Following the Supreme Court’s landmark decision to overturn the federal ban on sports betting, some leagues, such as the MLB and NBA, have publicly campaigned for a cut of the betting action. Don’t expect the NCAA to follow suit, according to a new report by USA Today.

Steve Berkowitz reports that NCAA senior vice president and chief financial officer Kathleen McNeely told agroup of college athletic business administrators at the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics’ annual convention that if sports gambling continues to operate under regulation on a state-by-state basis, it will be up to individual schools to decide whether they want to pursue this type of money.

The article notes that officials from West Virginia and Marshall are reportedly working toward obtaining “integrity fee money” to offset anticipated compliance and monitoring costs of potential legal sports betting in the state of West Virginia. As far as SEC schools are concerned, sports will be coming to Mississippi casinos on July 21.

The NCAA notes that the new legalized sports betting will lead to more compliance and monitoring costs for the NCAA as well as teams themselves and presumably conferences. The NCAA has vocally opposed legalized sports betting.