Sunday, November 16, 2025

🏈 College Athletics: The FSA System Without Guardrails How NIL, Conference Realignment, and Private Equity Created the Purest Form of Commercialized Sport A Systems Analysis of Labor Exploitation and the Death of Amateurism

College Athletics: The FSA System Without Guardrails

🏈 College Athletics: The FSA System Without Guardrails

How NIL, Conference Realignment, and Private Equity Created the Purest Form of Commercialized Sport

A Systems Analysis of Labor Exploitation and the Death of Amateurism

Abstract: This paper applies the Financial Systems Analysis (FSA) framework to American college athletics, demonstrating that the amateur model has collapsed into the most extreme form of commercialized sport in existence. Following the 2021 Supreme Court decision enabling Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) compensation, college sports has rapidly evolved into a system where athletes generate billions in revenue while receiving minimal compensation, schools function as competing entertainment corporations, and private capital flows unchecked through unregulated "booster collectives." We demonstrate that college athletics operates as the FSA SYSTEM without guardrails—a preview of what professional sports would become if all institutional constraints were removed. The paper analyzes the three-layer FSA mechanism, quantifies the labor exploitation gap ($3.2B+ annually), documents the conference realignment crisis, and projects three collapse scenarios for 2025-2035.

🚨 BREAKING POINT: As of 2024-2025, college athletics faces simultaneous crises in athlete compensation, conference stability, Title IX compliance, and antitrust litigation—all while generating record revenue ($18.9B in 2023). The system is fundamentally unsustainable.

I. The Illusion Shatters: From Amateur Myth to Hyper-Commercialization

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For over a century, American college athletics maintained a profitable fiction: that athletes were "student-athletes" engaged in educational activity, not employees generating commercial revenue. This ideological construct—amateurism—allowed universities to capture billions in media rights, ticket sales, and sponsorships while paying athletes nothing beyond scholarships.

The Breaking Point: NCAA v. Alston (2021)

The Supreme Court's Verdict: In a unanimous 9-0 decision, Justice Brett Kavanaugh's concurrence destroyed the amateur pretense:

"The NCAA's business model would be flatly illegal in almost any other industry in America... The NCAA is not above the law."

This decision didn't just allow NIL compensation—it demolished the legal foundation for restricting athlete pay.

The Revenue Reality

$18.9B

Total NCAA Revenue (2023)

Up from $11.6B in 2015

$7.8B

Big Ten Media Deal

2024-2030, largest in college sports

$3B

SEC Media Rights

Annual, ESPN deal through 2034

$50K

Scholarship Value

Athlete "compensation"

What Changed After Alston

July 2021: NIL Era Begins

States pass laws; NCAA suspends restrictions; chaos ensues

2021-2022: Booster Collectives

Wealthy donors create tax-exempt NIL collectives as pay-for-play schemes

2022: Transfer Portal Explosion

Free agency without contracts; 2,000+ football players enter portal annually

2023-2024: Realignment Crisis

USC/UCLA to Big Ten; Texas/Oklahoma to SEC; Pac-12 collapses

2024: House Settlement

$2.78B settlement; revenue-sharing begins 2025

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II. College vs. Pro Sports: The Guardrail Gap

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Professional sports operate under FSA SYSTEM with constraints. College has the same mechanisms but zero regulatory guardrails.

Labor Protections

Professional: Unions, collective bargaining, health benefits, pensions, guaranteed contracts

College: No unions, no bargaining, no long-term healthcare, career-ending injury = financial ruin

Revenue Sharing

Professional: Athletes receive 48-51% of league revenue through CBA

College: Athletes receive ~7% (scholarships) while generating billions

Governance

Professional: Commissioner authority, league-wide rules, salary caps, draft system

College: NCAA powerless, schools act independently, no spending limits, recruiting = bidding wars

Antitrust

Professional: Limited exemptions; negotiate with unions to avoid challenges

College: 100+ years of wage-fixing collusion; now facing $21B+ in damages

The Core Difference: Pro sports evolved toward balance through unionization. College sports is pure capital extraction—professional-scale revenue with zero labor protections. It's FSA SYSTEM's final form.

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III. The Three-Layer FSA Model in College Sports

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Layer 1: Capital Influx (The Architects)

Key Actors:

  • Booster Collectives: Dark money pools funding NIL; no disclosure, tax-exempt, unregulated
  • Private Equity: CVC, RedBird circling; revenue-sharing deals with athletic departments
  • Media Conglomerates: Fox, ESPN, CBS controlling realignment through rights
  • Conference Networks: Big Ten Network, SEC Network as media cartels

Mechanism: Capital flows to schools/conferences, not athletes. Boosters use tax deductions to fund recruiting slush funds.

Layer 2: Liquidity & Data Nexus (The Fuel)

Revenue Streams:

  • Media Rights: $10B+ annually; basis of entire model
  • NIL Marketplace: $1.67B (2023-2024); unregulated, no reporting
  • Ticket Sales: $4B+ annually; schools keep 100%
  • Sports Betting: Faster integration than pro leagues; high integrity risk

Mechanism: Athletes create content (games), schools sell content (media rights), athletes receive tiny fraction.

Layer 3: Risk Exposure (The Fault Lines)

Systemic Vulnerabilities:

  • Labor Exploitation: $3.2B+ annual value transfer from athletes
  • No Healthcare: Career-ending injuries = medical debt, no coverage
  • Academic Fraud: Fake classes to maintain eligibility
  • Mental Health Crisis: Transfer portal chaos, no support
  • Title IX Collapse: Olympic sports being cut
  • Antitrust Exposure: $21B+ in pending litigation
  • Competitive Imbalance: Rich schools buying talent

Mechanism: All risk borne by athletes; institutions externalize costs while capturing revenue.

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IV. Case Study: The Pac-12 Collapse

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The Death of a 108-Year-Old Conference
July 2022

USC/UCLA announce departure to Big Ten for $70M+/year (vs. Pac-12's $30M)

July 2023

Colorado leaves for Big 12; Pac-12 media negotiations collapse

August 2023

Oregon/Washington leave for Big Ten (reduced share initially)

September 2023

Arizona, Arizona State, Colorado, Utah leave for Big 12

Result

Conference reduced to Washington State and Oregon State; $500M debt; litigation

The Lesson: Conferences are media rights cartels where schools are content providers and athletes are the product. Geography, tradition, student welfare—all irrelevant. Only media market value matters.
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V. The Labor Exploitation Mechanism

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Quantifying the Value Gap

Total College Sports Revenue (2023): $18.9B

Athlete "Compensation" (scholarships): ~$1.3B (7%)

If athletes received pro sports share (50%): $9.45B

Annual Exploitation Gap: $8.15B

Just for revenue-generating sports (football/basketball): ~$3.2B stolen labor value annually

The Healthcare Catastrophe

What Happens After Career-Ending Injury

Professional Sports:

  • Guaranteed contracts continue payment
  • Lifetime health insurance
  • Pension benefits
  • Disability insurance

College Sports:

  • Scholarship revoked if can't play
  • Health coverage ends at graduation/eligibility
  • No pension
  • No disability protection
  • Medical debt for ongoing treatment
Real Example: Former college football player suffers spinal injury. School covers immediate surgery. Player graduates. Years later needs additional surgery for chronic pain: $150K out-of-pocket. School that profited from his labor: $0 liability.

The Academic Fraud Systemic Risk

Notable Scandals:

  • UNC (2011-2014): 18 years of fake classes; 3,100+ students enrolled; primarily athletes
  • Memphis (2008): Derrick Rose's SAT fraud; Final Four vacated
  • Syracuse (2015): Academic fraud, failed drug tests covered up
  • Missouri (2019): Tutor completed coursework for athletes

The Structural Incentive: Schools profit from athlete performance, not education. Athletes need eligibility to play, not degrees. Result: systematic academic fraud to maintain eligibility for revenue-generating players.

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VI. The Booster Collective System: Unregulated SWFs

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Case Study: Texas Longhorns NIL Infrastructure

The Three-Entity Structure:

  1. Texas One Fund: Primary collective, $10M+/year
  2. Clark Field Collective: Sport-specific funding
  3. Horns with Heart: Charity providing legal cover

How It Works:

  • Boosters donate (tax-deductible)
  • Collective "hires" athletes for "marketing"
  • Athletes post on social media, make appearances
  • Reality: pay-for-play with tax benefits

The Scale:

  • Top quarterbacks: $1-3M annually
  • Five-star recruits: $500K-1M signing bonuses
  • All outside NCAA oversight
  • Zero transparency requirements

The SWF Comparison: Booster collectives function exactly like sovereign wealth funds in pro sports:

  • Massive capital pools with political agendas
  • No disclosure requirements
  • Long-term strategic objectives (conference dominance)
  • Tax advantages (donations are deductible)

Difference: SWFs in pro sports face some league scrutiny. Booster collectives face ZERO oversight.

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VII. The Three Collapse Scenarios (2025-2035)

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Scenario 1: The Antitrust Breakup (Probability: 45%)

Federal Courts Force Structural Reform

The Trigger:

  • House v. NCAA settlement ($2.78B) only covers past damages
  • New lawsuits challenge forward-looking restrictions
  • Courts rule NCAA/conferences operate as illegal cartel

The Outcome:

  • Power 5 conferences forced to split from NCAA
  • Create new "College Football League" with proper labor relations
  • Athletes classified as employees, unionize
  • Revenue sharing codified at 40-50%
  • Remaining schools return to actual amateur model

Timeline: 2027-2030

Scenario 2: The Title IX Reckoning (Probability: 35%)

Revenue Sports Consume Everything

The Crisis:

  • Schools paying football/basketball players $20M+/year
  • Title IX requires equal treatment of men's/women's sports
  • Schools can't afford to pay all athletes equally
  • Response: Cut all non-revenue Olympic sports

The Outcome:

  • Wrestling, swimming, track, soccer, volleyball eliminated at major programs
  • Only football, basketball, maybe baseball remain
  • Colleges become minor league systems for NFL/NBA
  • Olympic sports move to club/private model

Timeline: 2026-2028

Scenario 3: The Private Equity Takeover (Probability: 20%)

Conferences Sell Equity to PE Firms

The Deal:

  • CVC/RedBird offer $5-10B for 15-20% conference equity
  • Schools take cash upfront, sell future revenue
  • PE firms control scheduling, media negotiations
  • Conferences become corporate entities independent of universities

The Outcome:

  • Academic mission completely separated from athletics
  • Teams become franchises owned by universities in name only
  • PE optimizes for profit: fewer teams, bigger markets, no regional consideration
  • College sports indistinguishable from pro leagues except athletes still exploited

Timeline: 2028-2032

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VIII. Policy Recommendations: Protecting Athletes in the Transition

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Immediate Federal Action Required

1. Employee Classification & Collective Bargaining Rights

  • Action: NLRB reclassifies revenue-sport athletes as employees
  • Rationale: Athletes generate billions in revenue for institutions; meet all legal tests for employment
  • Implementation: Athletes allowed to unionize, negotiate collective bargaining agreements
  • Timeline: Immediate (authority already exists)

2. Guaranteed Lifetime Health Insurance

  • Requirement: Schools must provide lifetime health insurance for any athlete who plays varsity sport
  • Coverage: All injuries/conditions related to athletic participation
  • Funding: 2% of media rights revenue deposited into athlete health fund
  • Rationale: Schools profit from athlete labor; must internalize injury costs

3. Revenue Sharing Mandate (50% to Athletes)

  • Requirement: 50% of all media rights, ticket sales, sponsorship revenue distributed to athletes
  • Distribution: Proportional to sport revenue generation + base amount for all varsity athletes
  • Enforcement: Schools failing to comply lose tax-exempt status
  • Rationale: Match professional sports labor share

4. NIL Disclosure & Regulation

  • Requirement: All NIL deals over $10K must be publicly reported
  • Regulation: Booster collectives treated as taxable entities, not charities
  • Enforcement: IRS audits of collective tax status
  • Rationale: Eliminate dark money, prevent pay-for-play abuses

5. Academic Support & Degree Completion Fund

  • Funding: $500M/year federal fund for athlete education
  • Coverage: Tuition for degree completion after eligibility exhausted
  • Support: Tutoring, counseling, career services
  • Rationale: Many athletes leave without degrees; schools benefit from labor but fail educational mission

6. Antitrust Enforcement & Conference Regulation

  • Action: DOJ investigation of conference realignment as restraint of trade
  • Focus: Media cartel behavior, competitive balance destruction
  • Remedy: Break up conference monopolies or impose revenue sharing across all conferences
  • Rationale: Current system creates winner-take-all oligopoly
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IX. Conclusion: The Reckoning

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The Core Reality: College athletics has evolved into a multi-billion dollar commercial enterprise that generates professional-scale revenue while maintaining the legal fiction that athletes are "amateurs" engaged in educational activity. This model is:

  • Legally indefensible: Courts have ruled it violates antitrust law
  • Morally bankrupt: Exploits predominantly Black athletes for profit while denying them fair compensation
  • Financially unsustainable: $21B+ in antitrust liability threatens institutional solvency
  • Academically fraudulent: Systematic manipulation of academic standards to maintain athlete eligibility
  • Structurally unstable: Conference realignment destroying century-old institutions for short-term media money

Why This Matters Beyond Sports

College athletics is a case study in what happens when institutions prioritize profit extraction over their stated mission. Universities claim to educate students while operating multi-billion dollar entertainment businesses that exploit their labor force. This is:

  • A labor rights issue: Workers generating billions receive poverty-level compensation
  • A civil rights issue: System disproportionately exploits Black athletes (55% of Division I football/basketball players, 2% of athletic directors)
  • A higher education crisis: Academic institutions abandoning educational mission for commercial profit
  • An antitrust issue: Cartel of institutions colluding to fix wages at zero for decades

The FSA SYSTEM Insight Applied

College sports demonstrates what the FSA SYSTEM becomes without constraints:

  • Capital flows unregulated: Booster collectives as dark money SWFs
  • Labor has zero power: No unions, no contracts, no protection
  • Governance is captured: Schools prioritize revenue over mission
  • Integrity is secondary: Academic fraud systematic, not exceptional
  • Stability is impossible: Short-term profit maximization destroys long-term institutions

The Three Possible Futures

45%

Antitrust Breakup

Courts force structural separation; Power 5 becomes professional league with unionized athletes

35%

Title IX Collapse

Revenue sports consume all resources; Olympic sports eliminated; colleges become minor leagues

20%

PE Takeover

Private equity buys conference equity; athletic departments fully corporatized; separation from academic mission complete

The Window for Reform

2025-2027 is the decision window. House settlement implementation, conference realignment stabilization, and pending antitrust cases will determine whether reform is orderly or chaotic. Without federal intervention, the system collapses under its own contradictions by 2030.

What Athletes Deserve

At minimum, athletes who generate billions for institutions deserve:

  1. Fair compensation: 50% revenue share matching professional sports
  2. Healthcare protection: Lifetime coverage for sports-related injuries
  3. Collective bargaining: Right to unionize and negotiate working conditions
  4. Degree completion support: Resources to finish education after eligibility
  5. Transparency: Public disclosure of all NIL deals and institutional revenue
  6. Due process: Protection from arbitrary punishment or scholarship revocation

The Political Economy Challenge

Why Reform is Unlikely Without Crisis:

  • University leadership: Presidents/trustees profit from current model; no incentive to change
  • Conference commissioners: Securing generational wealth from media deals; ignore athlete welfare
  • Boosters: Enjoy power and access from funding collectives; resist transparency
  • Media companies: Profit from content; want stability, not athlete rights
  • NCAA: Bureaucracy protecting its existence, not athletes

Result: Every powerful actor benefits from exploitation. Athletes have no institutional representation. Only external force (courts, federal government, athlete organizing) can break the equilibrium.

The Comparison to Company Towns

Historical Parallel: College athletics resembles early 20th century company towns:

  • Workers (athletes) generate value for employer (university)
  • Employer provides housing/food (scholarship) in lieu of cash wages
  • Workers cannot organize or bargain collectively
  • Employer controls all aspects of worker life
  • Workers have no recourse when injured or mistreated
  • System justified by ideological construct ("amateur student-athlete" vs. "grateful for opportunity")

Company towns were eventually outlawed as exploitative. College athletics operates the same model with judicial approval because athletes are classified as students, not workers.

The Racial Justice Dimension

Critical Context: In revenue-generating sports (football, men's basketball), 55-60% of Division I athletes are Black. These athletes generate billions for predominantly white institutions (87% of university presidents are white, 89% of athletic directors, 92% of conference commissioners). The wealth transfer is from Black athletes to white administrators, coaches, and boosters. This is not incidental—it's structural.

What Happens Next

The 2025-2030 period will determine whether college athletics:

  • Professionalizes: Becomes honest about being commercial entertainment, pays athletes fairly, provides protections
  • Bifurcates: Power 5 splits off as professional league, rest return to actual amateur model
  • Collapses: Antitrust judgments bankrupt institutions, system implodes in chaos

The current model—professional revenue with amateur labor—is legally, morally, and financially indefensible. It will not survive the decade.

For Policymakers

Federal action is required because:

  • State-by-state NIL laws create regulatory chaos
  • Institutions will not self-regulate; they benefit from exploitation
  • Antitrust enforcement alone insufficient; need comprehensive labor law reform
  • Athletes lack political power; require external protection

The NLRB and DOJ have authority to act now. Congress should follow with legislation codifying athlete rights.

For Athletes

The path to protection is through collective action:

  • Unionization (Northwestern case precedent exists)
  • Collective refusal to play without contracts/benefits
  • Legal challenges to NCAA/conference restrictions
  • Public advocacy for legislative change

Individual NIL deals do not solve systemic exploitation. Only organized labor power can force structural reform.

For Institutions

Universities claiming educational mission while operating exploitative commercial enterprises face existential credibility crisis. The choice:

  1. Lead reform: Voluntarily implement athlete protections, revenue sharing, healthcare
  2. Resist and collapse: Fight change until courts impose it, destroying institutional reputation and finances

History suggests institutions will choose option 2, requiring external coercion.

The Final Word

College athletics is the FSA SYSTEM without guardrails—a system where capital flows freely, labor has no power, governance is captured, and stability is impossible. It demonstrates what happens when commercial imperatives override institutional mission and regulatory constraints are eliminated.

The amateur model is dead. The only question is whether its replacement treats athletes as employees deserving protection or continues exploiting them as disposable content generators.

The 2021 Alston decision opened the door to reform. The 2024 House settlement provides a roadmap. The 2025-2027 implementation period is the window for action.

After that, the system either transforms or collapses. There is no third option.

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X. Appendix: Key Data Points & Sources

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Revenue Figures

  • Total NCAA revenue (2023): $18.9B [NCAA Financial Report, 2024]
  • Big Ten media deal: $7.8B over 7 years [CBS Sports, 2023]
  • SEC media deal: ~$3B annually [ESPN, 2023]
  • NIL marketplace: $1.67B [Opendorse, 2024]

Athlete Demographics

  • Black athletes in D-I football: 55% [NCAA Demographics Database, 2024]
  • Black athletes in D-I men's basketball: 56% [NCAA Demographics Database, 2024]
  • White university presidents: 87% [American Council on Education, 2023]
  • White athletic directors: 89% [TIDES Report, 2024]

Legal Developments

  • NCAA v. Alston: 141 S. Ct. 2141 (2021)
  • House v. NCAA settlement: $2.78B [Sports Business Journal, 2024]
  • Estimated total antitrust exposure: $21B+ [Multiple pending cases]

Conference Realignment Timeline

  • 2022: USC/UCLA to Big Ten
  • 2023: Texas/Oklahoma to SEC (announced 2021)
  • 2024: Oregon/Washington to Big Ten; Pac-12 collapse

Methodology Note

Revenue sharing calculations assume 50% athlete share (matching NFL/NBA CBAs) applied to revenue-generating sports only (football, men's basketball). Scholarship values estimated at $50K average (tuition + room/board). Exploitation gap represents difference between current compensation and hypothetical fair-market value.

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Citation & Acknowledgments

Cite this paper as:

Author. (2025). College Athletics: The FSA System Without Guardrails - How NIL, Conference Realignment, and Private Equity Created the Purest Form of Commercialized Sport. [White Paper].

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Related Work: This paper builds on "The FSA SYSTEM: The Financialization and Geopolitical Weaponization of Global Sports" (2025), which introduced the three-layer Financial Systems Analysis framework for understanding modern sports as financial infrastructure.

Acknowledgment: This analysis is informed by decades of athlete advocacy, legal scholarship on labor rights, and investigative journalism exposing NCAA exploitation. The athletes who have fought for reform—from Northwestern's unionization attempt to Ed O'Bannon's lawsuit—deserve recognition for challenging a system designed to silence them.

This paper advocates for structural reform to protect athlete rights and wellbeing. The author believes the current system is legally indefensible, morally bankrupt, and unsustainable. These are analytical conclusions, not neutral observations.© Randy T Gipe

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