NIL
Jake Williams Selected For 2025 TopConnect Basketball Symposium
Story Links MILWAUKEE – Jake Williams, the associate head coach and recruiting coordinator for the Milwaukee men’s basketball team, has been selected to participate in the prestigious 2025 TopConnect Basketball Symposium taking place at the Marriott Village at Lake Buena Vista on Monday, June 9. TopConnect developed by ETSU Athletic Director Dr. Richard Sander, identifies the […]


MILWAUKEE – Jake Williams, the associate head coach and recruiting coordinator for the Milwaukee men’s basketball team, has been selected to participate in the prestigious 2025 TopConnect Basketball Symposium taking place at the Marriott Village at Lake Buena Vista on Monday, June 9. TopConnect developed by ETSU Athletic Director Dr. Richard Sander, identifies the top assistant basketball coaches in the country and connects them with mid-major Athletic Directors providing tremendous networking and leadership development opportunities for both parties.
In its eighth year, TopConnect develops educational programming that allows these top assistant coaches to hear from a variety of successful leaders and speakers. The 2025 symposium is headlined by a panel of prominent and successful coaches and industry leaders.
Athletic Directors on hand include, Mark Benson, University of Albany; Anthony Henderson, Hampton University; Mark Wharton, University of Tennessee, Chattanooga, Nico Yantko of Murray State University, and Jon Schemmel of University of South Dakota.
Panel discussions include:
- The Hiring Process and Thereafter
- Perspective of First-Time Head Coaches
- NIL From Multiple Perspectives
- House Settlement
The fan-favorite “Speed Dating” returns and allows for rapid networking to take place between the assistant coaches and administrators.
The three-word mantra of “Connect. Prepare. Lead.” identifies the purpose of TopConnect.
Since the inception of TopConnect in 2018, more than 50 assistant coach and assistant athletic director participants have been promoted to the next chair of Head Coach and Athletic Director as well as a Conference Commissioner.
If you have questions regarding TopConnect, please contact Dr. Richard Sander at sander@etsu.edu. TopConnect works in conjunction with Connected Media, LLC and East Tennessee State University’s Doctoral program in Global Sport Leadership.
NIL
LeBron's agent calls for key agreement within NIL contracts amid transfer portal chaos
Acclaimed sports agent Rich Paul seems to believe that one significant addition should me made to Name, Image and Likeness deals in college sports, as programs continue to deal with major roster attrition due to the transfer portal each year. Paul is the owner and operator of Klutch Sports Group, which represents NBA all-time points […]


Acclaimed sports agent Rich Paul seems to believe that one significant addition should me made to Name, Image and Likeness deals in college sports, as programs continue to deal with major roster attrition due to the transfer portal each year.
Paul is the owner and operator of Klutch Sports Group, which represents NBA all-time points leader LeBron James (Los Angeles Lakers), along with a plethora of other stars like Anthony Davis (Dallas Mavericks) and Draymond Green (Golden State Warriors), among others in major American professional sports.
College athletics is taking the shape of the professional model that Paul has found success with. But the ever-evolving NIL era is missing a “contractual agreement” where there is an obligation on the student athlete’s part, according to Paul.
As it stands, college players can transfer at will and are not bound to a school despite being signed to an NIL contract. Schools have attempted to push back on the issue in court without success, allowing players under contract to transfer without penalty.
“I think NIL should come with a contractual agreement,” Paul said via the Sports Business Journal. “The negative perception and behavior within the transfer portal and things like that – If we’re going to have student athletes get paid – we should teach them the proper way and the obligations that actually come with getting paid.”
“If you sign with Ohio State, for that matter, and you sign an NIL deal for $3 million, then that should come with a term, two years, three years or whatever the case may be,” Paul continued. “But that way, you’re not signing with Ohio State for $3 million this year, and then you’re going to TCU for $4 million next year, because that’s going to hurt the purity of the game.”
Transfer portal regulation could be around the corner, as the NIL space continues to change seemingly each year. But, for a college player to be obligated to one institution, athletes would likely need to be classified as employees, something that doesn’t appear to be an option for the NCAA and College Sports Commission due to the potential for unionization.
NIL
College football 2025: What you need to know about the new season
College football stayed very much in the news throughout the offseason, with details emerging almost weekly about changes in the… College football stayed very much in the news throughout the offseason, with details emerging almost weekly about changes in the way the sport works, both on and off the field. With the kickoff of the […]

College football stayed very much in the news throughout the offseason, with details emerging almost weekly about changes in the…
College football stayed very much in the news throughout the offseason, with details emerging almost weekly about changes in the way the sport works, both on and off the field.
With the kickoff of the 2025 campaign less than a week away, here’s a quick cheat sheet on all that’s changed (and also what hasn’t):
How come players are getting paid now?
This has been developing for decades. It’s rooted in a handful of lawsuits in which players sued to be able to profit from their name, image and likenesses — say, for instance, on the covers of a video game or the back of a team jerseys.
Starting this season, the schools themselves will be able to pay the players directly for using their NIL, which further blurs the line between amateur and professionalism.
What still isn’t allowed is “pay for play” — where a school simply signs a player to play for them — though many people argue these NIL deals are simply pay for play in disguise under the term “revenue sharing.”
There have been, however, persistent calls for players to be treated more like employees — for instance, through collective bargaining — and that figures to be the next big debate to play out.
How much money do the players make? And who pays?
Contracts range from several million dollars for top quarterbacks such as Arch Manning of Texas to four-digit deals for players far down on the depth chart.
Schools are allowed to share 22% of a portion of their revenue this school year, which amounts to $20.5 million that has to be split among all sports, but mostly goes to football and men’s basketball.
Who pays? Well, often it’s us, the fans, one way or another. Some schools are increasing the cost of tickets and ticket licenses; others are upping concession prices and a few more have added athletic surcharges to tuition bills.
Most every big school has been hitting up boosters to fill in the gaps that the $20.5 million and added scholarship costs will create. Some sports departments are getting extra funding from government.
Did Deion Sanders stay at Colorado?
He did. Though there was speculation wide and far that Sanders might follow his sons Shedeur and Shilo out the door after two years, the coach insisted he was with the Buffs for the long-haul. Just as preseason camp was warming up, Sanders disclosed he’d been diagnosed with bladder cancer, which he said had been treated.
“I’m healthy, I’m vibrant,” Sanders said.
His team? Who knows? Replacing a star quarterback and a Heisman Trophy winner in Travis Hunter is never a sure thing. The over/under on the CU win total this year is 6.5 according to the MGM Sportsbook.
Why is Bill Belichick coaching in college?
The 73-year-old, six-time Super Bowl winner with the New England Patriots said he was looking for a new challenge and a place to build a program the way he wanted, instead of the way NFL teams he interviewed with were telling him.
He also cited the close connection he had to his new school, North Carolina, where his father served as an assistant coach in the 1950s.
What about Alabama?
The Crimson Tide’s four losses in coach Kalen DeBoer’s first season were the most since Nick Saban’s debut in 2007. The Tide’s hopes for a turnaround rest on quarterback Ty Simpson, who won the starting job this month after sitting on the sideline for his first three seasons in Tuscaloosa.
Simpson is a rarity — a five-star recruit who didn’t bail on his school in search of more playing time and potentially more money.
Alabama’s opener is Aug. 30 at Florida State.
When do the games start?
Things kick off Saturday, with Big 12 rivals Kansas State and Iowa State meeting in Ireland. Big games next weekend include No. 1 Texas at No. 3 Ohio State, No. 9 LSU at No. 4 Clemson and No. 6 Notre Dame at No. 10 Miami.
Anything new about the College Football Playoff?
This is the second year of the 12-team playoff. There will be four rounds of games, starting Dec. 19 and ending exactly a month later at Hard Rock Stadium near Miami.
The five best conference champions will earn automatic bids into the tournament, but in a tweak from last year, the four best among them will not be guaranteed a top-four seed and a first-round bye. Instead, they’ll be slotted in by how the 13-person selection committee ranks them.
So, for instance, if Texas and Alabama are CFP No. 1 and 2 heading into the SEC title game and Texas wins a close one, but Alabama only falls to No. 4, the Tide would still get the 4 seed and a first-round bye.
How to keep track of who’s good and not good
After Labor Day, the AP releases its weekly Top 25 poll every Sunday. The CFP selection committee starts releasing its weekly rankings the first week of November. Its last poll, on Dec. 8, will slot the teams into the playoff bracket.
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Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here. AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-football
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© 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, written or redistributed.
NIL
Sophie Cunningham injury: Indiana star celebrates Kelsey Mitchell, Fever win after scary collision
Even when she’s not contributing on the floor, Sophie Cunningham is celebrating her team’s success. After Cunningham left the Fever’s game against the Connecticut Sun on Sunday with an apparent knee injury, things looked dire for Indiana. The team was down 28-13 at the time of Cunningham’s injury and trailed heavily a substantial portion of […]

Even when she’s not contributing on the floor, Sophie Cunningham is celebrating her team’s success. After Cunningham left the Fever’s game against the Connecticut Sun on Sunday with an apparent knee injury, things looked dire for Indiana.
The team was down 28-13 at the time of Cunningham’s injury and trailed heavily a substantial portion of the game. Alas, the Fever didn’t give up, rallying back to force overtime and eventually pulling out a 99-93 victory. After the game, Cunningham posted a three-word tweet to celebrate her teammate’s comeback win: “KELSEY FREAKIN MITCHELL.”
In the win, Kelsey Mitchell exploded for 38 points and six assists while shooting 11-22 from the field and 5-8 from beyond the arc. Mitchell has been spectacular this season, leading the team with a career-best 19.9 points per game.
With the performance on Sunday, Mitchell passed Tamika Catchings for the most career games with 30+ points in franchise history with 11. It wasn’t the only piece of history made Sunday. The comeback win was also the largest in Fever history.
As exciting as the Fever’s jaw-dropping win was, it’s difficult for Indiana to fully enjoy the moment. Cunningham wasn’t able to return to the game on Sunday and could miss extended time with the injury. It’d be a serious hit to the Fever’s playoff hopes.
After all, Cunningham has been spectacular this season. The Missouri product is averaging 8.9 points, 3.6 rebounds and 1.2 assists per game while shooting 47.7% from the field and 44.3% from beyond the arc.
Cunningham’s injury occurred when Sun guard Bria Hartley crashed into her on a drive to the basket. Hartley seemingly fell onto the lower part of Cunningham’s leg, causing the Fever forward to hobble away on one leg while clutching her injured knee.
Cunningham isn’t the only player battling an injury on the Fever. Superstar guard Caitlin Clark has been out with a groin injury since July 15, and has missed 22 total games this season due to injury.
On Sunday, Fever head coach Stephanie White said the team hopes for Clark to return before the end of the regular season. However, if she’s unable to, and Cunningham is sidelined, the Fever could be in dire straits.
Sophie Cunningham is scheduled to undergo an MRI on Monday, per Scott Agness. The Fever will take the court next on Friday against the Minnesota Lynx at 7:30 p.m. ET. The game will air live on ION.
NIL
Mark Pope wants to tighten and move transfer portal window to after NCAA Tournament
Mark Pope is a huge advocate for extending the college basketball season to 40 games, but that’s not the only major change in the sport he’s suggesting. The Kentucky head coach also has thoughts on the current state of the transfer portal. “If I could change (the transfer portal), I would probably move it to […]

Mark Pope is a huge advocate for extending the college basketball season to 40 games, but that’s not the only major change in the sport he’s suggesting. The Kentucky head coach also has thoughts on the current state of the transfer portal.
“If I could change (the transfer portal), I would probably move it to the day after the national championship game and make it a really tight window, make it a five-day window,” Pope said this week on the Eye on College Basketball with Matt Norlander. “That way, everyone has had time to evaluate, everyone has had time to see it, and just make it a shorter window so that we can just get through the process. The process is already crazy fast.
“But I say that also acknowledging that that answer raises a lot of issues too. There’s no perfect answer.”
During the 2024-25 season, the transfer portal opened up after the first weekend of the 2025 NCAA Tournament wrapped up — a one-week bump back from the previous season. It officially opened for business on March 24 and stayed open for 30 days before closing on April 22. This is just the entry window, though, not a deadline for making commitments. But it forced coaches and would-be transfers to make decisions while the season was still being played. It’s challenging to balance coaching and recruiting during the most important stretch of the season.
“The worst thing was playing in the NCAA Tournament while the portal was open. I probably mismanaged that last year, in all honesty,” Pope admitted.
We likely won’t ever know exactly what Pope “mismanaged” about the portal this offseason, but Kentucky was still able to land Tulane transfer Kam Williams on the morning of the Wildcats’ Sweet 16 showdown against Tennessee, a game UK lost in blowout fashion. Pope added that coaching in today’s game demands going as fast as possible down multiple roads, but that he didn’t do well enough of making it happen in the spring.
“That’s something that we’ve talked in great detail about how we’re going to remedy next year,” he said.
But much like how his returning players are expected to take a leap in 2025-26 after gaining a year of experience at Kentucky, the same will be true for Pope as a head coach. Last offseason, he was starting from scratch. But this offseason, there were a dozen Quad 1 wins, a pair of NBA Draft picks, and the first second NCAA Tournament weekend since 2019 under his belt to work with.
“One benefit for us was we had been here and won,” Pope said of navigating the portal this offseason. “So that’s the big thing we didn’t have coming in the first year. Guys were kinda saying like ‘What is Kentucky going to look like?’ I mean you just had one of the great all-time coaches in the history of the game vacate this seat and you brought in me, right? So there was that question. I don’t think we had to deal with that question at all this year. Everybody had seen us play and see what our guys did.”
All of that banked-up clout allowed Pope to rebuild Kentucky’s roster through the portal and turn the ‘Cats into a potential title contender in 2025-26 — and that was with some self-reported missteps along the way.
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NIL
LaNorris Sellers Flaunts NIL Wealth With $185K Mercedes-Benz
iStockphoto / © Jeff Blake-Imagn Images Audio By Carbonatix South Carolina football star LaNorris Sellers is gearing up for his sophomore season in Columbia. The quarterback is hoping to build upon a phenomenal debut as the Gamecocks’ starter under center. That production as a redshirt freshman has him in Heisman trophy conversations ahead of the […]


iStockphoto / © Jeff Blake-Imagn Images

Audio By Carbonatix
South Carolina football star LaNorris Sellers is gearing up for his sophomore season in Columbia. The quarterback is hoping to build upon a phenomenal debut as the Gamecocks’ starter under center.
That production as a redshirt freshman has him in Heisman trophy conversations ahead of the 2025 college football season. It’s also resulted in a notable boost in NIL income.
Last year, Sellers guided the Gamecocks to a 9-3 output with wins over the likes of Clemson, Missouri, and Oklahoma. He threw for 2,500 yards and 18 scores while adding another 674 yards on the ground.
He hopes to build on his success this fall. Excitement surrounding his expected growth has those in the area eager to watch.
The LaNorris Sellers hype is real.
The signal caller burst onto the scene as a relative unknown in 2024. He’s now being mentioned as a potential top 10 NFL Draft pick in the 2026 selection process.
“When you see him at his best, he’s unstoppable. He’s a great runner when he takes off. Strong arm. Built well. Can handle the physical beating he’s going to take at quarterback and shake off sacks. Moves around really well.”
-Steve Muench via The McShay Show
Sellers can sling it. He can run, too. At 6-foot-3 and 240 pounds, he’s impossible to bring down. His dual threat abilities gave opposing defenses nightmares last year.
Sellers is considered a top Heisman trophy contender this preseason and a future pro prospect. He’s now cashing in on his newfound fame.
The football star will have a new car on the South Carolina campus this fall.
Sellers will renew an NIL partnership with Dick Dyer & Associates. He posted a comical ad on social media to announce the agreement.
In that commercial, he flaunted the perks of his deal by showing off his new ride. He’ll drive a 2025 Mercedes-Benz G63 this season, valued at $186,100.
LaNorris Sellers spoke on NIL poachers this offseason. He and his father said they turned down millions to stick around in Columbia.
The passer stayed loyal to the Gamecocks. He believes he can have everything he needs at South Carolina.
This new deal certainly supports that outlook, as does his $3.7 million NIL valuation. Sellers will be riding in style on campus this year.
NIL
Multi
In the transfer portal age of college athletics, it’s become common to see some players on your favorite team leave every year. For Utah this offseason, defensive tackle Keanu Tanuvasa left for BYU, cornerback Cam Calhoun left for Alabama and wide receiver Zacharyus Williams left for USC. On the other hand, the Utes utilized the […]

In the transfer portal age of college athletics, it’s become common to see some players on your favorite team leave every year.
For Utah this offseason, defensive tackle Keanu Tanuvasa left for BYU, cornerback Cam Calhoun left for Alabama and wide receiver Zacharyus Williams left for USC.
On the other hand, the Utes utilized the portal to get players such as New Mexico quarterback Devon Dampier, Washington State running back Wayshawn Parker and UC Davis cornerback Blake Cotton, all of whom are projected to start this season.
Utah also got running back NaQuari Rogers and wide receiver Ryan Davis from New Mexico, along with Lobos offensive coordinator Jason Beck.
“I mean listen, New Mexico is probably not thrilled with the Utes right now. We’ve got their coach and their quarterback and their running back,” Utah athletic director Mark Harlan said on Saturday.
For all the positives of the transfer portal — allowing teams to completely revamp their roster in an offseason, allowing players the freedom to go wherever they want — there’s drawbacks as well.
Teams have a lot of turnover — new players, between freshmen and transfers, make up about half of Utah’s roster this season — every year. Fans, meanwhile, aren’t as connected to new players as they used to be after watching them develop in the program for three or four years.
Prior to the advent of the portal, the NCAA rule made it so players could transfer, but they’d have to sit out a “year in residency” before being allowed to play. That wasn’t that long ago; Cam Rising had to sit out his first season in Salt Lake City after transferring from Texas in 2019.
Then, the rules shifted to one transfer without having to sit out a year, but the year in residency rule would apply to the second transfer.
That’s what happened to Runnin’ Utes guard Deivon Smith, who transferred from Georgia Tech. Then, during the middle of the basketball season, a West Virginia judge struck down the NCAA’s transfer rules, clearing the way for Smith to immediately play.
Smith, by the way, transferred again after a successful season at Utah to play at St. John’s.
The NCAA could no longer enforce its own rules, and relented. Now, every player is immediately eligible to play, no matter how many times they transfer schools.
Unlimited free agency has turned the college sports world on its head. In no other sports league in the world does free agency happen every season. Imagine if LeBron James or Patrick Mahomes were able to sign with a new team every year. That’s what’s currently happening in college sports.
While unlimited transfers can have some positive aspects for players and teams, those in charge of collegiate athletics are clear that it’s a net negative.
The question is, how do you fix it?
The NCAA is powerless in its ability to enforce transfer rules struck down by the legal system. During the landmark House v. NCAA settlement, which allowed universities to directly pay players for the first time ever, any attempt to restrict transfers was denied.
The reasoning from the courts is simple — college players are students of a university, and it’s not legal to block a student from transferring to another school.
The only way to truly solve the issue is with federal legislation or collective bargaining (players forming a union and negotiating with a league).
Right now, federal legislation seems to be the path forward. Last month, members of the House of Representatives introduced a bipartisan bill — the SCORE act — that attempts to set some guardrails on college sports.
The bill covers a wide range of important issues, with rules for transfers being one of them. The bill shields participating institutions from antitrust lawsuits, meaning the NCAA could once again set parameters for “the manner in which a student-athlete may transfer between institutions, if such rules provide that at least one occasion each student-athlete may transfer between institutions and be immediately eligible.”
In essence, that would mean the return of the year in residency requirements for athletes that transfer more than one time.
“Listen, it is a tough deal. I do think … this is going to have to be solved by federal legislation. I will say there’s more momentum there than there has been. We expect a bill to pass in the House here shortly. In the Senate, it’s going to have some problems,” Harlan said.
“Both sides I think understand that the graduation rates are going to plummet and we’re going to be where we were in the 70s…where student-athletes were just not graduating, and it’s a shame.”
In the meantime, until federal legislation is enacted or collective bargaining happens, Utah is doing what it can to entice athletes to stay in Salt Lake City.
That includes signing some athletes to multi-year revenue sharing deals. The deals don’t prevent a player from leaving for another school but can include financial penalties such as buyout money a player (or their new school) has to pay to the university to exit the deal, just like coaches have to do when they get a new job.
Multi-year deals haven’t become commonplace for Utah, Harlan said, but the school has signed some with players.
“Well, we’re just starting, right? So it’ll be interesting to see, but there’s language in these contracts that talks about possible loss of value if they leave,” Harlan said.
“We’re just all going to play it out, and then how harsh is Jason (Greco, Utah’s executive senior associate athletics director for governance and brand strategy) is going to tell me to be. I love the kid and I don’t want to hold kids back. I’m not in the business for that, so we’re just going to have to kind of figure it out as we go.”
Until transfer limits are restored, more and more schools will roll out multi-year deals to try to keep athletes on their campus. The other hope for schools is that with the new revenue-sharing cap and a clearinghouse that will evaluate third-party NIL deals for “true market value,” there will be a more level financial playing field in the Power Four, which will in turn limit the volume of players transfers to new schools for a pay increase.
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