NIL
2025 WCWS finals preview
Bill ConnellyJun 4, 2025, 08:00 AM ET Close Bill Connelly is a writer for ESPN. He covers college football, soccer and tennis. He has been at ESPN since 2019. Open Extended Reactions As it turns out, there were multiple ways to end the Oklahoma softball dynasty. Coach Mike White and Texas methodically laid a foundation, […]

As it turns out, there were multiple ways to end the Oklahoma softball dynasty.
Coach Mike White and Texas methodically laid a foundation, brick by brick, first getting to super regionals, then reaching the Women’s College World Series championship series twice before falling to the Sooners both times. With a rugged, experienced team that snapped out of a late-season funk at the last possible moment, the Longhorns took down Oklahoma for the first time ever in the WCWS on Saturday, snagging a 4-2 win on their way to a third championship series in four years.
Texas Tech, meanwhile, just went out and signed the best player in the country last summer. That worked, too. NiJaree Canady led the Red Raiders to their first WCWS this season, allowing just one run in two wins, then outlasted Oklahoma’s Sam Landry in a thrilling 3-2 victory on Monday night.
A breathless and thrilling WCWS, one that has featured walk-off home runs, pitching duels, late-night extra-inning affairs and, now, a fallen champion, will get the fitting ending it deserves.
Texas and Texas Tech will meet for the national title in a best-of-three series starting Wednesday at 8 p.m. ET on ESPN. It will be the first title for whoever prevails.
Let’s preview the championship series!
Jump to:
The basics | Last meeting
How did Kavan bounce back?
How to hit Canady’s pitch
Prediction
The basics
Texas Longhorns
Coach: Mike White (seventh year)
Record: 54-11 (9-6 vs. other WCWS teams)
The Longhorns finished third in their first SEC campaign, but after a spectacular 39-3 start, they entered the postseason having gone just 7-7 in their last 14 games. After spending a good chunk of the season ranked No. 1 in the country, they drew just the No. 6 seed in the NCAA tournament.
Postseason path (8-1):
Regionals: def. Eastern Illinois (10-2), def. Michigan (16-4), def. UCF (9-0)
Super regionals: lost to No. 11 Clemson (7-4), def. No. 11 Clemson (7-5), def. No. 11 Clemson (6-5)
WCWS: def. No. 3 Florida (3-0), def. No. 2 Oklahoma (4-2), def. No. 7 Tennessee (2-0)
Runners on second and third with no outs in the bottom of the eighth. In MLB, that scenario produces a run over 80% of the time, and that’s what ace Teagan Kavan was facing against a smoking-hot Clemson team in a must-win Game 2 in the Austin Super Regional. It had quickly begun to look like a “peaked too early” sort of season for both Texas and Kavan. But she generated a strikeout, a lineout and a groundout to escape the jam.
The Longhorns small-balled a couple of runs in the top of the 10th inning, and Kavan closed out a 5⅔-inning, no-run relief performance after getting out of one more potential jam at the bottom of the 10th.
Texas survived Game 3 against Clemson and, given life once more, shifted back into gear in Oklahoma City. Kavan has been the best pitcher in the WCWS (17 innings, 0.41 ERA, no extra-base hits allowed), and the Longhorns ruthlessly went 3-0 against a loaded top half of the bracket.
Texas Tech
Coach: Gerry Glasco (first year)
Record: 53-12 (3-2 vs. other WCWS teams)
After signing a record-setting NIL deal to play in Lubbock, Canady has been as good as advertised all season, leading the nation in wins (33), ERA (0.90) and both batting average allowed (0.153) and slugging percentage allowed (0.221). Through late March, Tech was still just 24-9 overall, having scored either zero or one run in five of its nine losses. Since the Red Raiders’ late March series loss to South Carolina, however, they are 29-3, and they have yet to lose in the NCAA tournament.
Postseason path (8-0):
Regionals: def. Brown (6-0), def. Mississippi State (10-1), def. Mississippi State (9-6)
Super regionals: def. No. 5 Florida State (3-0), def. No. 5 Florida State (2-1)
WCWS: def. Ole Miss (1-0), def. No. 9 UCLA (3-1), def. No. 2 Oklahoma (3-2)
The Tech offense has improved down the stretch, and while it’s still merely good and not great, it has backed Canady with multiple runs in seven of eight postseason games. And she doesn’t tend to need more than that. In four games against seeded opponents, Tech has scored 11 runs and allowed just four. Canady led Stanford to the national semifinals in each of the past two seasons, but in four WCWS losses for Canady, the Cardinal were shut out three times (including twice by Texas’ Kavan last year). She has gotten more support than that this time around, and it has made a world of difference.
Perhaps most encouragingly, after Canady allowed a game-tying, two-run home run in the top of the seventh against Oklahoma on Monday evening — the Sooners’ bats didn’t produce enough runs in OKC this year, but they still filled their “dramatic seventh-inning homers” quota — Tech immediately responded, grinding out a run in the bottom of the seventh to win anyway.
1:52
Texas Tech shocks the softball world, upsets Oklahoma
Scott Van Pelt reacts to Texas Tech’s incredible upset over Oklahoma to reach their first ever Women’s College World Series Championship Series.
The Red Raiders came to the WCWS as underdogs, but at this point, they have the confidence of title favorites.
Looking back at this year’s meetings
Texas went 2-0 against Tech in the Bevo Classic in February. At least one of those wins might turn out to be pretty relevant.
Feb. 14 (Austin): Texas 2, Texas Tech 1 (nine innings)
Starters: Kavan (9 IP, 4 H, 1 ER, 18 K, 1 BB) vs. Canady (8 IP, 7 H, 1 ER, 11 K, 1 BB)
Key hitting performances: Texas’ Mia Scott: 2-for-3 with a double and an RBI; Texas’ Ashton Maloney: 1-for-3 with a double and a run scored; Tech’s Mihyia Davis: 2-for-4
We got an early-season title-series preview, and Kavan put up a record-setting performance. Tech went ahead 1-0 in the fourth on an RBI single from Anya German, but a Scott double drove in Ashton Maloney in the fifth to send the game to extra innings. Canady was of course excellent, but Kavan struck out a career-best 18 batters, and the top three hitters in the Tech order — Davis, Alana Johnson and Lauren Allred — struck out nine times between them. In the bottom of the ninth, Joley Mitchell scored on a throwing error, and the Horns prevailed.
Editor’s Picks2 RelatedFeb. 16 (Austin): Texas 11, Texas Tech 0 (five innings)Starters: Kavan (4 IP, 6 H, 0 ER, 5 K, 1 BB) vs. Samantha Lincoln (0.0 IP, 1 H, 2 ER, 1 BB)Key hitting performances: Texas’ Katie Stewart: 3-for-3 with a HR, a double, 5 RBIs and 2 runs; Texas’ Reese Atwood: 1-for-1 with a HR, an RBI, 2 BB and 3 runs; Texas’ Joley Mitchell: 1-for-2 with a triple, 2 RBIs and a run scored; Tech’s Davis: 2-for-3With Canady resting in this matchup, it is not quite as relevant — Texas batters are probably not going to see someone other than Canady in the coming days unless something goes haywire. That said, Tech batters did get a few more cracks at Kavan and did very little with them.Overall, Kavan pitched 13 innings against the Red Raiders this season and allowed just one earned run and 10 hits with nearly two strikeouts per inning. That was a nice rebound for her after a couple of iffy performances against Tech last season, but besides Demi Elder (2-for-5 with four RBIs against Kavan), none of the players who were decent against her in 2024 are still in the Red Raiders’ lineup.How did Teagan Kavan turn it back on?For a little while, it appeared as if the proverbial SEC grind was catching up to both Texas and Kavan. After a 39-3 start, the Longhorns went 7-7 from April 12 through the SEC tournament, and Kavan pretty clearly lost her edge.Date rangeRecordERAWHIPOBPPct. in zoneGB/FB*Through April 1218-21.420.88.24459.8%1.05April 13 through Supers6-34.911.65.36447.2%1.60WCWS2-00.410.82.23154.4%1.42(* GB/FB = ground ball-to-fly ball ratio)Kavan gave up three runs in four innings in a 4-1 loss to Tennessee, then allowed a combined eight runs (five earned) in higher-scoring wins over LSU (7-3 and 6-5) the next weekend. Oklahoma absolutely walloped her in a three-game sweep in Norman — she gave up six earned runs in 2⅓ innings in a 7-6 loss, then eight in 2 innings in a 9-8 loss — and in the following weeks, Ole Miss scored six, Michigan scored four and Clemson scored five against her. She was nibbling too much, missing the strike zone more, getting herself into more hitter’s counts and allowing far too many baserunners.At the WCWS, that has all changed. Back at Devon Park, where she had two brilliant outings against Canady and Stanford in 2024, she reverted to form. She’s getting ahead of hitters again, she’s keeping the ball in the strike zone but varying her locations better, and she’s simply not letting batters make any good contact whatsoever.Here are the hit locations for Florida and Oklahoma — the teams that finished the season ranked second and fourth in home runs — in Kavan’s first two WCWS games this season. (She came in in relief against Tennessee on Monday after No. 2 pitcher Mac Morgan pitched four scoreless innings.)
Kavan vs. Florida and Oklahoma TruMediaOf 56 Sooners and Gator batters faced, only about six made genuinely threatening contact, and all six flew out to center or right field. Oklahoma and Florida have incredibly powerful lineups, and the Sooners had throttled Kavan pretty well, both in April and in last season’s WCWS. She forced both the Gators and Sooners to settle for singles.Now Kavan faces a Tech lineup she shut down twice in February. Tech has been able to generate runs — though rarely a ton of them (and almost none against Kavan) — in a variety of ways. This isn’t an incredibly deep batting order, but the Red Raiders have a little bit of speed, power and patience.Mihyia Davis, 4-for-7 against Kavan back in February, leads the team in total bases (123), stolen bases (26) and runs scored (64), and she’s second in extra-base hits (21, including 10 doubles and six triples). She’s a solid chaos agent at the top of the order. Behind her, No. 3 hitter Lauren Allred is a solid doubles hitter (she’s second on the team with a 1.071 OPS), and Canady herself, the cleanup hitter, leads the team with a 1.121 OPS and 11 home runs in just 101 at-bats. She has three postseason homers, though she’s just 1-for-8 with a double and a walk in the WCWS. The bottom half of the order, meanwhile, with players like Alana Johnson and catcher Victoria Valdez, basically just tries to soak up pitches before turning things back over to Davis at the top.Success against Kavan was hard to come by in February, and with Kavan raising her game in Oklahoma City, that might remain the case. But if there’s consolation here for the Red Raiders, it’s that their ace might keep Tech in games long enough for the batters to figure something out.
How do you hit a NiJaree Canady pitch?It’s just jaw-dropping how much Canady continues to live up to the hype. She now has made 11 WCWS appearances in three seasons, and in 65⅔ innings pitched she has allowed just 37 hits with a 1.18 ERA and 77 strikeouts. When her team gives her any run support whatsoever, she wins, and it’s patently unfair that she has hit as many home runs this season (11) as she has allowed.In terms of both keeping opponents off the bases and giving up little power, she has been the best pitcher in the sport this season.
Slugging percentage allowed vs. on-base percentage allowed TruMediaThe history of sports is littered with stories of players signing prolific contracts but failing to deliver on them. Canady, however, signed a jaw-dropping NIL deal — one that honestly shifted paradigms for women’s sports as a whole — and then simply went out and earned her money, start after start.
It’s hard to figure out the best way to quantify Canady’s dominance because it’s so thorough. So, let’s actually look at the stats in a different way: When someone has success against Canady, what does it look like? Heading into her Monday night outing against Oklahoma, here’s where batters have gotten their hits against Canady:
Hits vs. Canady (through May 30) TruMediaThe right-handed Canady allows nearly the same overall batting stats against right- and left-handed batters (she has allowed a .450 OPS against lefties and a .437 OPS against righties), but she gives up vastly different contact against them:Canady vs. lefties: .173 batting average allowed, 36.4% strikeout rate, 2.5% BB rate, 4.07 pitches per batter faced, 0.8% home run rate, 1.16 GB/FBCanady vs. righties: .141 batting average allowed, 34.7% strikeouts, 7.2% BB rate, 4.24 pitches per batter faced, 1.7% home run rate, 0.39 GB/FBAgainst lefties, she keeps the ball on the ground and gives up a higher batting average, but it’s almost all singles. Righties, however, get fewer hits but are far more likely to work deep into the count and potentially make good contact.No one in Texas’ righty-heavy lineup really did so back in February — almost no one even reached the outfield, and both of the Longhorns’ extra-base hits were doubles down the third-base line — but if Texas does have success against Canady in the coming days, it’s likely to come from star righties like Reese Atwood (1.354 OPS, 21 HRs, 86 RBIs), Joley Mitchell (1.276 OPS, 17 HRs, 63 RBIs) or Katie Stewart (1.166 OPS, 17 HRs, 78 RBIs) pulling a ball deep to left. They went a combined 1-for-11 against Canady in February, but they’ve been dynamite for most of 2025. Lefty Mia Scott (1.182 OPS, 8 HRs, 55 RBIs), meanwhile, did go 2-for-3 against her as well.
PredictionWhoever wins in the coming days, it will feel like the culmination of a journey — either that of White’s Longhorns or of Canady herself. Kavan and Canady have combined for just a 0.74 ERA thus far in the WCWS, and it’s therefore almost impossible not to envision a scrappy, low-scoring series decided by random, great individual at-bats.Since Texas has the deeper offense, and since Kavan has been Canady’s equal in OKC, the Longhorns are the obvious favorites here; in fact, ESPN BET gives Texas (-225) equivalent odds of 64.7% over Tech (+165).
With the incredible drama this WCWS has produced, we deserve a Game 3, so I’ll say Texas in 3. The Horns have the overall edge, but Canady and her increasingly confident teammates will give themselves a chance at another couple of upset wins.
NIL
The Journey of Nebraska Football Jacob Bower
In an era where college football is increasingly defined by transfer portal headlines and NIL deals, Jacob Bower’s story cuts through the noise with raw authenticity. A former walk-on who once paid his way just to be part of the Nebraska program, Bower has transformed himself into a scholarship linebacker and a symbol of everything […]

In an era where college football is increasingly defined by transfer portal headlines and NIL deals, Jacob Bower’s story cuts through the noise with raw authenticity.
A former walk-on who once paid his way just to be part of the Nebraska program, Bower has transformed himself into a scholarship linebacker and a symbol of everything the Huskers hope to build under head coach Matt Rhule. His journey, from scout team reps to spring standout, isn’t just a feel-good tale. It’s a blueprint for the kind of player development that still matters in Lincoln.
Bower’s rise from walk-on to scholarship linebacker at Nebraska is the kind of story that reminds fans why they love college football. At just 10 years old, Bower wasn’t chasing tackles; he was singing in a traveling church choir. But during a performance stop at Memorial Stadium, something shifted.
Bower fell in love with Nebraska football, planting the seed for a journey that would one day bring him back, not as a visitor, but as a linebacker.
The Rancho Santa Margarita, California, native had a full ride waiting at Army, with the chance to play rugby and earn a free education. But the pull of Nebraska was stronger. He turned down certainty for a shot at something bigger, walking on in Lincoln and footing the bill himself, all to chase a dream that started in the stands of Memorial Stadium.
Jacob Bower walked on to Lincoln in 23 to little fanfare,using a RS & developing he continued 24 by playing in 6 games!Getting better every day Bower in 25 has earned a scholarship and will surprise fans this season & has a big future ahead!We are 54 days out til Husker Kickoff! pic.twitter.com/yeNxcgvUQp
— Tyler Pedersen (@TylerSPedersen) July 5, 2025
After piling up 174 tackles, 6.5 sacks, and 4 interceptions over his final two seasons at Santa Margarita Catholic High School, Bower arrived in Lincoln in 2023 as a walk-on determined to earn his place in the Huskers’ locker room. Capping off his senior season, Bower earned a spot in the Orange County All-Star Game, where he earned recognition as one of the game’s top defensive performers.
After redshirting in his first season at Nebraska, Bower saw action in six games during the 2024 season, making his Husker debut against UTEP. He logged his first career tackle in the win over Northern Iowa, quietly beginning to carve out a role on Nebraska’s special teams and defensive depth chart.
Bower’s relentless drive and breakout spring showing in 2025 didn’t go unnoticed. During a routine practice, Rhule halted the action to deliver a moment that would redefine Bower’s journey, awarding him a scholarship in front of the entire team.
Next. Nebraska Football Season Central. Nebraska Football Season Central. dark
Bower’s path to a Nebraska scholarship wasn’t paved with headlines or shortcuts. From choir kid to walk-on to game-changer, his story is a reminder that in Lincoln, heart still matters. For the Huskers, Bower isn’t just a player; he’s proof that the dream is still alive.
Nebraska Football 2025 Schedule
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NIL
Pay to Play: College Baseball and the NCAA’s New Economy of Visibility
About 6 minutes reading time. Reginald Armstrong | Aug 12th, 2025 10:55pm EDT Apparently, a judge—Claudia Wilken—has ruled that NCAA Division I universities can now be legitimate modern-day Robin Hoods and pay “student” athletes. On June 6, 2025, she approved the House v. NCAA settlement—a federal court decision that fundamentally reshapes the NCAA’s amateurism model. […]

Reginald Armstrong | Aug 12th, 2025 10:55pm EDT

Apparently, a judge—Claudia Wilken—has ruled that NCAA Division I universities can now be legitimate modern-day Robin Hoods and pay “student” athletes. On June 6, 2025, she approved the House v. NCAA settlement—a federal court decision that fundamentally reshapes the NCAA’s amateurism model.
No more scholarship caps. A new structure for revenue-sharing. And perhaps most notably: the creation of a Name, Image, and Likeness clearinghouse for NIL deals exceeding $600—for transparency, of course.
As an additional development in the House v. NCAA settlement, attorneys have now agreed to allow NIL collectives to exceed the proposed $20.5 million revenue-sharing cap—provided deals meet a loosely defined “fair market value” threshold. This adjustment effectively softens the cap and reopens the door for high-dollar NIL arrangements, particularly among power programs with deep-pocketed boosters.
The payout? $20.5 million per school annually. How that sum gets divvied up remains unclear—I haven’t drilled down into the particulars. But let’s not kid ourselves: the lion’s share will likely be funneled toward college football and men’s basketball.
Still—college baseball is stirring. With the 2025 College World Series freshly concluded and the transfer portal buzzing like a switchboard, this offseason isn’t idle—it’s ideological. NIL valuations, roster reshuffles, and coaching chess moves now rival the MLB draft in drama. LSU, Arkansas, and Texas A&M are stacking talent like hedge funds stack assets. We’ve entered an era where a pitcher’s arm comes attached to a media strategy.
Just look at the decisions being made now—
Dylan Loy
A lefty who pitched in Tennessee’s CWS finals and SEC title game, Loy opted to transfer to Georgia Tech rather than go pro—likely weighing brand development and NIL upside against draft uncertainty.
Gavin Kash

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One of college baseball’s top sluggers with 41 career home runs, Kash remains unsigned, evaluating portal offers with six-figure NIL implications.
Brady Neal
LSU’s promising catcher, entered the portal post-surgery and has since committed to Alabama. His stat line (.276/.408/.578 with 9 HRs) suggests future draft appeal—but his decision to stay collegiate ensures medical recovery, visibility, and a fresh start under Alabama’s rebuild.
Zach Root

Arkansas pitcher Zach Root (33) throws a pitch against Washington State during an NCAA baseball game on Friday, Feb. 14, 2025, in Fayetteville, Ark. (AP Photo/Michael Woods)
East Carolina’s lefty ace, transferred to Arkansas after injury rather than jump into the 2025 draft—presumably to reset valuation through performance and pitch under the spotlight of SEC competition.
Jason Torres
Miami’s injured first baseman committed to Alabama—choosing legacy rebuild over uncertain draft slotting.
Conner O’Neal
A senior catcher drafted in the 9th round by the Dodgers, O’Neal received a paltry $2,500 signing bonus. Meanwhile, unsigned collegians are fielding NIL deals at ten to forty times that. It’s a reversal of the path once considered inevitable.
These aren’t isolated cases. They’re proof points. College isn’t just a stop on the way to the majors—it’s a strategic platform, and sometimes, the more prosperous one.
That in turn reawakens the longstanding tension around Title IX, as questions of equitable access and compensation intersect with economic realities. Revenue sports will drive the bulk of distribution. But fairness? That depends on who’s holding the purse—and the mic.
Even Dabo Swinney, Clemson’s Head Football coach and a symbol of collegiate consistency, recently dismissed the playoff structure as doomed to “blow up in five years.” His frustration didn’t end there—it echoed the silent groan of coaches and traditionalists who see NIL, the portal, and the new power dynamics as a departure from collegiate soul, not an evolution.
And I get it. I’ve long believed that athletes—true student-athletes—deserved stipends. Even a slice of their NIL. But now? Now we’re staring down a landscape where kids not old enough to legally toast a win in some states will earn more than seasoned professionals—teachers, lawyers, even broadcasters. When that level of income arrives before the diploma, it alters incentives and confuses identity.
The most troubling part? Athletes may now weigh whether to go pro at all. The path to prosperity for many was the draft. Suiting up at the highest level wasn’t just a dream—it was survival strategy. But now, campus can be more lucrative than rookie ball. College isn’t just a proving ground—it’s become a platform. And increasingly, a destination.
I still miss the voices of Keith Jackson and Chris Schenkel. I miss when athletes stayed four years on balance, honoring the name on the front of the uniform as much as the one on the back. When a college athlete’s story began at freshman orientation and didn’t end until graduation caps flew.
As a lifelong USC Trojan supporter since 1973, I remember when the band struck up “Conquest,” the cardinal-and-gold pageantry unfolded, and Saturdays felt like sacred ritual—rooted in rhythm, pride, and continuity. The culture wasn’t curated—it was lived.
Today? Athletes hop universities like we change socks. Only now, they’re paid—legally, openly, and no longer through booster laundering.
You might call this progress. You might call it overdue. But let’s not pretend there hasn’t been a cost.
Something rooted. Something rhythmic. Something undeniably collegiate has been quietly traded for something transactional.
And as college baseball recalibrates—with expanded rosters, NIL money chasing exit velocity and ERA, and players weighing pro dreams against collegiate branding—we stand at a threshold. If the game still wants heart, it will need storytellers, not just scouts. If it wants culture, it must frame the moments that echo—beyond bat speed and box scores.
We’ve entered the age of visibility economics. The question now is: What will we show—and what will we remember?
NIL
Bill Belichick era begins at UNC :: WRALSportsFan.com
Here with WRL sports executive producer Pat Welter, Mark Bergen, it’s double duty. WRL Triangle 2 and the WREL daily download. Pat, football season is days away. And the three triangle teams UNC, Duke, NC State, a ton of storylines. So I thought, what better way to preview the season than to do a draft […]
NIL
In-house collective, intellectual property, and asset protection
The “BBNIL Suite” is now officially the in-house collective for University of Kentucky athletics. Now run by JMI, this new agency will help athlete secure third-party NIL deals in addition to the rev-share payments that will be made by school. Kentucky has officially become one of the few schools to move a collective in-house. This […]

The “BBNIL Suite” is now officially the in-house collective for University of Kentucky athletics. Now run by JMI, this new agency will help athlete secure third-party NIL deals in addition to the rev-share payments that will be made by school. Kentucky has officially become one of the few schools to move a collective in-house.
This group’s top priority will be to negotiate deals, build athlete brands, and ensure every deal passes through the newly established NIL Go clearinghouse. Kentucky is moving everything under one roof and attempting to protect the brand.
“It gives us an opportunity so that our partners are somewhat protected, Kentucky athletic director Mitch Barnhart said on Tuesday. “The intellectual property, institutional property; it’s really important that if people want to use our marks, use our facilities for part of their endorsement property, that’s part of the deal. You come to the University of Kentucky and you’re part of our family and you get to use our things, but also that’s part of the relationship. There’s a responsibility and a right that comes with that.”
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This new collective will replace Club Blue as the official collective for Kentucky athletics. However, it will not be the only avenue for athletes to try and broker NIL deals. Barnhart says that UK players can try and get deals elsewhere but it will be tricky. The UK brand will not be available if they leave the BBNIL umbrella.
“Under the rules, they can still provide NIL opportunities. They would have to go through the range of compensation in NIL Go nationally like everybody else. We think that now if they do that, they probably wouldn’t have the IP rights and those kind of things. So we’re hopeful that as we go, we can sort of keep folks focused on what has been sort of our pathway forward. We have the financial responsibility in this new world that we’ve gotta take care of,” Barnhart said. “We gotta make sure that we protect both the folks that are in the program in terms of the sponsors as well as protect our student-athletes.”
“If a couple athletes decide to go off and do their own thing, it sort of hurts the entire team. The team is stronger together in everything you do. On the field and off the field. On the court and off the court. Your marketing value and those kind of things are better if you can do those things together. There’s lots of examples of that.”
Barnhart also specifically mentioned that BBNIL would strike some individual deals when needed, but to use the Kentucky brand, athletes will need to work directly with JMI. This is important because collectives are not going away anytime soon. The SCORE Act is a bill that codifies the House settlement and will provide national framework for NIL enforcement. This would give college athletics antitrust protection and could legitimately enforce “valid business purpose” rules upon booster-drive third-party collectives. However, it needs to pass first. Schools need collectives and rev-share payments to fund programs.
The athletic department is eliminating its successful third-party collective and handing the keys over to JMI in this historic deal. UK is all-in on this new NIL venture as the school adjusts to the rev-share era.
NIL
Preseason AP Poll: First Top 25 revealed ahead of 2025 College Football Season
The preseason AP Poll is here as the top 25 rankings were revealed ahead of the 2025 college football season. It’s time to gear up for the regular season. There are plenty of national championship contenders near the top of the AP Poll. This could very well be a wide open college football season. Without […]

The preseason AP Poll is here as the top 25 rankings were revealed ahead of the 2025 college football season. It’s time to gear up for the regular season.
There are plenty of national championship contenders near the top of the AP Poll. This could very well be a wide open college football season.
Without further ado, let’s dive into the AP Poll Top 25 ahead of kickoff. We start at the top!
Texas is geared up to win a national title this season with what they have at their disposal. Arch Manning steps in at quarterback and, arguably, he’ll be the most responsible.
Steve Sarkisian has led this program to the CFP semifinals twice but it’s time to take the next step. They’re all in to become kings of the college football world.

Penn State is running it back, similar to what Big Ten foe Ohio State did last season. Drew Allar leads the charge at QB and is aided by RBs Nick Singleton and Kaytron Allen.
On defense, Dani Dennis-Sutton headlines an elite defensive unit, as they’ll collectively replace Abdul Carter. The Nittany Lions are on the short list of national title contenders.
Ohio State comes in as the defending national champions but can they win back to back? Georgia did it recently of course, but the Buckeyes have to replace their QB.
Even with someone new like Julian Sayin under center, WR Jeremiah Smith can make him look like a superstar. On defense, DB Caleb Downs is back and captains a very solid defense, despite the unit losing NFL-talent to last year’s draft.
Dabo Swinney and Clemson returned to a large national spotlight last season with their most successful year in a few seasons. Winning the ACC and returning to the CFP was just the first step.
As far as how the AP Poll sees them, this will be a very competitive team that could climb its way to national title contender. QB Cade Klubnik is the de facto leader, but there are first round picks, potentially, on defense with Peter Woods and TJ Parker on the defensive line.

Georgia comes into the season, perhaps, more under the radar than in recent seasons. The AP Poll has them high up considering this team just won the SEC and had the No. 2 seed.
Kirby Smart is arguably the best coach in college football, so thinking this team’s time at the top is done would be foolish. But a lot hinges on Gunner Stockton at QB. Good thing he has new WR Zachariah Branch (USC transfer).
Marcus Freeman and Notre Dame nearly won it all last year. If that was the case, maybe this team could’ve been No. 1 in the AP Poll!
Still, RB Jeremiyah Love is back, and he’s a Heisman contender. The defense is veteran-heavy as well. They added DB transfer DeVonta Smith (Alabama).
Oregon had a massive opportunity to make a run for a national title last year, but were picked off by Ohio State in the CFP quarterfinals. Still, the Ducks went 13-0 and won the Big Ten.
Now how do you follow that up? Dan Lanning ushers in a new quarterback in Dante Moore, keeps attacking the recruiting trail and transfer portal and hopes it all breaks right. The AP Poll is a bit of a believer.

Year 1 for Kalen DeBoer and Alabama didn’t go as planned, not making the playoff and losing to Michigan in a bowl game. Still, DeBoer’s coaching prowess and development can’t be understated.
Ty Simpson is the expected QB and he has an all-star at WR in Ryan Williams to throw to. The defense is loaded with stars such as LT Overton. They’re back to SEC contender and have a chance to make a run in the CFP.
LSU gets preseason respect from the AP Poll and now it’s time to prove their worth. Brian Kelly goes into Year 4 with the Tigers and the CFP has to be the requirement right?
Garrett Nussmeier is back at QB and is firmly in the Heisman Trophy race. Harold Perkins, should he return to form, could be one of the best linebackers in the country.
Miami fell short last season with some missed opportunities to get to the ACC title game. To be fair, they had a little bit of Lady Luck on their side as well.
Carson Beck transferred in to replace Cam Ward at QB. That’ll be the biggest spotlight in Coral Gables this season. Mario Cristobal has a lot of talent at his disposal and the College Football Playoff should be the minimum.
Preseason AP Poll: First Top 25 revealed
11. Arizona State
12. Illinois
13. South Carolina
14. Michigan
15. Florida
16. SMU
17. Kansas State
18. Oklahoma
19. Texas A&M
20. Indiana
21. Ole Miss
22. Iowa State
23. Texas Tech
24. Tennessee
25. Boise State
Others receiving votes: BYU 156, Utah 144, Baylor 132, Louisville 90, Southern Cal 64, Georgia Tech 63, Missouri 33, Tulane 23, Nebraska 23, UNLV 21, Toledo 13, Auburn 10, James Madison 9, Memphis 9, Florida St. 8, Duke 6, Liberty 5, Navy 5, Iowa 5, TCU 4, Pittsburgh 3, Army 2, Colorado 1, Louisiana-Lafayette 1.
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