University Sports Commission exaggerates $44.4 million in zero deal

The University Sports Commission (CSC) released a correction Friday, saying it exaggerated the value of name, image, similarity (NIL) transactions, and over $40 million of transactions have been cleared in the data set released a day ago.
University Sports Committee accuses Deloitte of
CSC is responsible for approving contracts worth $600 or more between college athletes and third-party companies. Schools are allowed to spend $20.5 million to athletes a year.
Deloitte helped develop a platform called NIL GO, which was criticized by the Clerk Reporting Errors Committee. The total value of the liquidation transaction was $35.42 million, rather than the previously announced $79.8 million.
$79.8 million is the total amount of all transactions in the system, including the total amount still pending.
The University Athletics Committee has realized that its external consultant had an instrumental report error in the data provided by Deloitte, which was included in yesterday’s zero transaction traffic report. Now, we are taking steps to articulate the data publicly.
– University Sports Commission (@THECSCommission) September 5, 2025
Additionally, the CSC said 6,090 transactions have been approved instead of the 8,359 people previously reported, which is the total number of transactions in the system to date.
“We assume full responsibility for this report error,” Deloitte said in a statement. “We have taken other measures to avoid any future recurrence and be confident in the zero GO platform.”
From June 11 to August 31, the committee said it had registered 28,342 students and 3,160 delegates and delegates on its zero GO digital platform.
After CSC launches NIL GO
CSC launched the NIL GO portal on June 11 Housev. NCAA settlement.
It allows schools to pay zero dollars directly to athletes, while providing them with the opportunity to make money from external groups. nil Go is responsible for analyzing external transactions.
according to Associated Pressthe committee did not report errors in other statistics unveiled Thursday, including 332 transactions that have not yet been liquidated and 75 transactions that have been resubmitted.
The committee said the most common licensing issues were providing the required information, failing to meet valid business requirements and delays in contradictory transaction terms.
According to the press release, the CSC said most transactions were liquidated within a week, but admitted “frustration” in the time it took to process certain zero exchanges.
“The CSC is working hard to speed up the waiting time and regret the frustration caused by these initial delays in the process,” the committee said in a statement. “Like any new system of this scale, some early delays and the pain of growth are inevitable.”
The CSC also added that the deal was worth up to $1.8 million. It said its “trade flow report” will be updated regularly for school and college athletes.



