Ohio has become the latest state to allow high school athletes to make money off their name, image or likeness (NIL).
The Ohio High School Athletic Association (OHSAA) has approved an emergency bylaw referendum allowing high school student-athletes to participate ...
By JOE REEDY AP Sports Writer Ohio has become the 45th state to allow high school athletes to enter into name, image and likeness agreements. Member schools of the Ohio High School Athletic As ...
The name, image and likeness (NIL) era in college sports continues to expand at the high school level. A high-profile lawsuit brought in the Court ...
A new bill proposed by an Ohio Republican lawmaker would revoke the brand new ability for high school athletes to be compensated for their Name, Image and Likeness.
Member schools approved an emergency referendum that came after a lawsuit from a top player from the Dayton area.
With 16,900 sportscasts (and counting) to his credit, 21 WFMJ Sports Director Dana Balash is the longest tenured sports anchor in the history of the Youngstown market. In a business where news and ...
The Ohio High School Athletic Association voted in favor of allowing high school student-athletes to profit from NIL on ...
High school athletes can start striking name, image and likeness deals, after a vote of the schools that make up the Ohio ...
It has always felt as if high school sports facilities — stadiums, gymnasiums or wherever it may be contested — should have a force field around it.
Ohio lawmakers are pushing to bring the Air Force’s next-generation KC-46 Pegasus refueling jets to Columbus, a move ...
Central Ohio athletes, coaches and athletic directors had a variety of reactions after OHSAA member schools approved the introduction of NIL.
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