so they won’t be uniform,” Neinas said.

“For example, does CU continue to want to fund skiing? There’s no money coming from skiing. It’s also expensive and there’s also a lot of history there. I think most everybody is of the opinion that the number of sports sponsored by institutions will be downgraded.”

•••
Thanks to the money train in the wake of the 1984 CFA ruling, we largely know how we got here. But where the heck are we going?

The NCAA and its members agreed in California court to pay out roughly $2.8 billion in damages as soon as late 2025. The top five — or “Power 5” — conferences, including the de-fanged Pac-12, are in line to cover 40% of the cost, with the remaining 27 Division I conferences splitting the other 60%.

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