Trump prepares sweeping order on college sports: Are payments to student athletes straining US universities?
United States President Donald Trump has said he is preparing a sweeping executive order aimed at addressing what he described as a growing crisis in American college sports. The proposed order, he said, will attempt to respond to rising payments to student athletes and legal disputes over compensation rules that universities say are creating financial pressure.Speaking during a White House roundtable with lawmakers, sports executives, college officials and coaches, Trump warned that the current system could push universities toward significant financial losses, according to IANS.“This is a very important meeting… because this is really the future of I think beyond college sports,” Trump said at the gathering. “This is the future of colleges because we’re looking at numbers that are coming in and the amount of money being spent and lost by otherwise very successful schools is astounding,” IANS reports.
A system under financial strain
Trump said universities are entering what he described as a financial arms race as institutions compete to attract top athletes in major sports such as football and basketball.“Educational institutions find themselves in a financial arms race for athletes in sports like football and basketball,” he said, according to IANS. “If Congress does not take action fast, it could destroy college sports and destroy the colleges that play these sports.”He cited financial losses reported by several universities to illustrate the scale of the problem.“It was announced at Penn State their athletic division lost $535 million this last year. Florida State… $440 million loss,” Trump said. “Those numbers are nothing compared to what’s going to happen.”The president said he plans to finalise an executive order within a week after consulting experts present at the roundtable.“I’ll have an executive order within one week and it’ll be very all encompassing,” Trump said, according to IANS. “We will get sued… and we’ll see how we do in the court system.”
Parallel push in Congress
The proposed executive order comes as lawmakers in Congress debate national rules for athlete compensation and college sports governance.House Speaker Mike Johnson said lawmakers are close to advancing legislation known as the Score Act, which seeks to create nationwide standards governing athlete payments, transfers and regulatory oversight.“We’re right on the verge of passage in the House, and we now think we have the votes to do that,” Johnson said during the discussion, according to IANS. “Congress does need to act quickly because it’s getting out of hand.”
Why college sports matter to universities
Supporters of reform argue that college athletics play a broader role in the US education system by creating pathways to higher education for many students.Secretary of State Marco Rubio said college sports help thousands of students access university education through athletic scholarships.“There are literally thousands and thousands of young Americans who are going to graduate this year with not just degrees but advanced degrees,” Rubio said at the meeting, according to IANS.
The legal shift behind athlete payments
The debate over athlete payments has intensified in recent years after courts in the US ruled that restrictions on athlete compensation violated antitrust laws.These rulings opened the door for athletes to earn money from endorsements and sponsorship agreements through Name, Image and Likeness (NIL) deals. While the new system has expanded earning opportunities for athletes, universities and regulators say the absence of uniform national rules has created uncertainty for institutions, athletic programmes and students.As the White House and Congress move towards possible regulatory changes, the coming months may determine how the balance between athlete compensation, university finances and the educational role of college sports is defined in the US.

