Michael Brauner is a Senior Sports Analyst and Contributing Writer for Yellowhammer News. You can follow him on Twitter @MBraunerWNSP and hear him every weekday morning from 6 to 9 a.m. on “The Opening Kickoff” on WNSP-FM 105.5, available free online.
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15 Compelling College Players Who Could Go Quickly
Image credit: Gage Wood (Photo by Eddie Kelly/ ProLook Photos) The MLB Draft is equal parts projection and persuasion—a search not just for talent, but for belief. The 15 players highlighted below are among the most compelling college names in this year’s class, each for a different reason. Some lit up Omaha, some carry freakish […]

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Gage Wood (Photo by Eddie Kelly/ ProLook Photos)
The MLB Draft is equal parts projection and persuasion—a search not just for talent, but for belief.
The 15 players highlighted below are among the most compelling college names in this year’s class, each for a different reason. Some lit up Omaha, some carry freakish tools, others are works in progress with tantalizing ceilings. This isn’t a ranking. It’s a snapshot of the players who captured our attention—and who might soon convince a front office to call their name early.
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Kade Anderson, LHP, LSU (BA Draft Rank: 4)
If Anderson’s brilliance wasn’t already clear by the time he reached Omaha, he removed all doubt once he got there. The LSU lefthander allowed just one run over 16 masterful College World Series innings, striking out 17—including a complete-game shutout in the national title game. His performance was surgical, unflinching and final.
But the truest measure of Anderson’s dominance came not from the stat sheet, but from the mouths of those who tried to hit him.
“He toys with you,” teammate Steven Milam told Baseball America.
That sentiment echoed through the LSU dugout and well beyond it. Armed with a fastball that danced at the top of the zone and breaking balls that spun at 3,000 rpm, Anderson carved his way through the 2025 season as the nation’s top college arm. He led Division I in strikeouts, earned first-team All-America honors, won Baseball America’s inaugural College Pitcher of the Year award and—fittingly—was named Most Outstanding Player in the College World Series.
To LSU head coach Jay Johnson, the decision for the No. 1 pick is obvious.
“His next pitch,” Johnson said in Omaha, “should be for someplace in the Washington Nationals organization. It’s not close.”
Jamie Arnold, LHP, Florida State (BA Draft Rank: 6)
There’s little mystery to Arnold’s place near the top of draft boards. The Florida State lefthander led the Seminoles back to national prominence with a 2.98 ERA and 278 strikeouts over 190.1 innings since the start of 2024, all while dominating in the crucible of the ACC.
But what makes Arnold compelling isn’t just what he is. It’s what he’s becoming.
Once a two-pitch arm, Arnold spent the offseason developing a changeup to round out his arsenal. By spring, it had turned into a real weapon—arguably too effective, he joked.
“It moves a ton so sometimes it’s hard to gauge where to start it,” Arnold told Baseball America. “But I’d say that’s a pretty good problem to have at this point.”
Arnold throws from a deceptive low slot and pitches with a poise that belies the pressure of his draft status. Where others might tighten, he leans in. Scouts believe that changeup could grade as plus or even double-plus in time, adding even more ceiling to an already high-floor profile.
Arnold enters the first round with one of the most complete arsenals in the class—and the mindset to keep sharpening it.
Liam Doyle, LHP, Tennessee (BA Draft Rank: 8)
When Doyle returned on two days’ rest to close out Tennessee’s regional final against Wake Forest, some called it reckless. Tennessee head coach Tony Vitello had a different take.
“He’d have killed me if I didn’t let him go back out there,” Vitello said—smiling, but only partly joking.
That moment distilled what makes Doyle so compelling. His fastball is a unicorn: a double-plus four-seamer from the left side that dominated hitters all spring. But it’s his mindset—his unrelenting, almost murderous competitiveness—that sets him apart.
Doyle nearly edged out Anderson for the national strikeout lead and regularly overwhelmed hitters with just that one pitch. His secondaries lag behind, but evaluators rave about his makeup and believe it will carry him through the developmental process.
Doyle’s profile isn’t complete, but his drive is. He’s the kind of pitcher who grabs 100 mph on short rest and dares you to swing. And that might just be enough.
Tyler Bremner, RHP, UC Santa Barbara (BA Draft Rank: 11)
Bremner’s 3.49 ERA might not dazzle at first glance. But look closer—over the final six weeks of the season, few pitchers in the country were better. From April 4 to May 16, Bremner struck out 74 while walking just 10 in 43.1 innings, posting a 2.91 ERA and showcasing why so many evaluators believe in his upside.
The 6-foot-2 righthander owns one of the best changeups in the draft and pairs it with advanced command, mid-90s velocity and a calm, controlled delivery. His slider remains a work in progress—flashing promise but needing refinement—but his feel for sequencing and zone control gives him a strong foundation.
More than anything, Bremner’s second half told the story. He didn’t just improve—he surged, revealing the kind of polish and poise that wins over decision-makers in draft rooms. His best ball is still ahead of him and that sentiment could very well push him into the top-15 picks on Sunday night.
Gage Wood, RHP, Arkansas (BA Draft Rank: 18)
No 2025 draft-eligible player delivered a more jaw-dropping moment than Gage Wood. On the sport’s biggest stage, the Arkansas righthander threw just the third no-hitter in College World Series history—missing a perfect game by a single hit batter—and broke the event’s strikeout record with 19.
It was a performance that felt mythic. But for those who’d seen him all year, it wasn’t a surprise.
“He had the best fastball in the SEC,” one opposing coach told Baseball America, calling it an “easy 80” on the scouting scale.
Wood’s fastball—explosive, late-rising and dominant—is his calling card, drawing comparisons to past SEC flamethrowers like Ty Floyd, who previously held the CWS single-game strikeout record. But he’s no one-trick arm. His curveball flashes plus, his slider and changeup show real promise, and his command tightened considerably in 2025.
For scouts who were already convinced, Omaha was simply confirmation. For everyone else, it was a revelation. Expect Wood to hear his name well before Day 1 ends.
Luke Stevenson, C, North Carolina (BA Draft Rank: 25)
Only 16 Division I hitters drafted in the first round since 1982 batted under .300 in their draft year. Stevenson is likely to become No. 18 after Texas A&M outfielder Jace LaViolette becomes No. 17 on Sunday night.
The North Carolina catcher hit just .251 this spring—a figure that puts him in rare and rather unflattering company—but also posted a .414 on-base percentage, walked nearly as many times as he struck out and mashed balls with a 96.5 mph average exit velocity, one of the best marks in the country.
It makes Stevenson one of this year’s most polarizing prospects. The hit tool is a legitimate concern, but almost everything else checks a box. He’s a plus receiver and blocker with an above-average arm, he controls the zone and he plays a premium position. He also doesn’t turn 21 until late July, giving him age-based upside.
The questions now: Which teams will overlook the batting average? And how high are they willing to take him?
Cam Cannarella, OF, Clemson (BA Draft Rank: 27)
Cannarella does almost everything well. He’s a plus runner, a gifted defender in center field with elite instincts and range and a hitter with feel, bat speed and the potential for more power as his frame matures.
But for all that promise, there’s one glaring red flag.
Cannarella’s throwing arm is well below-average—closer to bottom-of-the-scale than just weak. He tore his right labrum as a sophomore, played through it, then underwent surgery before the 2025 season. Though he mostly returned to form at the plate, he was absent from pregame throwing drills and showed severely diminished arm strength in games. Scouts don’t expect him to ever reach average in that category.
At 6 feet, 180 pounds, Cannarella is a classic hit-over-power profile with some physical projection left. The power may come. The arm likely won’t.
Still, elite center field defense is a rare commodity—and that, combined with his contact skills and speed, may be more than enough for a team willing to live with the risk.
Caden Bodine, C, Coastal Carolina (BA Draft Rank: 29)
If you ask opposing coaches who the best defensive catcher in this year’s draft is, many won’t hesitate: Caden Bodine.
“He’s the most complete receiver in the country,” one coach told Baseball America. And the numbers—and eyes—back it up.
Bodine is a high-level pitch framer with an elite feel for stealing strikes, a polished blocker and a strong, accurate arm. His work behind the plate helped anchor Coastal Carolina’s run to Omaha and earned him a reputation as the best defensive catching prospect in the class.
Offensively, Bodine brings advanced bat-to-ball skills and a discerning eye, but his lack of power raises questions about how his offensive game will translate to pro ball. He controls the zone, but the thump is light. In pro baseball, even strong defenders eventually need to do some damage.
Still, organizations value defense at catcher more than ever. And Bodine’s rare polish and poise behind the plate will give him a long runway to figure out the rest.
Devin Taylor, OF, Indiana (BA Draft Rank: 34)
Taylor didn’t leave much room for debate in 2025. He batted .374/.494/.706 with 18 home runs, 13 doubles, 12 stolen bases and drew 52 walks to just 30 strikeouts—numbers that only solidified what he’s been since arriving in Bloomington. Across three college seasons, he never posted an OPS below 1.080 or hit fewer than 16 home runs.
In a draft light on proven college bats, Taylor stands out. His offensive polish, power and patience make him one of the safest bets to hit at the next level.
The question is how much value he can provide elsewhere. Taylor is a below-average athlete who’s likely confined to left field, where his glove and range may limit his impact. But when you hit like he does, teams tend to find room.
He’s a bat-first prospect in a draft starving for college bats—and that alone makes him a strong first-round candidate.
Patrick Forbes, RHP, Louisville (BA Draft Rank: 47)
Forbes is more blank canvas than finished product, but it’s the kind of canvas that comes with unopened paint in all the right colors.
After two years flashing vibrant stuff in relief, Forbes moved into Louisville’s rotation in 2025 and surged up draft boards with a brilliant opening month. The full body of work was less consistent—he finished with a 4.42 ERA over 71.1 innings—but the ingredients were undeniable: a 36.7% strikeout rate, a career-best 10.7% walk rate and flashes of dominance that few in the class could match.
Forbes is a dynamic mover with a whippy arm and a fastball that explodes out of a low three-quarters slot. It sits mid 90s and can touch 100 with late ride, especially dangerous at the top of the zone. He pairs it with a power slider that morphs in shape—sometimes tight and vertical, other times sweeping across the plate—especially effective against righthanded hitters.
His command remains fringy and his changeup rarely appears, but the raw tools are as loud as any arm on the board. What Forbes becomes will depend on which team is ready to pick up the brush.
Cam Leiter, RHP, Florida State (BA Draft Rank: 85)
Few players in this year’s draft offers more unknown—or more upside—than Leiter.
He transferred to Florida State after a solid freshman year at Central Florida and wasted no time showing scouts what made him one of the most electric arms in the class. In just seven starts and 35 innings in 2024, Leiter struck out 56 batters with a high-octane arsenal before a shoulder injury ended his season. Attempts to rehab eventually gave way to surgery, and Leiter didn’t throw a pitch in 2025.
When healthy, he’s a live-armed righthander with a 94-96 mph fastball that’s touched 99 and generated a 30% miss rate. He spins two distinct breaking balls—a hammer curve in the low 80s and a power slider that can blur into cutter territory at its top end velocity. Both flash plus. Against lefties, Leiter will fold in a firm changeup that keeps hitters off balance.
The injury history clouds his draft stock, but the pure stuff and 6-foot-5, 235-pound work-horse frame are loud enough to carry real belief. For teams willing to take a leap, Leiter offers the kind of upside few others can match.
James Quinn-Irons, OF, George Mason (BA Draft Rank: 87)
At 6-foot-5, 230 pounds, Quinn-Irons didn’t look like someone who belonged in the Atlantic 10. And by the end of his career, he didn’t play like it either.
His junior season at George Mason felt like a parting gift. He hit .419 with 16 home runs, 24 doubles and 36 stolen bases while drawing walks, hitting for power and punishing pitchers who dared challenge him in the zone. It was the kind of year that turns heads in any conference. In the A-10, it bordered on absurd.
Quinn-Irons always had the frame, the athleticism, the raw tools. But in 2025, everything started to sync. The swing tightened. The chases came down. And while he still didn’t see much premium velocity, scouts could finally start dreaming big on a player who combined size and speed in ways few others in this class can.
He played all three outfield spots in college, and there’s a chance his straight-line speed keeps him in center. If not, the arm plays in right. Either way, Quinn-Irons was a giant for the A-10. Now he gets a bigger stage.
Cody Bowker, RHP, Vanderbilt (BA Draft Rank: 98)
Without high-octane velocity, Bowker might not be your typical SEC arm.
The Maine native began his college career as a two-way player at Georgetown, quietly flying under the radar until he committed fully to pitching as a sophomore. That decision changed everything. A transfer to Vanderbilt in 2025 gave him a national stage, and he made good on it—posting a 4.38 ERA with 99 strikeouts over 72 innings in the toughest conference in the country.
Bowker doesn’t overpower hitters, but he confuses them. His low-slot delivery adds funk and deception, making his 92–94 mph fastball—which will bump 95—play well above its velocity. His changeup is his best secondary, a fading, tumbling pitch that tunnels beautifully off his fastball and gets swings from both sides. He mixes in a slider and cutter that can sometimes blend, and his continued growth might depend on separating those shapes or introducing a softer breaking ball.
Bowker isn’t finished yet, but the progress is real—and evaluators have noticed. He’s a late-blooming, Northeast-built righty with the traits and temperament to start and the ceiling of a sneaky valuable Day 1 pick.
Grant Jay, C, Dallas Baptist (BA Draft Rank: 128)
There’s nothing subtle about the way Jay plays baseball.
Thickly built and power-packed at 6 feet, 225 pounds, Jay leaves an impression the moment he steps in the box. He hits the ball hard—and often, far. In 2025, he slugged 19 home runs, swiped 14 bases and became Dallas Baptist’s all-time home run leader, blending brute strength with surprising athleticism.
His hands are fast, his wrists strong, and when he connects, the ball jumps. But there’s some volatility baked into the profile. Jay’s swing can lengthen, and his aggressive approach leads to both below-average chase and zone contact rates. It’s a power-over-hit package, especially for a catcher.
That’s where things get interesting. Jay moves well for his size and owns a strong arm, but the finer points of catching—receiving, blocking, consistency—still need work. Some scouts see a future first baseman or corner outfielder. Others think the right development path could keep him behind the plate, where his offensive upside carries far more weight.
For a team willing to bet on strength, tools and positional value, Jay is the kind of swing worth taking. He could be a sneaky Day 1 pick.
Brody Donay, C, Florida (BA Draft Rank: 217)
Of the 15 players on this list, Donay is the least likely to come off the board on Day 1. But he might be the most fascinating gamble.
At 6-foot-5 and 235 pounds, Donay is hard to miss. He’s a towering presence with rare strength and some of the loudest raw power in the class. After transferring from Virginia Tech to Florida, a few subtle swing tweaks—wider base, quieter hands—unlocked a career year. He hit .303 with 18 home runs and posted the best strikeout and walk rates of his career. When he connects, the ball leaves in a hurry.
But getting to that power isn’t always easy. Donay remains a free-swinger with a high chase rate and one of the lowest contact rates among projected top-10 round picks. His defense is similarly split: a cannon arm but slow mechanics and below average receiving. Florida often used him at designated hitter, and his long-term home might be first base or right field.
He’s a player of extremes—huge tools, huge question marks. The team that drafts Donay won’t be playing it safe. But if it hits, the reward could be just as big as the risk.
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USD Football Picked First in 2025 PFL Preseason Poll
Story Links 2025 PFL Coaches Poll (PDF) ST. LOUIS (PFL) – For the first time since 2019, San Diego football has been tapped as the Pioneer Football League’s preseason favorite in the league’s 2025 Preseason Coaches Poll, released Monday. Pioneer Football League2025 Preseason Coaches’ […]

ST. LOUIS (PFL) – For the first time since 2019, San Diego football has been tapped as the Pioneer Football League’s preseason favorite in the league’s 2025 Preseason Coaches Poll, released Monday.
Pioneer Football League
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PL | Team | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | Points |
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1. | San Diego | 5 | 4 | 1 | 94 |
2. | Drake | 3 | 2 | 1 | 78 |
3. | St. Thomas | 1 | 2 | 0 | 72 |
4. | Butler | 0 | 1 | 4 | 66 |
5. | Dayton | 0 | 1 | 2 | 65 |
6. | Morehead St. | 1 | 0 | 0 | 64 |
7. | Presbyterian | 1 | 1 | 1 | 55 |
8. | Davidson | 0 | 0 | 1 | 53 |
9. | Marist | 24 | |||
10. | Valparaiso | 18 | |||
11. | Stetson | 16 | |||
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The PFL will present its 2025 Preseason All-PFL Team on Tuesday.
San Diego picked up five first-place votes and was not ranked lower than third by any of the league’s head coaches to earn the poll’s top spot with 94 points.
Drake, the 2024 PFL Champion, was first on three ballots and was picked in the top three on six ballots to earn second in the poll with 78 points. St. Thomas, with 72 points, including a first-place vote, was third with 72 points.
Butler, Dayton, and Morehead State were tightly packed in the next three spots. Butler was fourth with 66 points thanks to five votes in the top three. Dayton was a point behind in fifth place at 65 points. Morehead State nabbed a first-place vote and was sixth in the poll with 65 points for its best preseason positioning since 2022, when it was picked fifth.
Presbyterian had one vote for each of the top three spots and edged out Davidson for the No. 7 position in the poll with 55 points. Davidson was eighth with 53 points.
Marist, Valparaiso, and Stetson rounded out the PFL Preseason Coaches’ Poll, ranked ninth, 10th, and 11th, respectively.
The poll reflects the vastly different landscape in the PFL entering the 2025 season with five programs helmed by new head coaches: Kevin Lynch at Butler, Saj Thakkar at Davidson, Joe Woodley at Drake, Mike Jasper at Stetson, and Andy Waddle at Valparaiso.
The upcoming 2025 season marks the 33rd year of the Pioneer Football League. The league will feature 11 teams, each playing an eight-game schedule to determine the league champion and recipient of the automatic bid to the NCAA FCS Championship. The 2025 schedule gets underway Thursday, August 28, with Dayton, Drake, and St. Thomas set to kick off on opening night. Marist opens its season on Friday, August 29, followed by the league’s remaining seven teams on Saturday, August 30.
About the Pioneer Football League
The Pioneer Football League is the only non-scholarship, football-only NCAA Football Championship Subdivision conference. The PFL is a truly national conference with members on each coast and throughout the nation’s heartland. Butler University, the University of Dayton, Drake University, and Valparaiso University were among the league’s founding members in 1993, with Davidson College, Marist University, Morehead State University, Presbyterian College, the University of San Diego, the University of St. Thomas, and Stetson University joining to form the current 11-team league.
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Welcoming All-American Volleyball Stars Andi Jackson and Izzy Starck
Avoli Elevates Roster with Elite NIL Signings: Welcoming All-American Volleyball Stars Andi Jackson and Izzy Starck Avoli Elevates Roster with Elite NIL Signings: Welcoming All-American Volleyball Stars Andi Jackson and Izzy Starck Avoli Further Solidifies Leadership in Women’s Volleyball, Driving Growth Through Strategic Athlete and Brand Partnerships PORTLAND, Ore., July 28, 2025–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Avoli, the first […]

Avoli Further Solidifies Leadership in Women’s Volleyball, Driving Growth Through Strategic Athlete and Brand Partnerships
PORTLAND, Ore., July 28, 2025–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Avoli, the first and only athletic brand dedicated exclusively to the performance needs and aspirations of women and girl volleyball athletes, today announced its most significant collegiate NIL athlete signings to date: Andi Jackson (University of Nebraska) and Izzy Starck (Penn State University). These pivotal partnerships highlight Avoli’s unwavering commitment to empowering the sport’s top talent and its strategic position within the rapidly expanding landscape of women’s volleyball.
Joining Avoli’s elite roster are two of the NCAA’s most impactful and celebrated volleyball athletes:
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Andi Jackson, a dominant middle blocker entering her junior season at the University of Nebraska, is a First-Team AVCA All-American and a two-time All-Big Ten selection (First Team in 2024). She boasted a remarkable .448 hitting percentage, ranking 4th in Division I, during the 2024 season, and is a cornerstone of Nebraska’s championship program.
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Izzy Starck, entering her sophomore season at Penn State University, was the 2024 AVCA Freshman of the Year and a Second-Team All-American. She led Penn State to the 2024 National Championship with a record 1,483 assists, including the final point.
Avoli, recognized as the first footwear brand to sign women’s volleyball athletes to NIL deals, has been at the forefront of NIL since its launch in 2023. Having worked with high-profile athletes like Harper Murray and Anna DeBeer, Avoli proactively utilizes these elite talents to amplify its brand. Andi Jackson and Izzy Starck will be prominently highlighted across Avoli’s channels throughout the upcoming NCAA season and beyond.
“Bringing Andi and Izzy into the Avoli family is a natural extension of our commitment to empowering women and girls in volleyball,” said Rick Anguilla, Avoli Co-Founder. “They are exceptional athletes and inspiring role models to young volleyball players, and their decision to champion our brand underscores the real impact we’re having on the sport. We’re thrilled to welcome them to the Avoli team as we continue to innovate and support the sport’s incredible momentum.”
Avoli’s rapid success is strengthened by strategic partnerships, notably with top sports retailer SCHEELS. Since launching in select retail locations in 2024, Avoli has achieved remarkable growth, driven by its unparalleled innovation and high-quality footwear that is unique in the women’s volleyball space.
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Offensive lineman DJ Wingfield files lawsuit against NCAA in bid to play for USC
When DJ Wingfield picked USC in the transfer portal last January, it seemed like an ideal one-year arrangement for both parties. The Trojans desperately needed experience on the interior of their already thin offensive line. Wingfield — after two seasons at a junior college, one at New Mexico and another spent at Purdue — was […]

When DJ Wingfield picked USC in the transfer portal last January, it seemed like an ideal one-year arrangement for both parties. The Trojans desperately needed experience on the interior of their already thin offensive line. Wingfield — after two seasons at a junior college, one at New Mexico and another spent at Purdue — was seeking to raise his profile in his final season of eligibility.
USC offered him a clear path to playing time at left guard, as well as a $210,000 payday for his name, image and likeness. He just needed the NCAA to approve a waiver for him to play another season.
Neither Wingfield nor USC figured that would be a problem at the time. But the NCAA denied Wingfield’s initial request for a waiver in late March, then later denied his appeal.
So, with fall camp set to open this week, Wingfield took the only route remaining for him to play at USC: He filed a lawsuit against the NCAA, seeking injunctive relief in order to play for USC.
Wingfield is seeking to challenge the lawfulness of the NCAA’s “Five-Year Rule”, which contends that players are eligible to play four seasons of competition across five years. Both USC and Wingfield believed, according to the complaint, that his waiver would be approved, considering recent rulings in the cases of Vanderbilt’s Diego Pavia and Rutgers’ Jett Elad, each of whom won the right in court to play an additional season.
But the waiver was denied, robbing Wingfield, he claims, of what could have been a “once-in-a-lifetime” NIL payday as well as an opportunity to “enhance his career and reputation” by playing at USC.
“The effect of the NCAA’s anticompetitive conduct will be to penalize Wingfield for having attended a junior college and for the disruptions caused by the pandemic,” the complaint reads. “The NCAA’s anticompetitive conduct, coupled with its unreasonable denial of Wingfield’s meritorious request for a waiver, thus threatens him with immediate irreparable harm.”
Wingfield’s collegiate career began in 2019 at El Camino College, a junior college in Torrance. He left El Camino during the 2020 season due to the pandemic, as Wingfield was tasked with taking care of his mother.
He played at El Camino in 2021 before transferring to New Mexico in the spring of 2022. Before completing a single game with the Lobos, he tore the anterior cruciate ligament in his knee, ending his season. He returned to play in nine games in 2023 before entering the transfer portal.
Wingfield transferred to Purdue where he earned a starting job in 2024, five years after he first started his college football career.
Still, he figured the NCAA would look past that timeline, given his circumstances and the cascade of legal challenges claiming that the NCAA is violating antitrust laws by limiting athletes’ eligibility.
Now that decision — and Wingfield’s college football future — is in the hands of a federal judge.
Whatever that judge decides could have an adverse impact on the Trojans offense this season. Without Wingfield, USC would be perilously thin up front. His absence could mean sliding projected right tackle Tobias Raymond to guard, while sophomore Justin Tauanuu steps in as starting right tackle. Otherwise, USC is likely to turn to inexperienced sophomore Micah Banuelos at left guard.
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Nick Saban, Greg Byrne praise Trump’s NIL Executive Order: ‘takes a huge step’
President Donald Trump issued an executive order on name, image and likeness (NIL) in college sports — the first major step toward placing regulations and guardrails on a system that has taken on a life of its own. The order, according to a release directly from the White House is aimed to “protect student-athletes and […]

President Donald Trump issued an executive order on name, image and likeness (NIL) in college sports — the first major step toward placing regulations and guardrails on a system that has taken on a life of its own.
The order, according to a release directly from the White House is aimed to “protect student-athletes and collegiate athletic scholarships and opportunities, including in Olympic and non-revenue programs, and the unique American institution of college sports.
Critics of NIL have argued for years now how it will be the end of non-revenue sports on college campuses, and the very first goal on the list for the order is preventing that.
RELATED: Trump issues NIL executive order on same day SCORE Act passes in U.S. House committee
Trump’s executive order has the stamp of approval from two of the most important people in the state of Alabama, former Crimson Tide head coach Nick Saban and current Alabama athletics director Greg Byrne.
Byrne released a statement of support on his X account on Thursday night, while Saban also praised the decision during an appearance on Fox News on Friday:
— Greg Byrne (@Greg_Byrne) July 25, 2025
“The University of Alabama applauds this executive order from President Trump to help secure a long-term sustainable model of intercollegiate athletics,” Byrne said. “We are proud of our broad-based athletics programs and strongly support future regulatory and Congressional action that will preserve these opportunities for student-athletes.”
Nick Saban praises @POTUS‘ Executive Order protecting student-athletes & collegiate athletic scholarships:
“I think @POTUS‘ Executive Order takes a huge step in providing the educational model that has always been what we’ve tried to promote to create opportunities for players.” pic.twitter.com/kehXs6kGg5
— Rapid Response 47 (@RapidResponse47) July 25, 2025
“I think President Trump’s Executive Order takes a huge step in providing the educational model that has always been what we’ve tried to promote to create opportunities for players male and female, revenue and non-revenue,” Saban said. “I think we sort of need to make a decision here relative to do we want to have an education based model which the President made a huge step towards doing that, or do we want to have universities sponsor professional teams? I think most people would choose the former.”
RELATED: As new Alabama-driven NIL bill gains traction, Congress moves to rein in ‘Wild West’ of college sports
College athletics have been moving towards a model — especially in football and basketball — to where players are employees rather than students, and the constant hemming and hawing of which direction will be taken in that area has stalled anything definitive from happening.
With Trump’s Executive Order though, it sounds like that momentum is being halted, and as Saban mentions, preserving not only non-revenue sports, but an educational-based system.
One critic of the amount of impact this will actually have was one of the most prominent college football reporters on the topic in Ross Dellenger of Yahoo Sports, who appeared on Paul Finebaum Thursday upon the news coming out and downplayed exactly what impact there is going to be:
Instant reaction from @RossDellenger :
“I wish I could tell you that (Trump’s executive order) was some groundbreaking thing and everything’s going to change in college sports after this…but I don’t think that’s the case.” pic.twitter.com/WxfjJIemE8
— Paul Finebaum (@finebaum) July 24, 2025
Dellenger pointed out that Congressional legislation is a much more permanent solution rather than any sort of Executive Order
“I wish I could tell you that (Trump’s executive order) was some groundbreaking thing and everything’s going to change in college sports after this…but I don’t think that’s the case.”
RELATED: Shomari Figures making bipartisan play to address NIL with support from GOP leaders, Alabama AD Greg Byrne
Ironically, U.S. Rep. Shomari Figures’ SCORE Act passed out of U.S. House committee on the same day and is moving towards passing as well, so perhaps actual change can be seen. The SCORE Act has similar goals as the Executive Order and could be even more critical than any sort of Executive Order.
Clearly, there is still a long road to go in order to get any sort of control on what college sports have become. Momentum though is moving in the right direction, and it certainly seems like those who make the every day decisions in college sports are in favor of action which has already been taken.
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Inside Bielema's NIL Strategy
At Big Ten Media Days, Bret Bielema laid out Illinois’ NIL philosophy — and it might just be the most sustainable approach in college football. Author: kiiitv.com Published: 7:54 PM CDT July 28, 2025 Updated: 7:54 PM CDT July 28, 2025 0


At Big Ten Media Days, Bret Bielema laid out Illinois’ NIL philosophy — and it might just be the most sustainable approach in college football.
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Tyran Stokes Could Reshape Gonzaga’s Identity in the NIL Era
When reports surfaced that Tyran Stokes, the No. 1 recruit in the class of 2026, is expected to take an official visit to Gonzaga, the college basketball world took notice. Since the recent House settlement and the legalization of direct revenue sharing, schools without football programs (and without sprawling athletic departments) are newly positioned to […]

When reports surfaced that Tyran Stokes, the No. 1 recruit in the class of 2026, is expected to take an official visit to Gonzaga, the college basketball world took notice. Since the recent House settlement and the legalization of direct revenue sharing, schools without football programs (and without sprawling athletic departments) are newly positioned to compete for elite talent that had in the last five years or so been reserved for schools with a large enough donor base to pay for their services. The revenue-sharing model directs more institutional support to athletes across all sports, giving basketball-first programs like Gonzaga the financial firepower to recruit top-tier players without competing against football for resources.
This is a program that has landed five-stars, developed lottery picks, and earned No. 1 seeds in the past. But the economics of the NIL made it increasingly difficult of late for basketball-first schools to operate in the same recruiting tier as revenue-heavy powerhouses. Stokes’ interest (and that of other top recruits currently being courted by the Zags) suggests that Gonzaga’s development model now has the economic allure to attract players previously boxed out and earmarked for Power-5 schools.
Incoming HS Senior Tyran Stokes had a Triple Double, Playing in Fiba U19 vs Jordan today..
19 PTS (9-11 FG)
11 REBS
10 AST
7 STLSWhat college would you like to see him at after his SR season… pic.twitter.com/uJ9sTKh6Kg
— Frankie Vision (@Frankie_Vision) July 2, 2025
So, How Good Is He Really?
Well, he’s the top recruit in the country for very good reason. Physically, he’s built like a tank, six-foot-eight, somewhere between 235-245 lbs., seven-foot wingspan, and an explosive vertical leap. He certainly doesn’t look it, but the dude must be built out of cannonballs and moon rocks. Imagine if Michael Ajayi somehow put on 20 lbs of muscle. That’s Stokes. Offensively, he’s a downhill playmaker who finishes through contact, rebounds aggressively, and finds teammates in space. He averaged 21 points, 9.3 rebounds, and nearly 4 assists last season for Notre Dame High School in California. He then followed that up with a starring role for Team USA, where he became the first player in U19 history to record a triple-double and averaged 12.2 points in just 18 minutes per game. His EYBL numbers back it up too—20 points, 8.3 boards, and top-ten scoring across the entire circuit. Every level he touches, he produces.
Defensively, Stokes is versatile, handsy, and aggressive. He moves well laterally for his size, can wall up against slashers, and switches comfortably across positions. His energy rarely drops, and his rebounding is elite for a wing. If you’re a coach, you can plug him into almost any system. If you’re a scout, you’re watching the jumper. That’s the one real question left. He shot just over 30% from three last season, and his free-throw numbers (mid-60s) suggest the touch isn’t all the way there. But the mechanics are clean, the volume is increasing, and the upside as a league-average shooter is very real.
Still, what makes this visit to Spokane so significant isn’t just the talent on tape. It’s who’s calling. Besides Gonzaga, Stokes has already been courted by Kansas, Kentucky, Oregon, USC, and Louisville (his hometown). He’s seen Allen Fieldhouse. He’s visited Rupp. He’s played for Tommy Lloyd on Team USA (and if you like playing for Tommy, wait til you play for his mentor and all-time great basketball mind Mark Few).
These are destination programs that usually close on players like Stokes. So why is Gonzaga still on the list?
The answer starts with fit. And it ends with what the program has quietly become: a landing spot for elite players who see Spokane as the most direct pathway to the NBA. And with the program’s pending move to the Pac-12 and a rapidly shifting NIL structure post–House settlement, the gap between Spokane and the so-called Blue Bloods is closing faster than anyone expected.
Why Stokes Fits Gonzaga
Few prospects in recent memory would arrive to Gonzaga with the physical readiness, big game experience, and upside that Stokes already possesses. In terms of size he’s just fine pounds and a couple inches shy of Graham Ike, but he’s lethal in transition and facilitates floor spacing from the wing. His unique blend of force and feel would instantly thrive within Gonzaga’s high-IQ, movement-based offense, especially with a veteran floor-marshal like Braeden Smith running point.
In terms of development opportunities for Stokes, Gonzaga gets players to the pros, yes, but more importantly, it equips them with the coachability, versatility, and physical tools necessary to keep them around in the league. It’s why NBA GMs now view Gonzaga in the same light as Kentucky and Duke–a professional finishing school that develops character, professionalism, and a team-first mindset in tandem with athletic performance.
For a player with Stokes’ ceiling—and the national attention that comes with it—Gonzaga offers something rare: a grounded, basketball-first community that treats their players as more than their market value. It’s a place where the pressure to succeed is met with support, where expectations are matched by belief, and where becoming a pro begins with becoming the kind of person who can handle it.
Why Gonzaga Can Now Compete for Stokes
Under the new revenue-sharing model, Division I schools can allocate up to $20.5 million per year to athletes. At football-first schools, that sum gets carved up across sprawling rosters, athletic departments, and compliance operations. But Gonzaga operates with single-sport precision. That gives Gonzaga the ability to direct a larger share of available revenue toward a smaller number of players, with fewer trade-offs and no internal competition for resources.
In practical terms, that means a player like Tyran Stokes could command more direct, structured compensation at Gonzaga than at any other school currently recruiting him. His visits have included Louisville, Kansas, Kentucky, Oregon, and USC—all high-major programs with football obligations that absorb a meaningful share of institutional funding. Gonzaga stands alone in that group: the only school without a football program, and therefore the only one capable of consolidating its revenue-sharing resources entirely around men’s basketball. That distinction is vital in an era where compensation is legal and expected, Stokes’s potential commitment to Gonzaga would quite literally be proof of concept that the new revenue-sharing model can preserve parity across conferences in the NIL era.
Final Thoughts
Tyran Stokes is a program-shaping talent—physically imposing, instinctually polished, and already equipped with the poise and processing speed that translate to the next level. His recruitment reflects that. But Gonzaga offers more than opportunity. With no football program, a unified donor base, and a basketball identity that has produced durable, high-character professionals, the program now occupies a rare position in the post-House era: fully resourced, culturally grounded, and built around player development in its fullest sense. Somehow, Gonzaga can not only compete for players like Stokes, it might have the strongest pitch for his eventual commitment. Stokes would be Gonzaga’s second No. 1 overall recruit, joining a short lineage that begins and ends with Chet Holmgren—and we’ve already seen how well that trajectory holds up in the league. Gonzaga can give Stokes the platform to rise, the community to stay grounded, and the space to grow into everything his future already promises.
Although Kentucky seems to be gaining ground as the frontrunner for Stokes’ commitment, the stink of the Calipari era still clings to Rupp like cheap cologne: loud, sweaty, and impossible to ignore. Mark Pope has done his best to exorcise the place, but no amount of holy water or leadership-summit charisma can scrub out a decade of ego, turnover, and early tournament flameouts. For most college hoops fans, the Wildcats still play the villain, and his potential commitment to Kentucky could feel to Louisville fans in his own hometown like seeing the pride of their city held up as proof that the University of Kentucky still runs the state.
Under the House settlement, Kentucky and Louisville’s NIL revenue will be divided across every varsity sport. That includes massive football programs with constant overhead and endless booster expectations. At Gonzaga, the entire athletic department is built around the long-standing success of its basketball program alone. The money should be substantial, the exposure is guaranteed, and the NBA outcomes are proven. For a player like Stokes, the choice should be a clear one.
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