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NCPA Files Complaint with DOJ against NCAA

The National College Players Association (NCPA), calling for reform in college sports, has filed a complaint with the U.S. Justice Department (DOJ) against the NCAA.

The NCPA is accusing the NCAA and those involved with the governing body of violating antitrust laws by capping compensation to athletes.

A recent report from the Associated Press stated the NCPA is requesting the DOJ pursue both civil and criminal charges against those who share responsibility in maintaining athletic compensation restrictions.

Below is an excerpt from the AP story.

“NCAA sports is a predatory economic cartel that denies college athletes the freedom to use their gifts and talents to earn money without restrictions: a freedom afforded to other Americans,” National College Players Association Executive Director Ramogi Huma said Friday.

For more than a decade, Huma, a former UCLA football player, and the NCPA have been leading the charge for college football and basketball players to receive a share of the millions of dollars in revenue their sports generate. The NCPA was part of a failed attempt to unionize football players at Northwestern. Huma has testified in front of Congress numerous times.

A complaint does not ensure an inquiry by the department, but college sports and the NCAA remain under legal and political pressure to lift the ban on paying athletes.

“It’s another avenue to attack the NCAA,” Gabe Feldman, director of sports law at Tulane, said of the complaint to the DOJ.

Huma cited last year’s 9-0 Supreme Court ruling against the NCAA in the Alston case for paving the way for further legal action, including Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s scathing concurring opinion in which he wrote that “there are serious questions whether the NCAA’s remaining compensation rules can pass muster.”

The NCAA lifted its ban on athletes earning money for endorsement and sponsorship deals last year, which allows third parties to compensate them.

To read the full story from the Associated Press, click here.