Steven A Moderator No. 1 Share Posted 3 hours ago Wow, what happens if 49 more states adopt such a rule? Ohio General Assembly member authors bill to prevent state schools from playing home football games at noon SPORTS.YAHOO.COM The bill includes an exemption that would allow Ohio State to continue to play Michigan at that time. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jon Joseph Moderator No. 2 Share Posted 2 hours ago It's High Noon between the O-HI-O legislature and a Fox. You took the money, you spent the money, too bad you didn't read the contract. The Tennessee Legislature has passed a law telling the NCAA that the House settlement terms cannot be enforced in the Volunteer State other than for its share of House damages. According to the legislature, the Vols and Vandy can exceed the $20.5 million year one cap on direct payment to athletes with impunity. And, any and every NIL deal is kosher and cannot be found to be out of line with 'market value.' The above two pieces of legislation evidence the need for college sports to find relief from the federal government. The House settlement does nothing to curtail 'creative' state legislative activity. If I were Greg Sankey, I'd tell the Tennessee legislature it's all good, but Tennessee and Vanderbilt are not included among the SEC defendants settling with the House plaintiffs. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Annie No. 3 Share Posted 2 hours ago I remember way back when all Duck games (and I think most, if not all, PAC games) started at 1:00 pm., which I thought was great. (I know not everyone would be happy about that start time, but I loved it.) Yes, that was before all games were on TV, so there's the hitch. But still, I'd be happy with noon, 1 pm, 2 pm, 3 pm games and getting home before it is dark. 1 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...