The Protect College Sports Act is a 111-page bipartisan bill that touches nearly every broken thing in college athletics right now, from the transfer portal to NIL pay-for-play to a provision that would allow schools to pool their media rights and sell them together. Sen. Eric Schmitt (R., Mo.) is a cosponsor and one of the architects of the bill, and he joins Front Office Sports to explain why he believes these issues are all connected and why Congress is the only entity that can actually fix them.

The Senate Commerce Committee just held a hearing on the bill, and before it even happened, the SEC and the Big Ten came out saying they could not support it as written. Athlete advocacy groups and labor organizations have raised a separate set of concerns, arguing transfer-portal eligibility rules and revenue-sharing caps should be negotiated through a CBA rather than decided by Congress. Sen. Schmitt addresses both groups directly.

The next step is a markup and committee vote that could happen as early as next week, with June being the most critical window before the August recess and fall campaign season closes off the timeline. If the SEC and Big Ten never fully get on board, the question of whether this bill can still pass is one Sen. Schmitt answers without hedging.