College Sports
2024
Joel Klatt Lead College Football Analyst In a way, they remind me of those New England Patriots teams that did similar things. Sure, they don’t have a Tom Brady or Rob Gronkowski, but they do a lot of things well and there’s not a real weak link in the chain (more on that later). They […]


Joel Klatt
Lead College Football Analyst
In a way, they remind me of those New England Patriots teams that did similar things. Sure, they don’t have a Tom Brady or Rob Gronkowski, but they do a lot of things well and there’s not a real weak link in the chain (more on that later). They were excellent on third down, going 11 of 17, while Penn State went 3 of 11. At the end of the first half, Notre Dame executed what they needed to in order to get three more points.So, you could tell Texas’ game plan was to get the ball on the outside at that moment. It called a slant and a run on the perimeter with an interior run sandwiched between those two plays. The sweep play on second-and-goal is the one everyone’s going to be talking about. Safety Caleb Downs made a great play to blow it up, pushing Texas outside the 5-yard line. Everyone seemed to hate that play call, but the film Sarkisian watched suggested that Texas couldn’t run the ball up the gut on two straight plays. The Longhorns were right there, traveling the correct path. The Buckeyes didn’t play too well either — with their offense failing to execute at the level they did in the previous two games and making costly penalties — but Texas had a legitimate shot at winning. I thought Texas was going to pull off the upset at one point in the fourth quarter. That’s how close it was. Texas survived the first quarter — like I said it needed to do — after Ohio State got an early score. I thought Sawyer’s interception at the goal line against Michigan was going to be an epic moment, but Ohio State didn’t win the game. So, Sawyer finally gets his moment — and it came in the CFP semifinals. That was an incredible pass rush. That was a play that no one will ever forget in Columbus or in all of college football for a long time.
Texas’ fantastic effort wasn’t enough.
Then, of course, there was the end-of-game situation. Notre Dame executed well in the final minutes, and Penn State didn’t. All of these games are going to come down to a play or two. Notre Dame made those plays. Penn State didn’t. Ewers said prior to the game that he expects to enter the 2025 NFL Draft, so there will be a quarterback change in Austin. But Arch Manning will take over, and Texas has put itself into the top echelon of the SEC. I don’t see the Longhorns taking any steps backward.It was such a strain for both teams to move the ball, and I loved every second of it. Penn State’s defense did what it needed to do, holding Notre Dame to fewer than three yards per carry for the first time all season. Both sides were giving max effort.recommendedBefore I dive into that Allar interception, I just want to say that this was a really successful year for Penn State. It had a chance late in the game to clinch a spot in the national championship. All Penn State fans would’ve taken that scenario at the start of the season. The season ended in heartbreak, but that’s going to be the new reality for nearly every contender in the expanded CFP era.Howard is at his best when Ohio State gets the ball to its playmakers in space. He’s not a great drop-back passer, though, and we saw that against a great Texas secondary. He’s going to face an excellent secondary in the title game. I thought Texas’ decision to double superstar wideout Jeremiah Smith was brilliant too, so Notre Dame has reasonable hope that a version of this can play out in the title game.Like Texas, Penn State made two crucial mistakes too many. Unlike Texas, though, Penn State’s mistakes weren’t from coaching decisions. A Penn State defender initially slipped in coverage on Jaden Greathouse‘s game-tying touchdown in the fourth quarter, and Allar threw the interception that allowed Notre Dame to win the game.When you run a deep in route, you have to make the defensive back feel like you’re going vertical. If he doesn’t feel like you’re going vertical, it’s going to be so tough to get back inside of him and cross his face to get the ball. That didn’t happen on that play. Gray sensed that the receiver wasn’t going anywhere, allowing him to get to the ball before the receiver was out of his cut.I can’t remember a defensive play that impactful and made by one guy. There might be some NFL ones, but that was such a special play and moment from the Ohio kid. He was a huge piece of Ohio State’s 2021 recruiting class. Everyone in Columbus will tell you that.
Ohio State beats Texas to advance to the National Championship

Jack Sawyer will never have to pay for anything in Columbus ever again.
From Penn State’s perspective, it had to put trust in its receivers that they would win their routes. You can’t always see it and you can’t wait to see it. QBs have to be on time and on target. Allar was decently on time and on target, but it was still picked. Notre Dame’s Christian Gray made an incredible play, and the receiver ran an atrocious route. What an incredible couple of days for college football that was.Texas wound up making critical mistakes at the wrong time, though. There were two obvious ones for the Longhorns. They didn’t score any points when they were at the 1-yard line and trailing 21-14 in the fourth quarter, and they allowed Buckeyes RB TreVeyon Henderson to take a screen pass 75 yards for a touchdown seconds before halftime. Both the Orange Bowl and the Cotton Bowl were incredible. Notre Dame is back in the title game for the first time in 12 years after its last-second win over Penn State. Meanwhile, Ohio State has a chance to win its first title in 10 years after taking down Texas — making a huge goal-line stand before Jack Sawyer‘s scoop-and-score sealed the game. That was also an epic game and one we’ve been hoping for.
The blueprint is there to slow down Ohio State’s offense.
Joel Klatt is FOX Sports’ lead college football game analyst and the host of the podcast “The Joel Klatt Show.” Follow him at @joelklatt and subscribe to the “Joel Klatt Show” on YouTube.That said, I despise toss sweeps in short-yardage situations. The ball goes five yards back intentionally. A play call like that is tough to swallow. In that situation, it’s even tougher. So, I didn’t like the call, but I understood it.
Texas will be just fine.
The Fighting Irish seem to always make the right plays at the right time. That’s a credit to their head coach, Marcus Freeman. He has done such a good job coaching this team. They execute and don’t beat themselves. Allar did that, and the play wasn’t totally his fault. It was a progression read against man coverage. For anyone who’s ever played the position, when you have to throw the ball downfield to your third read, very rarely are you going to be on platform. Generally, something will be in the quarterback’s lap at that moment, and he’s trying to throw a dig or in route. That’s an uber–aggressive play call.
Notre Dame is a good situational football team.
Sawyer is a great player and has been a great human in my meetings with him, so I’m happy for him that he had that moment.As I mentioned earlier, Ohio State’s underwhelming execution certainly gave Texas a chance to win that game. Texas did some great things defensively as well, but some of Ohio State’s offensive woes were its own doing. I’ve been saying this since I was on the call for the Michigan game, but when Ohio State has a lack of creativity offensively, it can struggle. It’s not a great running or drop-back passing team.The way that game ended might feel devastating for Texas, but Sarkisian has the program on the rise. It made it to the semifinals for a second straight year, and Sarkisian is not going anywhere anytime soon. [Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account, follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily.]
Drew Allar‘s interception was brutal, but he wasn’t all to blame for it.
In the lead up to the game, I mentioned how Penn State’s receivers were going to have to make a play at some point. In fact, James Franklin has told me that what held this team back in the past is that it doesn’t have that wide receiver it can rely on in a big situation. Well, Penn State’s wide receivers had zero catches in the Orange Bowl. They became the first non-service academy to have a game this year when a wide receiver didn’t have a single catch.Texas was nearly able to overcome that crucial mistake. QB Will Howard wasn’t playing well, and Ohio State’s game plan wasn’t dynamic, in large part because of how Texas played. Texas’ defensive line and secondary were great.Franklin knew this was the weak link. He tried to address it in the transfer portal. There were moments during the season where Penn State’s receivers made big plays, but they never felt reliable. Ohio State still needed to make two more stops to prevent Texas from tying the game in the final minutes. After forcing an incompletion on third down, “Captain Jack” saved the day for Ohio State with his strip sack and 83-yard touchdown return on fourth-and-goal.
Notre Dame wins 27-24 over Penn State with a game-winning field goal

This College Football Playoff has over-delivered. Let’s start with the Henderson touchdown. Texas didn’t need to play prevent-defense there, but it shouldn’t have manipulated its own structure to create a vulnerability. Texas is going to watch that film and wonder why it blitzed a corner on that play, with the screen pass going right to that spot.Allar is also going to get too much of the blame. I’m not going to try and be an apologist for Allar, because you can’t blindly throw a ball over the middle like that late in a game. That’s the No. 1 cardinal sin of quarterbacking. Just saying you can’t throw the ball over the middle like that, though, doesn’t do the play justice. The play had Allar going back toward the middle of the field in his progression. Allar said he was trying to dirt at his receiver’s feet after the first two progressions weren’t there, but he took the bullet like a man when he spoke to reporters after the game. Texas did what it needed to do against Ohio State in a game that I thought offered a narrow path to win. Ohio State was playing great coming into this game. It was like a supernova of a team through its first two CFP games. It was going to take a specific game plan and path from Texas to win that game.Allar showed good leadership by taking accountability for that play, and that’s what quarterbacks are supposed to do. When we lose, it’s me. When we win, it’s me.
Notre Dame beats Penn State 27-24, Advances to CFP Final

Penn State’s weak link was exposed.
Ohio State began to show some of what I call “eye candy” plays in the fourth quarter, particularly on its game-winning touchdown drive. Yet, Texas had responded all game long with QB Quinn Ewers making some excellent plays. The Longhorns were doing that again after the Buckeyes went up 21-14, and it seemed inevitable that they’d tie the game.As for the interception, Allar is going to live with that mistake for the rest of his life. I feel bad for him in that sense. I have never played in a game of that magnitude, but I’ve thrown interceptions that will haunt me forever. Before we preview the last game of the year, let’s share my takeaways from the semifinals. Freeman is an incredible coach. Notre Dame is a team that people love to hate for a lot of reasons, but he has made Notre Dame a likeable product with the way he handles his business.It showed on the most critical play of Penn State’s season, too. That’s a tough pill to swallow for the Nittany Lions.

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College Sports
Former Alabama QB Trusts Nick Saban to ‘Save College Football’ on New NIL Commission
Legendary retired Alabama Crimson head coach Nick Saban’s involvement in President Donald Trump’s proposed NIL commission remains a subject of speculation. While Saban hasn’t outright said he’ll be on such a commission should it be created via an executive order, it appears he’s been working behind the scenes to address the state of college football, […]

Legendary retired Alabama Crimson head coach Nick Saban’s involvement in President Donald Trump’s proposed NIL commission remains a subject of speculation.
While Saban hasn’t outright said he’ll be on such a commission should it be created via an executive order, it appears he’s been working behind the scenes to address the state of college football, the transfer portal, and NIL.
Many head coaches, analysts, and former players have lamented the new landscape that is dominated by multi-million NIL deals with no guardrails on expenditures nor the transfer portal.
Many have publicly praised one of the most successful college football coaches in history for his ability to transform college sports.
Former Alabama QB A.J. McCarron Thinks Nick Saban Can Save College Football
Former Crimson Tide quarterback A.J. McCarron, who has full faith in his college head coach, is among those who endorse Saban.
In a recent episode of “The Next Round,” McCarron fully endorsed Saban as the ideal co-chair to spearhead this new NIL commission.
He also gave a brutally candid assessment of his perspective on how college football stands today.
“I’m not a fan of college football right now,” McCarron said. “I think it’s a [expletive] show with everything, and hopefully, with Saban getting co-chairman on that board helps bring some structure to it because they need it. It hurts to think about it because I missed out on a lot of money from that sense.”
McCarron went on to joke that the backpay from the House settlement should extend back to his college years, rather than ending in 2016.
It’s frankly understandable for former players to have a bitter outlook on the state of things when they weren’t privy to these million-dollar NIL deals—particularly one like McCarron, who won three consecutive national championships quarterbacking Alabama.
McCarron is not alone in expressing the urgent need for a regulated system. Many see the current landscape as untenable.
It’s not clear how this proposed commission look like, or how it will fix NIL, especially in concert with revenue sharing.
However, it appears that Saban is taking quiet steps toward a solution, as he has met with Texas Tech billionaire booster Cody Campbell to discuss what the commission might look like and what they can do.
Campbell is a former player who started the Red Raiders NIL collective and has been said to have a key role in the star-studded transfer class.
Whatever the future for the commission might look like, there probably isn’t a better-positioned legend in the sport poised to take on the challenge like Saban.
College Sports
Kansas State University
By: D. Scott Fritchen All eyes turn to Arlington, Texas. Kansas State ended its Big 12 Conference season with a 9-5 win at Cincinnati, giving the Wildcats a school-record 17 conference wins, and K-State, 31-23, currently own a 35 RPI and appear in a good position for a berth in the NCAA Regionals, which […]

All eyes turn to Arlington, Texas.
Kansas State ended its Big 12 Conference season with a 9-5 win at Cincinnati, giving the Wildcats a school-record 17 conference wins, and K-State, 31-23, currently own a 35 RPI and appear in a good position for a berth in the NCAA Regionals, which will be revealed on May 26.
But for now, K-State turns its attention to the Big 12 Baseball Championship at Globe Life Field in Arlington, starting on Wednesday. No. 6 seed K-State, 17-13, will face No. 11 Houston, 12-17, at 8:00 p.m. on Wednesday. The K-State/Houston winner will move on to play No. 3 seed TCU on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. The games will be shown on ESPN2 and ESPN+.
The 2025 Big 12 Championship, which features an increase to 12 teams, will be played in a single-elimination format for the first time.
K-State Sports Extra’s D. Scott Fritchen spoke with longtime K-State baseball broadcasters Brian Smoller and Matt Walters about the Wildcats, their season, and beyond.
D. Scott Fritchen: Every team is different. In your eyes, what is most unique about this 2025 K-State baseball team?
Brian Smoller: Good question. They are a competitive bunch. They’re so competitive at times that when they went through a slow part or low part of the season, they’re so competitive that they got down on themselves. Emotion in baseball is never a good thing. But for a team that’s relatively new with a lot of first-year guys that have transferred in, they’re remarkably close. I don’t know that I’ve been around a team that’s been this close to each other with a group of first-year players or transfers as this group is. They’re pretty tight. They do it all together. When they’re all hot, they’re all hot together. They’re on the upswing so that’s a good thing.
Matt Walters: The first thing that comes to mind is K-State has a large group of guys from the portal that have shown up in Manhattan from smaller Division I schools and have produced the most home runs in a season in school history and brought the threat of the home run to the plate in so many spots in the order.

Fritchen: What are your biggest takeaways from the Cincinnati series?
Smoller: The big takeaway is that the K-State bullpen stepped up. The bullpen had a 1.08 ERA. The development and performance of Tanner Duke and Ty Ruhl and Tazwell Butler, that gives you a very encouraging sign going into the postseason. There was one question mark going into Cincinnati and that was who they were going throw behind their starters to get some consistency in the bullpen. Some of the matchups on paper actually favored K-State’s starting pitching, and it actually ended up to be the opposite. Lincoln Sheffield was OK on Saturday but the bullpen being as good as it was is a great sign for K-State going into the post season.
Walters: Getting out with a win. I was concerned that if K-State got swept at Cincinnati that it might put K-State in harm’s way regarding the NCAA Tournament. Thursday was a game K-State could’ve easily won and things didn’t go well Friday, and to bounce back and jump on Cincinnati early, set a tone, and finish it off with a 9-5 win was huge. That meant that K-State in the last nine games of the regular season, the last nine conference games, went 5-4 and finished above .500, which sets a much better tone than going 4-5 to finish off the regular season.
Fritchen: What did this K-State team show you in its last home series against No. 12 West Virginia?
Smoller: Faced with a must-win series against a team that was playing pretty well, K-State showed great resolve and had a never-say-die attitude, and of course, the Friday night game was one of the greatest wins in that stadium’s history, coming back from six in the ninth. It just shows you how tight this team is that they have great belief in each other and in their coaches. It’s fun when teams like that, that try that hard and care that much, when it actually pays off and you get wins like that. We saw great performances from Seth Dardar and Keegan O’Connor and all the guys who’ve hit so well at home, and then the pitching performances that the Cats got. It’s fun. It’s a great ride as a broadcaster and a great ride as a fan to see teams that care have it all pay off. That was the culmination of West Virginia, and it really cemented their place in the postseason.
Walters: This has been one of the most special teams at home I can ever recall. This is a team that’s a different team at home for whatever reason. They believe they can come from behind and score and do the necessary things to win games, and against West Virginia they showed that. It’s not the best of habits to fall behind by 5, 6 or 7 runs against a team like West Virginia, who’s had an incredible year. But to be able to move the line, to stretch some things together, and to produce some home runs in there to eradicate a big deficit in the first ballgame of the series, and then to have your heart ripped out late in the ballgame in the Sunday contest and to hang a seven spot on the board screams volumes about this team. They only lost three times in Manhattan all year, which is a spectacular accomplishment.
Fritchen: What most makes this K-State squad a dangerous team heading into the Big 12 Tournament?
Smoller: One of the positives is K-State tries to play a game in Globe Life early in the season, so the surroundings aren’t new. Teams get in there and they’re wowed by the Major League ballpark and the aura of being in the home of the Rangers, and they’re in their locker room, and in their cages. Everything is first rate. So, some of that can kind of distract you from the mission at hand. I don’t think K-State will be distracted. They know they’ll be playing next week. They go in and they’re playing some teams that they’ve played before, and they’ve won in that park already this year. They’re a pretty confident group going into Arlington and feel like they have a chance to make some noise.
Walters: If most everybody is clicking and this team is on the same page, not just in the Big 12 Tournament but in the postseason, it can be very dangerous because of the long-ball potential really anywhere in the order, once again. It’s a team that if you make mistakes, they can make you pay in a big way. If K-State is getting guys on base at the top of the order and guys are driving them in and they’re able to run a little bit and just playing the game like they did at home much of the year, they’re going to be a load to beat. K-State just has to go about its business, not think too much, just play the game. You’ve won 30-plus games and are going to be the field of 64. Just be smart, play smart, do the right thing, and you’re going to have a chance to win some ballgames.

Fritchen: In your mind, why is K-State a NCAA Regional team this year?
Smoller: The schedule has played out exactly as you’d hoped if you’re K-State. They’ve won enough games away from home and have beaten good teams enough that they’re RPI is a great strength. Unfortunately, in college baseball, you don’t have a NET ranking or a College Football Playoff Committee that evaluates teams based on metrics beyond the RPI. College baseball is still trying to figure that out. They have a committee that meets but the RPI is the main metric, and until that changes, you have to figure out how to get the RPI in your favor. Pete Hughes and his staff have done a great job of scheduling in a way that allows K-State to get a high RPI. They’re sitting at 35 in the RPI, and the strength of schedule is really good and they have 31 wins and a number of Quad 1 and Quad 2 wins and zero Quad 4 losses. That resonates as good as it gets. They’ll be a No. 3 seed and go somewhere, but as we saw last year, that makes them a dangerous team.
Walters: The fact that they went 17-13 in the Big 12 and had some very quality non-conference wins helped immensely. This is a team that, when it plays with an edge, is a much better baseball team. For whatever reason, this team has struggled on the road, but what’s done is done, you’ve earned your spot into the field of 64, and now you have to prove you belong in the field of 64, and I think this team can. We’ve talked a lot about offense, but the pitching has to uphold its end of the bargain, and there are some guys who have to do a little bit more. K-State maybe needs a little longer starts, and we’ll see if Coach Hughes moves anything around, but pitching and defense has to help out the offense. If K-State plays all three aspects well, they have a chance to rattle some cages, but it can’t just be an offensive postseason for K-State because they’re going to run into teams that are equally if not better offensively. The pitching and defense need to carry some mail here in the postseason.
Fritchen: How do you think the start of the season against No. 6 North Carolina, No. 5 Arkansas, Michigan, No. 22 TCU and No. 2 LSU most benefited this K-State team from the outset?
Smoller: Not only did they play those teams and were competitive, but they won most of those games and then had a chance to win against North Carolina and should’ve won the game against LSU. That showed that this team, they have this belief, and they talk about it all the time, that when they play well, they’re as good as anybody in the country. That’s what separates this team perhaps from some other K-State teams. The talent on this team was evident in those early weeks. We were in Arlington watching the team take batting practice, and I shook my head and told the coaches, “This is an embarrassment of riches. I don’t remember a team that is as talented just individually talented as this team.” They said, “Yeah, we’re pretty excited about this team. We just don’t know where it’s going to go yet.” Every team goes through its ups and downs, but when this team is on, they have the talent to compete with anybody in the country.
Walters: It showed them what they can do and what their potential is. I’m hoping this baseball team remembers that and remembers how it played in Frisco and plays that way now because nobody else is going to give K-State much of a chance to get out of a regional and get to super regional like they did last year. So, if you just play smart baseball, do the right things, move the guy in front of you, and do your part as a player, and hold up your end of the bargain, I think K-State very easily could get to a super regional. But it’s going to take a collective effort. From what happened in that very first weekend and what happened in Arlington and Frisco, that struck an early fire in this baseball team, and I hope they can rekindle it in Arlington and wherever they land in the NCAA Tournament, because this team has the potential to be very, very dangerous, and one you don’t want to play.

Fritchen: What do you consider to be the biggest strengths of this K-State team?
Smoller: Offensively, I think that’s where it starts. The three things that Pete Hughes loves to talk about are home runs, walks and stolen bases. When they’re getting on the base or hitting home runs, they’re really hard to beat. We saw it in the Cincinnati game on Saturday. Cincinnati had a lot of momentum from the first two games of the series, and then it’s their Senior Day and they have a very large and experienced senior class, and K-State just battered them in the first three innings, put up nine runs, and that game was effectively over at that point. They can suck the life out of another team because of the threat of a long ball up and down the lineup, and right now the pitching – especially in the bullpen – is becoming a strength. This is kind of what happened last year. K-State went into the postseason and found some success with starters but their bullpen really kind of rounded into form. That’s kind of following the same path, and it gets you excited about what this team could do.
Walters: There’ve been numerous times this year when this team at the plate is going the opposite direction. When they’re hitting the opposite way, this team is that much better. Keegan O’Connor and Seth Dardar and AJ Evasco and Shintaro Inoue — when they’re letting the ball get a little deep and they go the opposite direction, that means you’re doing really good things at the plate. To me, that’s been one of the most impressive things about this squad is the ability to go to the opposite field with power.
Fritchen: What have been the biggest challenges for this K-State team?
Smoller: K-State is the only team in the Big 12 that has had the same starting rotation for every conference game. That’s a luxury that not everybody else can have, but it also means you have some guys who are maybe a little bit tired. Pete Hughes pointed that out after the Saturday start by Michael Quevedo this weekend, that he could be fatigued having thrown this many innings and in this many games, and in this many high-pressure situations. You have some depth in the bullpen to cover those guys. But starting pitching is the one area where they’re going to have to get some guys to step up the next couple weeks.
Walters: Winning on the road and finding the right mindset on the road. To me, when you play on the road, you have to play with a chip on your shoulder, because the world is against you. I don’t know that this team did that enough this year. You always have to be careful of the sweep, and I know it was highly disappointing to get swept in Stillwater and especially to get swept in Lawrence. Now when you get to the NCAA Tournament, you’ll likely be playing a top seed in its own ballpark and you have to be able to block everything out, believe in the guy next to you defensively, and the guy hitting behind you and in front of you in the order, and believe in the guys on the mound, and you have to go take it like K-State did last year in Fayetteville because they’re not going to give it to you.

Fritchen: For K-State fans who might see the Wildcats in action for the first time in the next couple weeks, who are some MVPs on this squad that fans should know about?
Smoller: I’d start with David Bishop, who is an unspoken MVP. We talked with him about two weeks ago about this team’s knack after losing to BYU and coming back so strongly and just being able to bounce back, and he mentioned that he had taken on a little bit more of a leadership role and a vocal role. I think the leadership role on this team is a really big strength, and he is one of those key guys. For a guy who never in his career has really been a big hitter, as far as putting up eye-popping numbers, he’s having a great finish. He’s playing outstanding baseball, had the three-run home run here the other day, and you can just see him taking on more of a captain role for K-State. He just bleeds purple. He’s definitely a guy to watch. He’s helped lengthen the lineup quite a bit.
Keegan O’Connor has put up All-Big 12 First Team numbers and is one home run shy of breaking the school record. He’s another guy K-State can really lean on. Truthfully, there are probably five or six who are playing outstanding baseball here down the stretch, and that’s what makes them so dangerous. It’s really not one guy you can focus on because as soon as I mention those two players, I’m thinking of three others.
Walters: To have guys come into the program from lower Division I programs and produce like some of the studs in big Division I programs has been beyond rewarding. Keegan O’Connor, Seth Dardar, Shintaro Inoue. A guy we haven’t talked about enough is David Bishop. You look at his five-RBI game on Saturday, and he’s a rock at first base and he’s just been incredible down the stretch. There are so many other guys, too, but that’s where you start because if you go back and look at it, the fact K-State lost the entire middle of its defense and the fact that you win 30-plus games again, finish sixth in the Big 12, and go to the NCAA Tournament again, that speaks volumes. You don’t just lose your catcher, your shortstop, your second baseman and your center fielder and have that kind of success the next year.
Fritchen: What can you say about the job Pete Hughes and his staff have done in Hughes’ seventh season as K-State head coach?
Smoller: I can’t say enough about Pete. First of all, he’s just a great guy to be around. Having done this for 25-plus years now, there are few coaches that make me laugh harder than Pete Hughes. He is just hilarious, and he’s always got great one-liners and keeps the guys loose, keeps the guys accountable, and he does a good job of delivering the message of what they need to do for each game. He relies on analytics and on his staff quite a bit, but he does a good job balancing that with good common sense. He’s one win shy of 200 in his career at K-State, making him the fastest coach to 200 wins in school history based on the number of games. He’s every bit deserving of that. He and his staff are fantastic. It really shows that even at K-State, if you have a coaching staff that’s completely aligned in the mission and in knowing exactly who you want to recruit and who your identity is as a team, and you go and recruit to that and stay true to that, and you work as a staff and you’re all on the same page, you can really do some special things.
Walters: With the incredible turnover compared to 2024, Coach Hughes and the entire staff deserve a big pat on the back, because there was no Kaelen Culpepper or Brady Day and there weren’t the name players, so to speak, and the coaches were able to get this team to believe early on, and when this team played with that chip on its shoulder and played without thinking too much and carefree and with that heart and passion, that’s what you have to do. This is a team that, after getting swept at Oklahoma State or at KU, could’ve gone the wrong way, but this team has stayed the course. It hasn’t produced a 15-game winning streak or a nine-game losing streak. There’s been a level of consistency, and now they have to turn that up a notch as we look to the postseason.
College Sports
Big Ten coach calls NIL spending “insanity” — but sees opportunity
As the NIL era turns college football into a financial arms race, Illinois head coach Bret Bielema isn’t mincing words: “Insanity, at its best.” With top-tier programs reportedly pushing $35–40 million annually in NIL roster spending, Bielema’s blunt take on the shifting landscape is a wake-up call for fans and administrators alike. His Fighting Illini […]
As the NIL era turns college football into a financial arms race, Illinois head coach Bret Bielema isn’t mincing words: “Insanity, at its best.”
With top-tier programs reportedly pushing $35–40 million annually in NIL roster spending, Bielema’s blunt take on the shifting landscape is a wake-up call for fans and administrators alike. His Fighting Illini finished 10–3 recently on a modest $5 million NIL budget — a fraction of what others are spending to chase wins.
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“Last year, we finished fifth in our conference, 18-team conference,” Bielema said during an interview with SiriusXM College Sports Radio. “We had about a $5 million pool… but the four teams ahead of us, I think, were north of $20 million.”
That budget gap, he warns, is unsustainable for programs like Illinois to overcome consistently. One strong season might be possible, but year after year? “That’s just not in the deck of cards that we’re dealt.”
Bielema isn’t just venting. His concern comes as the House v. NCAA settlement looms — a potential turning point that could standardize NIL dealings and introduce revenue sharing. He believes the current system, full of unregulated dollars and inconsistent guardrails, can’t last.
“This is the last… NIL world that’s really uncharted, unprotected and… without consequences,” he said. “There’s probably some growing pains we’ve got to go through.”
Illinois Fighting Illini head coach Bret Bielema.Matthew O’Haren-Imagn Images
Still, he sees value in NIL — especially for athletes. “It’s also awesome for our kids,” he noted. But parity is essential. Bielema put it simply: “Whether we’re all shopping at Walmart or Louis Vuitton, as long as we’re all shopping in the same mall, I can live with that.”
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As NIL continues to evolve, Bielema’s message is clear: structure is key. For college football to thrive, the playing field must be leveled — or at least regulated.
Related: Jeremiah Smith’s $4M NIL valuation continues to rise with new deal
Related: Tulane Football unleashes better NIL structure than some P4 programs
College Sports
Gardner Fills Out Football Coaching Staff Ahead of 2025 Campaign
Jim Pierce Football 5/19/2025 2:54:00 PM Jarod Minassian Three newcomers and two promotions finalize the Skyhawks’ 2025 football staff Story Links EASTON, Mass. (May 19, 2025) – Stonehill College Football head coach Eli Gardner announced the addition […]


Jim Pierce
Football
Jarod Minassian
Three newcomers and two promotions finalize the Skyhawks’ 2025 football staff
EASTON, Mass. (May 19, 2025) – Stonehill College Football head coach Eli Gardner announced the addition of three new coaches and the promotion of two assistants to round out the Skyhawks coaching staff going into the 2025 season.
The 2025 Skyhawk coaching additions include:
Dan Hebert – Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks
Zahneer Shuler – Wide Receivers
Thomas Walsh – Video Coordinator/Tight Ends
Along with the new coaching additions, returning coaches Jerry Maher – Special Teams Coordinator/Running backs, and Dylan Berardelli – Run Game Coordinator/Offensive Line, received promotions from their previous positions.
Hebert was named Offensive Coordinator and Quarterbacks coach in March after most recently spending the 2024 season as the Wide Receivers coach at Dartmouth College. In his lone season with the Big Green, the team posted an 8-2 record and won the Ivy League. He helped guide Big Green wide receiver Paxton Scott to an All-Ivy League Honorable Mention with 34 catches and 411 receiving yards in just six games played.
Hebert also has experience at the University of Kentucky, where he assisted with quarterbacks and running backs, including NFL draftees, quarterback Will Levis of the Tennessee Titans, and running back Ray Davis of the Buffalo Bills. Hebert coached and played at Central Connecticut State and was a two-year team captain for the Blue Devils.
“Hebert has a great background and brings great energy to our program,” said Coach Gardner. “He has great experience coaching at both the FBS and FCS levels, including a successful coaching and playing career in the NEC. The players love the direction Dan is taking our offense, and I am excited for his future here.”
Shuler will enter his first season as the Wide Receivers coach for the Stonehill Football program ahead of the 2025 season. He joins the staff after spending the past season at McKendree University, where he was the Bearcats’ wide receivers coach and recruiting coordinator.
At McKendree, Shuler helped guide two receivers to all-conference honors as the Bearcats finished second in the conference in passing yards while also assisting with various operational duties.
Shuler also spent two seasons at Notre Dame College (OH), where he was the wide receivers coach, leading two student-athletes to all-conference honors. He also assisted in special teams drills on top of receiver and recruiting duties. Shuler began his coaching career with a one-year stint at Lackawanna College, where he was the wide receivers coach and recruiting coordinator.
Shuler played two seasons at Lackawanna College, earning himself the role of team captain as well as Second Team All-Conference honors before transferring to the University of New Mexico. At New Mexico, Shuler played both tight end and running back and was named to the 2018 All-Region Team.
“Zahneer has great energy, along with a technical approach to coaching,” said Coach Gardner. “He has multiple coaching stops already in his young career and brings a good knowledge foundation. He is clear and direct in his coaching, and our guys gravitate towards him and his approach.”
Walsh returns to his alma mater to begin his first season as Video Coordinator and Tight Ends coach. Most recently, Walsh spent the past season at Wagner College, where he was the Offensive Line Coach, Run Game Coordinator, and an Offensive Quality Control Coach for the Seahawks football program.
A 2024 Stonehill graduate, Walsh was a five-year starter on the offensive line, a two-time team captain, and was named to the NE10 All-Conference Second Team and the Phil Steele FCS All-NEC Team. Walsh also interned in the Stonehill Equipment room as a student-athlete.
“Having Tom return to Stonehill was a no-brainer when the opportunity presented itself,” said Coach Gardner. “He was an extremely successful student-athlete and former captain of our program. He knows and loves Stonehill, and that comes out in his approach in recruiting and coaching. He provides great perspective and relatability for our student-athletes.”
With coaches entering and departing ahead of the 2025 season, Gardner promoted both Dylan Berardelli and Jerry Maher with new titles and responsibilities.
Berardelli will retain his role as Offensive Line coach while beginning his first stint as Run Game Coordinator for the Skyhawks. For the past three seasons, Berardelli has been the O-Line coach, guiding multiple Skyhawks to All-Conference honors, including Walsh and David Satkowski, ’24, who most recently played professionally in the United Football League (UFL) with the DC Defenders.
Satkowski became the first Stonehill football player to receive a minicamp invitation from an NFL team when he participated in the Chicago Bears’ offseason program. Berardelli has also coached at Rice University, Kenyon College, and Western New England. He played four seasons at Hamilton College and was a four-year starter at left guard before becoming a team captain.
“Berardelli has done a great job of developing our offensive line room and maintaining the culture we have,” said Coach Gardner. “He is extremely intelligent and thoughtful in his approach, and his guys play hard. He has a shared vision for the style of offense we want to run and will continue to help us win games up front.”
After spending the past three seasons as Video Coordinator and Running Backs coach, Maher will take on the new role of Special Teams Coordinator while retaining his responsibilities with the running backs.
Maher has guided the Stonehill rushing attack to new heights, which includes three straight seasons with at least 10 rushing touchdowns and the top rushing attack in the Northeast Conference in 2022 when the Skyhawks rushed for 21 touchdowns and over 200 yards per game. Along with his work on offense, Maher has also worked with various special teams units over the past two seasons.
“Maher did a great job overseeing multiple special teams units the last 2 seasons, which made the decision easy for me to expand his role,” said Coach Gardner. “He is very organized, thoughtful, and direct in his coaching philosophy. I am excited for him to play a larger role on Special Teams and for him to provide the edge we need to win that phase of the game.”
Stonehill football will open its 12-game 2025 season on August 30 in Fairfield, Conn., when the Skyhawks take on Sacred Heart University to begin their fourth Division I campaign. The first game at the comforts of W.B. Mason Stadium will be on Saturday, Sept. 6, with Lafayette College making the trip to Easton, Mass.
For the latest on Stonehill Athletics, follow the Skyhawks via social media on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.
College Sports
O’Brien named UMD captain for 2025-26 – Duluth News Tribune
DULUTH — Minnesota Duluth redshirt junior forward Mary Kate O’Brien is receiving a promotion for her redshirt senior season, being named captain of the Bulldogs women’s hockey program for 2025-26. O’Brien was an alternate captain for UMD in 2024-25 when she scored seven goals and 18 assists for a collegiate-high 25 points. The Wilbraham, Massachusetts, […]

DULUTH — Minnesota Duluth redshirt junior forward Mary Kate O’Brien is receiving a promotion for her redshirt senior season, being named captain of the Bulldogs women’s hockey program for 2025-26.
O’Brien was an alternate captain for UMD in 2024-25 when she scored seven goals and 18 assists for a collegiate-high 25 points. The Wilbraham, Massachusetts, native received a medical redshirt her freshman year after missing all but three games due to injury. She graduated from UMD this spring with degrees in business analytics and marketing but will return as a graduate student to work on a Master of Business Administration in 2025-26.
Defenseman Tova Henderson, who will be a senior next year, and forward
Grace Sadura,
a junior in 2025-26, will serve as first-time alternate captains for UMD. Henderson, of Richmond, British Columbia, was an All-WCHA second-team pick in 2024-25. Chanhassen’s Sadura posted a collegiate-high six goals and eight assists for 14 points as a sophomore.
O’Brien is UMD’s lone returning captain after graduating senior defenseman and alternate captain Hanna Baskin, as well as fifth-year senior co-captains Clara Van Wieren and Nina Jobst-Smith. UMD is replacing its nine seniors and fifth-year seniors with
five transfers and eight freshmen in 2025-26.
College Sports
Comparing Shedeur Sanders’ NIL Earnings at Colorado to Browns Contract
Shedeur Sanders made things official with the Cleveland Browns on Monday when the quarterback signed his rookie contract. While the NFL gives Sanders the chance to make plenty of money, his first contract might not compare to what he was bringing in at Colorado last season. Per NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero, Sanders’ rookie deal is […]

Shedeur Sanders made things official with the Cleveland Browns on Monday when the quarterback signed his rookie contract.
While the NFL gives Sanders the chance to make plenty of money, his first contract might not compare to what he was bringing in at Colorado last season. Per NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero, Sanders’ rookie deal is a four-year, $4.6 million contract with a $447,380 signing bonus.
His exact NIL earnings aren’t clear, but On3 gave him a valuation of $6.5 million last season.
The good news for Sanders is that he’ll likely keep many of his partnerships from college, like his deals with Nike, Beats by Dre and Gatorade. Sanders is also one of the biggest names in this year’s rookie class, so he’ll have plenty of other endorsements heading his way soon.
Sanders’ rookie contract could have been worth much more had he not faced a historic slide after being widely projected as a first-round draft pick. The NFL grants higher rookie salaries to players who were drafted earlier, meaning a first-rounder’s salary is much higher than a fifth-rounder like Sanders.
Per Spotrac, No. 1 overall pick Cam Ward will get a four-year deal worth $48.757 million and a $32.1 million signing bonus. Sanders’ Colorado teammate, Travis Hunter, will get a $46.571 million contract with a $30.509 million signing bonus.
The lost money is something Sanders can’t ignore, but he now has the chance to use it as motivation to get a massive payday when it’s time to sign his second contract.
Sanders was one of the most talented quarterbacks in the draft, throwing for 4,134 yards and 37 touchdowns in his final season at Colorado. He was the No. 2 quarterback on the final big board from Bleacher Report’s NFL Scouting Department, only behind Ward.
Unfortunately, some mistakes from Sanders during the draft process meant teams passed on him until the fifth round, but he’ll look to let his play do the talking this fall.
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