NEWNow you can listen to Pak Gazette articles!
A law firm involved in the historic antimonopoly demand agreement of $ 2.8 billion that involves the NCAA and the five largest conferences in the nation destroyed the former University football coach Nick Saban and the possibility of an executive order of the Trump administration to deal with the name, image and image.
Hagens Berman’s law firm lawyers issued a statement on Monday by calling Saban’s report in the possible executive order of “not being and useless.” Steve Berman, managing and co -founder partner of the firm, described the conversations of Saban and Trump “unnecessary”.
CLICK HERE for more sports coverage at Foxnews.com

Nick Saban speaks before President Donald Trump arrives to give a graduation speech at the University of Alabama, on May 1, 2025, in Tuscaloosa. (Photo AP/Mike Stewart)
“While I was a coach, Saban initially opposed the payments null to athletes, pressing to add restrictions and red ribbon through national legislation to add ‘some type of control’,” Berman said in a statement. “During his time, examining the salary structure of athletes, he won dozens of millions of dollars and was previously the best paid coach in university football.
“The conversations of coach Saban and Trump’s eleventh hour about executive orders and other interference are only a more unnecessary self -care.
The firm added that there were several ways in which university athletes have benefited from null without any executive orders of the White House in any administration. The firm said it allowed athletes to obtain their own income, among other positive aspects.
Pak Gazette Digital communicated with Saban’s representative to comment.
Trump was considering an executive order to regulate the name, image and image in university sports after meeting with the legendary Alabama Crimson Tide coach, the Wall Street Journal reported last week. According to reports, Saban does not want to stop the null payments, but seeks to “reform them.”

President Donald Trump shakes the former Alabama football coach, Nick Saban, before pronouncing a special graduation speech to the graduates of the University of Alabama, on May 1, 2025, in Tuscaloosa. (Gary Cosby Jr.-Tuscaloosa News)
According to the reports, Bill Belichick explores the public relations movement after an uncomfortable television interview
In an appearance in Pak Gazette Channel last year, Saban urged Congress to intervene and make him void “the same in all areas.”
“And I think that should still exist for all players, but not just a game payment system as we have done now, where who collects the greatest amount of money in their collective can pay more for the players, which is not a leveling playing field. I think that in any competitive place, you want to have some guidelines that provide everyone to have the opportunity to succeed,” he said.
Saban said that the NCAA “can handle” null and any change that is necessary, but the Congress “must” add “national legislation.”
“Now, we only have state legislation, and each state is different, which would protect the NCAA from the litigation once we establish guidelines for the future of university athletics. But litigation is what led us to this point at this time,” Saban said. “We have to have some protection against litigation. I don’t know if they are antitrust laws or whatever.
“I am not well versed in all that to make a recommendation. But I know that we need some kind of federal standard and guidelines that allow people to enforce their own rules.”
Senator Tommy Tuberville, R-ala., Said “if someone” can help regulate null, “is President Trump.”
Saban presented Trump on Thursday at an event for Alabama graduate students, where Trump spoke a speech.

(Mitchell Layton/Getty images)
In the speech, Trump was excited about Alabama’s sports programs, saying that school is a “where legends” are made.