Rutgers Athletics and Law School Launch Cutting-Edge NIL Externship Program

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Rutgers Athletics and Rutgers Law School are teaming up for a new externship program. This one’s all about giving law students real-world experience with the legal side of college sports.

It’s not just theory—they’ll get into the nitty-gritty of things like Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL), NCAA compliance, contracts, and how athletic departments actually run. The program kicks off in Fall 2026. Honestly, it feels like a big step for both Rutgers Athletics and the university as a whole.

Overview of the Externship Program

Here’s the deal: Rutgers Law students can jump in and get hands-on experience with the legal stuff behind college athletics. If you’re picked, you’ll work right alongside athletics department leaders on legal, compliance, and policy issues.

It’s immersive, and the idea is to help students build practical skills while pitching in for Rutgers Athletics at the same time.

Key Responsibilities and Learning Opportunities

Externs will be supervised by Chris Chung, Senior Associate Athletic Director, Revenue and Contract Management. The projects? There’s a bunch, including:

  • Conducting legal research: Digging into NCAA rules, conference policies, and state NIL laws.
  • Analyzing contracts and sponsorship agreements: Looking over and interpreting different legal docs.
  • Assisting with athletics compliance efforts: Helping make sure Rutgers Athletics follows all the right rules and policies.
  • Policy development: Helping shape and update institutional policies.

Besides all that, students will lend a hand with employment and administrative legal work. That means drafting or reviewing employment documents, helping with scholarship and aid agreements, and pitching in on broader policy and risk management tasks.

Benefits for Law Students

There’s a lot in it for law students, especially those with a background in college or pro sports. Working directly with the ever-changing legal landscape of college athletics is a rare opportunity.

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It’s the kind of hands-on experience that can really set you up for a future in sports law or something similar.

Skill Development

What do students actually learn? Here’s a quick rundown:

  • Research: Digging deep into tough legal and regulatory questions.
  • Contract review: Figuring out what’s in all those agreements and contracts.
  • Regulatory analysis: Making sense of NCAA and state NIL rules.
  • Policy drafting: Getting involved in shaping how things are actually done at the institution.

Getting a feel for how legal work fits into athletics administration and university operations is pretty valuable. If you’re thinking about a career in sports law, this is the kind of experience you want on your resume.

Impact on Rutgers Athletics and the University

This collaboration is a meaningful move for Rutgers, connecting the classroom with the real world. Law students get a chance to learn, and student-athletes benefit from extra legal support.

Enhanced Resources for Student-Athletes

With law students jumping in, Rutgers Athletics gets more hands on deck for legal and compliance work. That means more resources and support for student-athletes.

The program fits right in with Rutgers Law School’s bigger goals, too—making legal education more accessible, pushing for academic excellence, and giving students real tools to succeed.

Future Prospects and Expansion

The externship starts in Fall 2026. Interested students should reach out to the field placement or externship supervisors at the Newark and Camden campuses.

Who knows? Down the line, there could be even more ways for Rutgers Athletics and the law school to collaborate and expand this program.

Potential for Growth

The legal landscape of intercollegiate athletics keeps shifting, and that means the externship program could really expand in new directions. Rutgers Athletics and Rutgers Law School are in a good spot to adapt and keep offering solid support to both law students and student-athletes.

This partnership isn’t just good for the folks directly involved. It might even inspire other schools to rethink how they help their own students and athletes.

By encouraging teamwork between academic and athletic departments, universities can open doors for students to get real-world experience. That’s the kind of thing that actually helps you build the skills you’ll need down the line.

Curious about the externship or just want to keep up with what’s new? Check out the official announcement on the Rutgers Athletics website.

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Joe Hughes
Joe Hughes is the founder of CollegeNetWorth.com, a comprehensive resource on college athletes' earnings potential in the NIL era. Combining his passion for sports with expertise in collegiate athletics, Joe provides valuable insights for athletes, fans, and institutions navigating this new landscape.

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