USC linebacker part of lawsuit intended to topple NIL system

Are USC and UCLA athletes getting all the NIL compensation to which they’re entitled?That’s the issue at the heart of a lawsuit filed this week — with USC freshman linebacker Talanoa Ili one of two lead plaintiffs — that challenges the House settlement’s restrictions on college athlete compensation.The $2.8 billion House settlement with the NCAA in June 2025 called for a two-tiered payment system to athletes, through revenue sharing with universities and NIL compensation.Any NIL deals above $2,500 needed to go through a new College Sports Commission clearinghouse known as NIL Go to ensure they were legitimate and paying market rate.Ili’s lawsuit claims that such an arrangement violates federal antitrust and state laws.As part of the proposed class-action lawsuit filed in the Northern District of California Court, Ili and Stanford quarterback Charlie Mirer contend that the House settlement curtailed the ability of scores of football and men’s basketball players to maximize earnings opportunities in 17 states — including California — that prohibit restrictions on NIL opportunities.The lawsuit names NCAA President Charlie Baker, the College Sports Commission and each of the Power Four conference commissioners as defendants, claiming they conspired to limit athlete earnings by capping revenue-sharing payments and prohibiting NIL benefits from athletic boosters and school-associated collectives.Among other things, the lawsuit seeks a jury trial and treble damages — three times the amount of any proven damages — as well as a permanent injunction against earnings restrictions in states that prohibit them.The complaint alleges that Ili’s earnings were restricted after he received “a substantial multi-year offer” from USC’s House of Victory collective in 2024 that led him to commit to the team.
That offer was rescinded after the House settlement, presumably over vetting concerns related to NIL Go that would have barred any deals that amounted t...