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PSU QB Sean Clifford, Big Ten Commissioner Discuss Improving Player Benefits

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Penn State quarterback Sean Clifford and other Big Ten football players spoke with Big Ten Commissioner Kevin Warren this week about player benefits and representation, according to ESPN’s Dan Murphy.

“It’s been a collective group coming together,” Clifford told Murphy. “Everyone wants players to have more of a voice.”

Clifford discussed the group’s goals
with More Perfect Union, a media organization focused on American
labor movements:

More Perfect Union @MorePerfectUS

EXCLUSIVE: College football players are unionizing, and the first chapter will be at Penn State.<br><br>The College Football Players Association is already in negotiations with the Big Ten.<br><br>Led by quarterback Sean Clifford, players want revenue sharing and better medical care. <a href=”https://t.co/pwg3JGRZbc”>pic.twitter.com/pwg3JGRZbc</a>

Warren also met with Jason Stahl, the founder and executive director of the College Football Players Association. Stahl raised the topics of player representation, medical insurance and media rights revenue, per Murphy.

Warren said in a statement to ESPN:

“The Big Ten Conference consistently communicates and collaborates with our student-athletes. We are in the process of formalizing a student-athlete advisory committee to seek input from our student-athletes about the changing landscape of college athletics. We continue to work with our member institutions to ensure our student-athletes have an outstanding and well-rounded experience, while promoting and safeguarding the mission of higher education, and prioritizing excellence and integrity in both academics and athletics.”

The CFBPA formed last July under
the guidance of Stahl, a former University of Minnesota professor. Any active college football player is eligible to join the association for $24 in
annual dues.

“This is the next step,”
Stahl told
Murphy last year. “If players don’t get organized
now, it’s never going to happen. There’s so much we can do right
now.”

A separate organization formed in 2001, the National College Players Association, is an advocacy group for all student-athletes.

Northwestern football players formed the College Athletes Players Association in 2014 in an attempt to unionize but were
denied in 2015 by the National Labor Relations Board.

In September, NLRB General Counsel
Jennifer Abruzzo announced the board was set to reverse its prior
stance and would make college athletes eligible for unionization
efforts, allowing them to “act collectively to improve their terms
and conditions of employment.”

Abruzzo stated student-athletes should
be viewed as “statutory employees” under common law.

A players union could represent the latest
transformational shift for NCAA sports, which generated $18.9 billion
in revenue for member schools in 2019, per
Felix Richter of Statista.

In June 2021, the U.S. Supreme Court
ruled the NCAA could no longer use the shield of amateurism to
prevent athletes from profiting off their name, image and likeness
(NIL) rights while they competed in college sports.

Opendorse, a firm that tracks
endorsements, found college athletes earned an estimated $917 million
in compensation during the first year of the NIL era, and that number
is expected to reach $1.14 billion during the 2022-23 academic year,
per Yahoo Sports’ Josh Schafer.

Stahl told Murphy when the CFBPA was formed that
revenue sharing between the NCAA, schools and players was likely years away, even in a unionized environment, and the initial
focus would be on reinforcing the health, safety and welfare of
players via increased medical benefits and practice restrictions.

Clifford, a 24-year-old Illinois
native, is entering his sixth year at Penn State and will be one of
the Big Ten’s most high-profile players during the 2022 season.

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