basketball

Wisconsin Governor signs new NIL bill

Yahoo Sports

Gov. Tony Evers signed a NIL bill which will benefit Wisconsin athletics in the NIL era by providing nearly $15 million in annual support.

Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers signed a new name, image and likeness bill into law on Wednesday, giving UW-Madison another tool to navigate the rapidly changing world of college athletics. The legislation is designed to help Wisconsin stay competitive as schools across the country adjust to direct athlete compensation, revenue sharing and an NIL marketplace that has reshaped roster building in football and men’s basketball. At the center of the bill is new state funding for athletic facility debt service.

Under the law, UW-Madison will receive $14. 6 million annually, while UW-Milwaukee and UW-Green Bay will each receive $200,000. Governor Tony Evers used a partial veto to clarify that the money is aimed at existing debt service, not broader maintenance language.

The practical effect is clear: by shifting some facility costs, Wisconsin can free up athletics dollars at a time when major programs are under mounting pressure to compensate athletes more directly. Legislative update for the #Badgers : Gov. Tony Evers has signed the NIL bill with minor tweaks via partial veto, saying that "greater flexibility is necessary" for the state funding (which includes $14.

6 million to UW-Madison). More to come via @journalsentinel — John Steppe (@JSteppe1) April 8, 2026 The bill also formalizes several NIL-related rules for the University of Wisconsin schools. It exempts NIL contracts and related revenue-sharing details from the state’s open records law, a move supporters argued was necessary to protect athlete privacy and avoid giving competitors insight into Wisconsin’s financial approach.