LeBron James says California's college athletes compensation law 'personal' for him
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LeBron James said Monday that California’s decision to sign a bill into law that would give student-athletes in the state the chance to make money on their name was “personal” for him.
James told reporters at the Los Angeles Lakers’ training facility that neither he nor his mother would have been able to benefit at all if he decided he was going to college instead of jumping from high school to the NBA.
CALIFORNIA GOVERNOR SIGNS BILL ALLOWING COLLEGE ATHLETES TO CAPITALIZE ON IMAGE, NAME AND LIKENESS
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“For sure I would have been one of those kids if I would have went off to Ohio State or if I went off to any one of these big-time colleges where pretty much that ‘23’ jersey would have got sold all over the place without my name on the back, but everybody would’ve known the likeness,” James said. “My body would’ve been on the NCAA basketball game, 2004. The Schottenstein Center would have been sold out every single night if I was there.”
He added: “Coming from the ... just from me and my mom we didn't have anything. We wouldn't have been able to benefit at all from it. And the university would have been able to capitalize on everything that I would've been there for that year or two or whatever. I understand what those kids are going through. I feel for those kids who've been going through it for so long, so that's why it was personal to me.”
California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed the bill into law, which defies NCAA bylaws and likely sets up a legal challenge that could reshape amateur sports in the U.S. The law also bans schools from kicking athletes off the team if they get paid.
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The law, which is set to take effect on Jan. 1, 2023, does not apply to community college and bans athletes from accepting endorsement deals that conflict with their school's existing contracts.
The NCAA, Pac-12 and SEC have all spoken out against the law.
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Membership in the NCAA, the top governing body for college sports, is voluntary. Athletes can get valuable scholarships, but the NCAA has long banned paying athletes to preserve the academic missions of colleges and universities.
The debate over paying college athletes has raged in recent years as some schools rake in millions from their athletic programs -- mostly from football and basketball. Many college basketball athletes have left school early to sign lucrative NBA contracts.
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The league now requires players to be at least one year removed from high school before entering the draft.
The NCAA has a history of coming down hard on players for receiving compensation or gifts of any kind.