College Sports
Athletics and Learfield Launch Buckeye Sports Group
COLUMBUS, Ohio – The Ohio State University Department of Athletics and Learfield’s Ohio State Sports Properties have announced the formation of Buckeye Sports Group (BSG), a groundbreaking initiative designed to support, streamline and enhance Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) opportunities for Ohio State student-athletes. By creating a dedicated team of NIL leaders, this strategic partnership will empower […]

Ohio State and Learfield Impact, the company’s industry-leading NIL services, are fueled by dedicated on-campus leadership professionals that prioritize Buckeye student-athlete brand engagement and content driven campaigns. Additionally, BSG will have access to Learfield’s Compass NIL technology to facilitate deal transactions and gain insights into student-athlete interests that foster authentic brand connections.
“Ohio State has always been a leader in college athletics, and this initiative is another step forward to build upon our strong NIL foundation,” said Carey Hoyt, Ohio State’s Deputy Director of Athletics. “By combining the power of our athletic brand with Learfield’s expansive network, we are creating an innovative, full-service approach to NIL that directly benefits our student-athletes.”
The House v. NCAA settlement marks a pivotal shift in college athletics. As part of the agreement, signed and approved Friday and that will take effect July 1, schools will now be permitted to directly compensate athletes for use of their Name, Image and Likeness. A key component of the settlement is the implementation of a Fair Market Evaluation process, and a “range of compensation” designed to establish standardized benchmarks for NIL deals across sports and institutions. Buckeye Sports Group will serve as a centralized hub for NIL brand deal facilitation, corporate partnerships, student-athlete storytelling and NIL support.
A Comprehensive NIL Strategy
The Buckeye Sports Group will support Ohio State’s student-athletes with comprehensive efforts within three key areas: deal facilitation and management, content creation and storytelling, and support services.
§ NIL Deal Facilitation & Management
o Negotiating and securing brand partnerships locally, regionally, and nationally for student-athletes.
o Overseeing contract preparation and fair market value assessments.
o Utilizing analytics to track NIL performance and return on investment.
- Content Creation & Student-Athlete Storytelling, powered by Learfield Studios
- Creating athlete-driven digital content, including social media campaigns, video series and podcasts.
- Leveraging Learfield’s Fanbase data and digital expertise to optimize distribution across social media and digital channels.
- Providing marketing resources for brand collaborations to maximize results, including the use of Ohio State marks, logos and access to campus facilities.
§ Athlete Support & Services
o Providing financial literacy and tax support through partnerships with industry experts.
o Offering branding and social media growth training to help athletes build their personal brands.
o Connecting student-athletes with brand partners to provide business experience, micro-internships and build professional networking relationships with companies.
A Unified Approach to NIL
In a move to streamline and optimize NIL operations, Buckeye Sports Group will also work to consolidate existing NIL collectives under a single marketing team. This unified structure will provide student-athletes with seamless access to opportunities while competing for the Buckeyes. The founding members of THE Foundation and The 1870 Society will remain engaged and serve in an advisory capacity to the new Buckeye Sports Group. Additionally, re-occurring donations and subscriptions made to The Foundation will continue to play a vital role in supporting Ohio State Athletics.
“We’re incredibly thankful for everything our NIL collective’s leadership, businesses and donors have done to support our student-athletes,” Ross Bjork, Senior Vice President and Wolfe Foundation-Eugene Smith Endowed Athletics Director, said. “Their commitment has helped shape the landscape in powerful ways. As we move forward with a more unified approach, we’re excited to combine efforts and further strengthen the NIL success of our student-athletes.”
Impact & Vision
Through this partnership, Ohio State Athletics and Learfield are setting a new standard for NIL excellence. The initiative aims to:
- Maximize student-athlete earning potential;
- Strengthen Ohio State’s brand value through strategic partnerships; and
- Create a sustainable, best-in-class NIL ecosystem that benefits athletes, brands, and the university.
“As we enter a new era for college athletics, we’re excited to build on our past successes and create even more meaningful NIL opportunities for Ohio State student-athletes,” said Todd Knisley, Vice President & General Manager of Learfield’s Ohio State Sports Properties. “Buckeyes have excelled both on and off the field, and we’re committed to amplifying that momentum. We also recognize the unique potential of our footprint in Columbus, one of the fastest-growing metro markets, for impactful deal-making. With the strength of Buckeye Nation behind us, we’re able to unlock incremental opportunities for partnerships on a local, regional, and national scale.”
BSG will fuel Ohio State’s NIL dealmaking success and build upon the momentum of over 500 NIL brand partnerships featuring Buckeye student-athletes across all 36 sports. Buckeye student-athletes have already collaborated with prominent brand partners such as Beats by Dre, Chipotle, RiteRug, Weber Grills, Element Electronics and more.
“We are committed to making Ohio State the premier destination for NIL success,” Hoyt added. “With Buckeye Sports Group, we’re building a model that will serve as the new standard for college athletics.”
#GoBucks
College Sports
MSU hockey’s Isaac Howard signs with Edmonton Oilers after trade
After a Hobey Baker-winning season, two consecutive NCAA tournament appearances, numerous game-winning goals and two memorable years with the Michigan State Spartans, junior forward Isaac Howard has signed his entry-level contract with the Edmonton Oilers. He will forgo his senior year of college hockey to begin his professional career. Following MSU’s postseason loss to Cornell […]

After a Hobey Baker-winning season, two consecutive NCAA tournament appearances, numerous game-winning goals and two memorable years with the Michigan State Spartans, junior forward Isaac Howard has signed his entry-level contract with the Edmonton Oilers. He will forgo his senior year of college hockey to begin his professional career.
Following MSU’s postseason loss to Cornell in the NCAA regional, discussions emerged about Howard potentially signing his entry-level contract with the Tampa Bay Lightning, who drafted him 31st overall in 2022. However, Howard and the Lightning could not reach an agreement, ending the possibility of a contract. Tampa Bay ultimately traded him to the Edmonton Oilers in a one-for-one deal for a first-round prospect.
Howard’s junior season with the Spartans was one for the record books. He tallied 52 points, including 26 goals and 26 assists, helping MSU capture back-to-back Big Ten regular-season and tournament titles, along with consecutive NCAA tournament appearances. Howard was a dominant force in the green and white.
The Wisconsin native played a crucial role in MSU’s recent success and collected an impressive list of postseason honors. He was named to the First Team All-Big Ten, earned Big Ten Player of the Year, was the Big Ten Scoring Champion, and took home Big Ten Tournament Most Outstanding Player honors. He was also recognized as Academic All-Big Ten.
Beyond the conference, Howard became the first Spartan since Ryan Miller in 2001 to win the Hobey Baker Memorial Award. He was also named an AHCA First Team All-American and received the Jim Johannson College Hockey Player of the Year award.
As part of the trade, the Tampa Bay Lightning acquired Sam O’Reilly, Edmonton’s late first-round pick in 2024, taken 32nd overall. O’Reilly played 62 games for the London Knights of the Ontario Hockey League, recording 28 goals and 43 assists, and helped the team win the Memorial Cup.
Howard’s next step will be joining the Oilers for training camp in September, where he will have the chance to earn a spot on the opening-night roster and officially begin his professional career.
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College Sports
Hobey Baker Winner Isaac Howard Signs With Edmonton Oilers, Leaves Lasting Legacy
EAST LANSING, Mich. – Isaac Howard, the 2025 Hobey Baker Award winner, will forgo his remaining eligibility at Michigan State and sign a three-year entry level contract with the Edmonton Oilers beginning in 2025-26. Originally drafted by the Tampa Bay Lightning with the 31st overall pick in the 2022 NHL Draft, Howard was traded to […]

Howard is set to become the 80th Spartan to play in the NHL, and joins Artyom Levshunov (Chicago Blackhawks), Karsen Dorwart (Philadelphia Flyers), Mason Appleton (Detroit Red Wings), Mackenzie MacEachern (Vancouver Canucks), Torey Krug (St. Louis Blues) and Jeff Petry (Florida Panthers) as a former Spartan currently under NHL contract.
“All of us within the Michigan State hockey program want to congratulate Ike on signing with the Edmonton Oilers and thank him for his two years as a Spartan,” said Michigan State head coach Adam Nightingale. “Growing up, every young hockey player dreams of reaching the NHL and we’re incredibly proud of Ike for achieving that dream.”
Howard is coming off a junior campaign in which he turned in one of the most impressive individual seasons in program history. His career-best 26 goals and 52 points helped him rank first nationally in points per game (1.41) and third in goals per game (0.70). He was the third Spartan all-time to hoist the Hobey, joining Ryan Miller and Kip Miller, and was the fourth Spartan to earn USA Hockey’s College Player of the Year Award. Howard’s season ended with laundry list of accolades that also included First Team AHCA All-American, Big Ten Player of the Year, First Team All-Big Ten and Big Ten Tournament Most Outstanding Player honors.
In Howard’s two seasons at Michigan State, he helped guide Michigan State to a monumental turnaround. MSU became the first team in conference history to win the Big Ten regular season and tournament titles in the same year in back-to-back seasons. MSU compiled a 51-17-7 record (.740) in those two seasons and earned back-to-back No. 1 seeds in the NCAA Tournament. In 2023-24, the Spartans returned to NCAAs for the first time since 2012 and picked up their first NCAA win since 2008.
At the conclusion of his junior season, Howard was named to Team USA ahead of the 2025 IIHF World Championships where he aided the United States in winning a gold medal for the first time in 92 years.
College Sports
Reinforcing the Educational Value of High School Sports, Other Activity Programs
The special place that high school sports and performing arts has in the hearts of millions of Americans was celebrated last week at the 106th NFHS Summer Meeting in Chicago. Heading those events was the induction of the 42nd class into the NFHS National High School Hall of Fame. As with many previous groups, the […]


The special place that high school sports and performing arts has in the hearts of millions of Americans was celebrated last week at the 106th NFHS Summer Meeting in Chicago.
Heading those events was the induction of the 42nd class into the NFHS National High School Hall of Fame. As with many previous groups, the accomplishments of the inductees were extraordinary, but their love, appreciation and dedication to high school sports were even more compelling.
As Caryn Schoff-Kovatch said, being involved in high school spots “was a magical time.” Schoff-Kovatch, who played basketball at New York’s St. Johnsville High School in the 1990s and remains the state’s all-time leading scorer in girls basketball, was one of four former high school athletes in the 2025 class.
Others included Anna Maria Lopez, a multi-sport athlete who led St. Mary’s Academy in Portland, Oregon, to two state volleyball championships; Tim Dwight, who helped City High School in Iowa City, Iowa, to its first state football championship and won 12 individual track titles before outstanding college and professional careers; and Prince Amukamara, a three-sport standout at Apollo High School High School in Glendale, Arizona, before his days in the NFL.
While these athletes had stellar college and professional careers, they were all about celebrating their accomplishments in high school and how high school sports set them up to succeed in life – not just sports.
“The excitement of going to school at City High School was something special,” Dwight said. “Now, to go into the school and see the trophies for our state championships is special. You’re proud of what the teams you were on accomplished. It’s special to win a state football championship. It was special to win a state track championship.”
“Playing for your high school – one word that comes to mind is pride – putting on your school colors,” Amukamara said. “I really cherished the time in high school and built a lot of long-lasting friendships.
“Sportsmanship is very important and says a lot about your character. It’s not saying you can’t play with “swag,” but you have to do it in a respectful manner. I learned about that at the high school level. If you can’t get sportsmanship down in high school, it’s going to affect your college and professional careers because coaches are looking for good guys.”
There were three high school coaches in this year’s class with a combined total of 133 years of experience and 39 state championships. The consistent message from all three coaches was their love for helping high school students succeed in life as well as on the court or field.
And one of those coaches remains active at 83 years of age. Jim Ciccarello has been coaching girls track and field in Albuquerque, New Mexico, for more than 55 years and has led teams at Manzano and La Cueva high schools to 11 state titles.
“My immediate family is myself and my two brothers, but my extended family is the 70,000 kids I’ve taught all these years,” Ciccarello said. “That’s my motivation. I consider these kids as part of my family. I’m so proud that I’ve been in high school track and field for 56 years. I’ve coached thousands of athletes, and they keep coming back. I never jumped 7 feet in the high jump, but I taught others to do that. And I’m proud of all our teams have accomplished over the years.”
The other coaches in the class were Linda Lampkin, who was the most successful girls volleyball coach in Missouri history with 13 state championships at Hermann High School, and Phil Savitz, who retired last year after 44 years as the winningest soccer coach in South Carolina history with 15 state titles at Irmo and River Bluff high schools.
“What I love about high school soccer is the relationships you get to develop and how deep the relationships become,” Savitz said. “When you get to see these players every single day, and when you get to talk to them about academics, commitment, character, communication. You see them every day – in the weight room, at practice and games, and in team meetings – it really resonates with me. Club sports, I like, but high school sports, I love. I feel what players can get from high school sports every day is greater than the club scene. Both are important, but the benefits of high school sports you take on the rest of your life.”
Others in the class were Lloyd Hisaka, a leader in officiating in Hawaii for more than 50 years; Ron Laird, who won two state basketball titles as a coach in Wyoming before leading the Wyoming High School Activities Association as executive director for 19 years; Jane Berry-Eddings, the performing arts inductee in the class from Salem, Oregon, who has directed the Oregon state speech and debate championships for 40 years; and Diane Wolf, a coach and state administrator from Idaho who for 25 years was one of the biggest contributors to the development of NFHS national spirit rules.
The ability of high school programs other than sports to make a difference and change lives was evident at last week’s conference as well. The Opening Ceremony featured the presentations of the NFHS National High School Spirit of Sport Award and the National High School Heart of the Arts Award.
Jack Punswick, a state champion swimmer from Blue Valley West High School in Overland Park, Kansas, who battled cancer, received the National High School Spirit of Sport Award. Punswick, who won the Kansas State High School Activities Association (KSHSAA) Class 6A state title in the 100-yard breaststroke as a junior in 2024, began his senior year at Blue Valley West with a cancer diagnosis that suddenly threatened his promising future as a swimmer.
During his months of treatment, his connection to the school’s swim team provided Punswick with the determination to rally and attempt to defend his state title at the 2025 KSHSAA Swimming Championships. He continued to practice even though his body was struggling to maintain his elite level of performance.
At the state championship in February, Punswick swam to a second-place finish in the 100 breaststroke. Although unable to claim a repeat title, he celebrated the fact he was even at the meet and able to compete. While cancer presented Punswick with a formidable challenge, he also viewed his ordeal as an opportunity to appreciate “daily wins” for himself and others. It has inspired him to pursue a career in physical therapy, where he can devote his life to improving other people’s lives by helping them rebound from their setbacks.
The recipient of the Heart of the Arts Award was Eden Coppersmith, a student at Paxton High School in Nebraska. Amazingly, through the speech program at Paxton and the school’s coach, Crystal Fox, Coppersmith was able to alter the course of her life that had been defined by silence and, by her senior year, become a confident speaker, participant and medalist at meets.
Coppersmith was born with Spina Bifida and selective mutism, an anxiety disorder, and faced significant challenges from a young age. In addition to life in a wheelchair, her journey to speak began with a single word. By fifth grade, she managed only three words in class the entire year. In sixth grade, her voice disappeared entirely. She wanted to speak and be heard, but her mind refused to let her talk.
And then came the decision that would open the door to a new life – Eden announced that she wanted to join the school’s speech team. Although she had never spoken in class, she wanted to be heard. And thanks to the opportunity to be a part of the Paxton High School speech team, it happened.
Truly, high school sports and performing arts are much more than games, concerts and championships – they are helping to shape high school student participants into successful citizens and leaders for years to come.
Read all NFHS Voice columns here.
College Sports
Steve Spurrier is still taking shots at Kentucky
Steve Spurrier has spent his life scoring points and taking shots at opponents. The Old Ball Coach turned Florida into a college football force, and pissed off a lot of people along the way. He has a way of turning a seemingly straightforward statement into a passive-aggressive barb, and that has not changed since he […]

Steve Spurrier has spent his life scoring points and taking shots at opponents. The Old Ball Coach turned Florida into a college football force, and pissed off a lot of people along the way. He has a way of turning a seemingly straightforward statement into a passive-aggressive barb, and that has not changed since he stepped away from the sidelines.
It took Kentucky almost 20 tries before the Wildcats finally defeated Spurrier in 2010. One loss to the Wildcats didn’t force Spurrier to pull any punches. After a 54-3 blowout win over Kentucky in 2011, Spurrier said, “Kentucky has a heck of a punter, I know that.”
Kentucky forced Spurrier into early retirement. The Wildcats beat South Carolina in consecutive seasons. Four weeks after a 26-22 defeat at Williams-Brice Stadium, Spurrier abruptly announced he was stepping away from the program.
The Old Ball Coach is spending his retirement life as an advisor for the Florida Gators. He can’t stay away from a microphone, speaking regularly on Pat Dooley’s podcast.
During this week’s show, Kentucky was a topic of conversation. The Wildcats just successfully flipped wide receiver Denairius Gray from Auburn, who was the third four-star talent Hugh Freeze lost in ten days.
“Kentucky fans are pointing out that their coach doesn’t play golf,” Pat Dooley pointed out on Another Dooley Noted Podcast.
“Kentucky?” Spurrier interjected. “They don’t have a lot of wins to brag about right now.”
I feel partially to blame for this stray from the Old Ball Coach. In late June, AL.com took a closer look at Hugh Freeze’s golf game following the rash of decommitments and found that Freeze was logging more scores than any other coach in the SEC. They also pulled Mark Stoops’ scores from Lexington Country Club, where he only played two 18-hole rounds in the month of May. It led me to make a quip, “Mark Stoops is too motivated to play golf.” Deputy Doofus ran with it, and now the joke has entered Spurrier’s crosshairs.
Let Spurrier make all the jokes he wants from the sidelines. It’s only going to give Mark Stoops one more reason to be motivated ahead of the 2025 season.
Sign up for the KSR Newsletter to receive Kentucky Wildcats news in the most ridiculous manner possible.
College Sports
‘We don’t know the rules’ — Big 12 coaches still wrestling with new world order after player payment changes
FRISCO, Texas — Within a small booth three stories above the practice field of the Dallas Cowboys, Kenny Dillingham crosses his legs, leans back in a swivel chair and details exactly what’s happening across the current college football recruiting landscape. “We don’t know the rules,” the Arizona State head coach says. “The settlement passed, but […]

FRISCO, Texas — Within a small booth three stories above the practice field of the Dallas Cowboys, Kenny Dillingham crosses his legs, leans back in a swivel chair and details exactly what’s happening across the current college football recruiting landscape.
“We don’t know the rules,” the Arizona State head coach says. “The settlement passed, but who knows what Deloitte is going to clear. Until there is clarity, you’re living in limbo.”
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And there’s something else.
“You are seeing a lot of people lie and promise fake things,” he says.
The Big 12 on Tuesday kicked off three weeks of conference football media days from the Cowboys’ domed practice facility just north of Dallas, its head coaches, administrators and players jaunting across the turfed field to various media stations on Day 1 of a two-day event. It unfolded in front of a backdrop of what happened a week ago: the implementation of the NCAA’s historic settlement of an antitrust case — a move that has ushered in direct athlete-revenue sharing.
A similar theme emerged from the eight head coaches here Tuesday, one likely shared by the eight others who get their turn Wednesday: The Wild West, they say, remains wild.
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The finger pointing has already begun.
Schools are making big enough contract offers to recruits that they cannot possibly remain under college football’s new compensation cap, some coaches believe. Others are guaranteeing third-party NIL deals as part of the total compensation package to athletes — something against new revenue-share rules.
A few are doling out cash from their collectives to high school players in an attempt to induce their commitment — also against new rules. And those schools rich enough to have front-loaded millions of dollars in the spring to compensate this year’s roster — while perfectly within the rules — now hold an advantage in building next year’s roster.
“I don’t understand what rules everybody is playing by,” Cincinnati head coach Scott Satterfield says. “The whole point of this was for us all to be playing by the same rules, but we are not. We are not playing by the same rules, particularly this past spring when everybody is apparently front-loading where others are having to now spend their [revenue-share] cap.”
The Big 12 and its coaches aren’t alone in complaining about the new system after the House settlement. (Kevin Abele/Getty Images)
(Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
Meanwhile, the newly minted entities charged with enforcing these policies, the College Sports Commission and its Deloitte-run NIL clearinghouse, are bogged down in legalities tethered to the settlement, those familiar with the process tell Yahoo Sports. In fact, dozens and potentially hundreds of submitted third-party NIL deals — some, perhaps, from booster collectives — remain under review as college leaders negotiate with House plaintiff lawyers over a final set of cap-circumvention rules and penalties. Plaintiff lawyers, most notably co-lead attorneys Jeffrey Kessler and Steve Berman, hold authority and approval rights to a variety of settlement enforcement concepts, including rules and penalties that, in the end, are likely to determine final decisions from the College Sports Commission.
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These rules identify a variety of possible ways schools may attempt to circumvent the cap, including the guaranteeing of third-party NIL compensation in offers to athletes, NIL contracts struck with those in high school and particulars around the NIL clearinghouse’s primary enforcement mechanisms for booster-backed contracts — that they are required to be within a “fair market-compensation range” created by Deloitte and must be for a “valid business purpose.”
Contacted this week, Kessler told Yahoo Sports that attorneys are working with major conference administrators to finalize the approval of what some term as “anti-circumvention” or “gamesmanship” rules.
How new NIL deals are processed
In the meantime, certain submitted NIL deals remain in limbo. That doesn’t go for all of them.
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Of the more than 1,200 deals submitted to the clearinghouse so far, about one-third have been approved — many of them with little to no issue, those with knowledge tell Yahoo Sports. About 80 have been denied and are likely, if they haven’t already, to be resubmitted (deals can be resubmitted once).
Kessler says that no deals have advanced past the second denial stage and into the appeals phase, where athletes present their case before a neutral arbitrator. College executives and attorneys are finalizing a group of eight arbitrators — many of them former judges, Kessler says — to serve as an independent arbitration group.
As college administrators and attorneys embroil themselves in legal negotiations, football coaches and general managers are preparing for the first-ever Aug. 1 official NCAA “offer date,” when schools can formally offer revenue-share contracts to prospects (some have already, informally).
On the recruiting trail across the country, Big 12 coaches say they are witnessing schools finding new ways, in the revenue-share era, to circumvent the cap and skirt the rules — perhaps even in their own league.
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“I’ve seen these agents coming out and saying, ‘It’s a guaranteed three-year deal for a high school kid.’ One in our league right now,” Satterfield said. “How?”
Said UCF head coach Scott Frost: “Only comment I have is about some of the offers going out to freshmen. Those people must not be planning on there being a cap because they wouldn’t be able to spend that.”
How do schools use front-loading?
In what’s been no secret, Texas Tech has used riches to fuel what’s become a recruiting juggernaut. The athletic program has spent more than $50 million on its athletes in both front-loaded money this past spring plus revenue-share dollars this coming academic year. That’s at least the front-loading of $30 million plus $20.5 million in rev-share.
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Front-loading refers to the literal loading upfront of player contracts as school collectives paid out all or a majority of deals before the settlement’s implementation date of July 1. Deals paid out on July 1 and after are subject to the new enforcement system specifically created to prohibit booster and collective compensation.
Joey McGuire, the Texas Tech head coach, describes his recruiting approach as the byproduct of high-level university support, careful planning and an “aggression” that all schools should be taking to compete with the bluebloods of college football.
“What we do as a conference is so important, but we also got to do it off the field,” he told Yahoo Sports in an interview. “We’ve got to recruit at this level if we are going to continue to be in the same conversation as the SEC and Big Ten. We’ve got to understand as a conference that we’ve got to commit to that. We have committed to that at Texas Tech and eliminated any people saying, ‘Well, they can’t do it there.’”
They are far from alone in front-loading. Booster collective spending on athletes in June was more than 800% higher than last June, according to Opendorse, an NIL platform used by dozens of collectives. According to another NIL platform, Teamworks, collectives distributed a whopping $71 million to athletes in June using their system.
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“When you front-load, that gives you the ability to have money in the rev-share this year to make big-time payments and close out guys,” says Baylor head coach Dave Aranda. “That’s what I’m seeing right now. There’s a fair amount in our league that did it. There are a couple of schools here today.”
There is a downside, Dillingham says.
“Most places are so win now and most coaches aren’t at a place they want to stay at,” he said, “Either you’re at the top, and it’s win now or as long as you can. Or you’re at a place where it’s win now and you can leave and get out. The front-loading allowed coaches to win now to take another job.
“But at the end of the day, all these people who front-loaded, eventually, you’re gonna have to tell players they have to take less. You may have set a standard for what people should be paid. Your starters may expect a certain amount of money when in reality they cannot functionally earn that amount of money if you want to build a team.”
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All of that, of course, is contingent on the College Sports Commission and Deloitte-operated NIL clearinghouse policing deals strictly enough.
“I don’t know how Deloitte is going to act,” Dillingham said, “but I know there are some future challenges where people don’t get the money that they were told they’d get.”
Kansas State head coach Chris Klieman didn’t have the luxury to front-load, he said.
“There are schools [that will] have $50 million rosters,” Klieman said. “You can’t be mad about it because it was legal, but that’s why this first year will be interesting once we end the season. What will happen moving forward? That’s where it’s going to get really interesting. That’s what we are concerned about: How do we reel this in? Is Deloitte going to really stay on top of that?”
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Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark, one of the people intimately involved in decisions around the new enforcement entity, holds confidence that the system will work.
“In theory, the settlement should create a more level playing field and enforcement will effectively determine if that’s the case or not,” he told Yahoo Sports. “I think the onus is on the commissioners to reinforce that there needs to be a change in behavior.”
So what’s next?
Already, there are cap-circumvention issues emerging in contracts and promises made to athletes.
For instance, at SEC spring meetings in May, Georgia head coach Kirby Smart told Yahoo Sports that schools are promising high school recruits and transferring players third-party NIL deals as part of their compensation package despite an important fact: None of those deals have been approved by the clearinghouse.
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Some school-affiliated booster collectives are currently compensating high school players — upward of $20,000 a month — to remain committed and eventually sign with their school, Smart and other coaches say.
Dillingham said he’s seen contracts that also permit schools to end or reduce a player’s salary over the course of the deal, something reported earlier this spring by Yahoo Sports via Illinois law professor Michael Leroy, who uncovered more than 90 different player contracts through open-records requests.
“These NIL contracts read like employee handbooks that reserve a right of employment at will for employers,” he said. “They don’t use ‘at will’ but the concept is, they can terminate the contract.”
In one ACC revenue-share contract obtained by Yahoo Sports, the school includes in the total compensation to the player a figure for “NIL” of $25,000 annually. Next to that figure is a line: “Subject to the Deloitte Clearinghouse.”
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“You don’t know if your NIL collective deals will go through and the school can change your rev-share dollar amount at any time,” Dillingham said. “Well, then what are we actually doing?!”
Many coaches are asking that question and plenty more.
Asked Tuesday if he’s heard feedback from the NIL clearinghouse, Frost smiled: “No. Have you?”
College Sports
Cornell women's soccer program signs seven incoming freshmen for 2025
ITHACA, N.Y. — Cornell women’s soccer head coach Rob Ferguson announced the addition of seven players to the Class of 2029. All seven players will join the program as freshman and be eligible to play in the upcoming 2025 campaign. “We are very excited about our incoming class and are excited to see how they adapt both […]


ITHACA, N.Y. — Cornell women’s soccer head coach Rob Ferguson announced the addition of seven players to the Class of 2029. All seven players will join the program as freshman and be eligible to play in the upcoming 2025 campaign.
“We are very excited about our incoming class and are excited to see how they adapt both short and long term,” Ferguson said. “From front to back, we are adding quality players and people, who we hope can come in and make a big impact on the field from day one, and who we are certain can impact our program over the next four years and help take us to the top.
“A big step for all these players, as with classes before them, is how quickly they can adapt to the speed of play and physicality, and how quickly they can be ‘all in’ on a culture level. Both are things we talk a lot about in the recruiting cycle, but ultimately need to play out. These are exciting times for Cornell women’s soccer. We bring back a really good squad of players, who have made excellent progress in the off-season, and add in some young, dynamic, technical, and physical talent.”
Those that will join the Big Red this fall include two defenders (Madison Guiry and Madeline Park), one midfielder (Chloe Benik), one forward (Andrea Wilson), one goalkeeper (Samantha Qureshey), and two players who can play multiple positions (Jessica Alessi – forward and defender; Raya Leikin – defender and midfielder).
INCOMING PLAYER BIOS
Sorted alphabetically
Jessica Alessi
Forward / Defender • 5-4 • Syosset, N.Y. • Syosset HS • Long Island SC
- Four-year letterwinner at Syosset HS in both soccer and track and field.
- Two-time All-County honorable mention (2023 and 2024).
- Named team captain for 2024 campaign, where she earned All-State honors and received team award for highest GPA.
- Member of Newsday‘s list of top 100 girls soccer players in 2024.
- Two-time Nassau County indoor track champion (2021-22 and 2022-23), winning in three disciplines (individual 1500- and 3000-meter events and 4×800 relay).
- Earned All-American honors in 4×800 relay at Nike Indoor Nationals in 2023.
- Placed 10th in 3000-meter at 2023 New York State Outdoor Championships.
- Four-time Nassau County champion in track, placing first in 1500- and 3000-meter events (2023 outdoor) before winning 3000-meter event during 2024 indoor and 2024 outdoor seasons.
- Honored by Newsday on three occasions by being named one of top 50 girls track athletes (spring 2024, winter 2025, spring 2025).
- Three-time class president (2022-23, 2023-24, 2024-25).
- Named to high honor roll all four years of high school.
- Members of both National and Spanish National Honor Socities.
- Played club soccer for Long Island SC, where she was Girls’ Academy Northeast Regional ID selection and National Talent ID selection in 2024.
- Enrolling in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.
Chloe Benik
Midfielder • 5-7 • Garden City, N.Y. • Garden City HS • SUSA FC
- Four-year letterwinner in soccer at Garden City HS, where she captained team to Nassau County Power Conference championship and NYSPHSAA Section VIII title in 2024.
- First Team All-New York State selection and Newsday‘s Nassau County Player of the Year in 2024.
- Two-time Newsday All-Long Island First Team and two-time All-Nassau County selection (2023 and 2024).
- Honored with Mike Clarke Award in 2024, awarded to Nassau County’s Most Oustanding Player.
- Tabbed Nassau County’s Power Conference Player of the Year in 2024.
- Named to Newsday‘s Preseason Top 100 list for girls soccer players in 2024.
- Received Second Team All-New York State honors in 2023.
- Member of three honor socities (National, National Art, and National Spanish).
- Played club soccer for SUSA FC, finishing as four-time qualifier for ECNL National Playoffs Champions League.
- Father, John, was four-year member of baseball program at Duke (1995-99) … mother, Tara, played softball at Fordham (1995-99)
- Second member of family to attend Cornell, joining her cousin, Samantha.
- Enrolling in the SC Johnson College of Business.
Madison Guiry
Defender • 5-7 • Hardwick, N.J. • Blair Academy • Match Fit Academy FC
- Four-year letterwinner in soccer at Blair Academy, where she captained team for three years and was a two-time First Team All-League (2022 and 2023) and First Team All-State (2021 and 2022) selection.
- Earned the Hammer Award for grit, a school community-based award.
- Received 2024 Blair Soccer Award, despite missing entire season due to injury.
- Five-year captain for club team, Match Fit Academy.
- Enrolling in the College of Industrial and Labor Relations.
Raya Leikin
Defender / Midfielder • 5-6 • Mill Valley, Calif. • Marin Academy • Mountain View Los Altos SC
- Earned four letters in girls soccer at Marin Academy, leading team in goals scored each of last two seasons.
- Two-time First Team Bay Area Conference (BAC) honoree.
- Named team captain and was selected team MVP following senior season.
- Aided Marin Academy to trio of BCL championships, as well as NCS championship (2022-23) and CIF state title (2021-22).
- Four-time NCS Scholar-Athlete selection.
- Also lettered in cross country for three seasons, finishing as a top-three runner each year and aiding team to qualify for states.
- Honor roll student and leader of five different student clubs.
- Completed an internship within the medical field, volunteered in numerous community initiatives, and was Marin Academy admissions fellow.
- Played club soccer with Mountain View Los Altos Soccer Club (MVLA SC), where club was ranked in top 6 ECNL clubs in nation and ranked in top 10 ECNL team in nation,
- Appeared in round of 16 of ECNL National Championship in 2023 and 2024.
- Older brother, Adam, is member of Pomona-Pitzer men’s soccer team.
- Enrolling in the SC Johnson College of Business.
Madeline Park
Defender • 5-7 • Palos Verdes, Calif. • Chadwick School • FRAM SC
- Served as four-year captain of Chadwick School girls soccer team, where she was a three-time All-Prep League selection (2021-22, 2022-23, 2024-25) and guided program to four consecutive CIF playoff appearances.
- Also earned three letters in volleyball, serving as a setter, and captaining 2023-24 team, and aided program to CIF playoff appearances in all three seasons.
- Played club soccer with FRAM Soccer Club, earning National Cup championship in 2020.
- Received National Charity League Presidental Volunteer Service Award.
- Member of Chadwick School’s Community Service, Sustainability Council, Athletic Council, and Peer Mentors clubs.
- Served as leader of Morgan’s Message club and was council member of Girls Academy Advisory Council.
- Enrolled in the SC Johnson College of Business.
Samantha Qureshey
Goalkeeper • 5-7 • Macungie, Pa. • Episcopal HS [Texas] • Albion Hurricanes
- Played soccer for four years at Episcopal High School in Texas, where she aided team to SPC championship in 2024 and was named to All-SPC Team during 2024-25 season.
- Two-time All-SPC South Zone honoree in 2023 and 2024.
- AP Scholar with Distinction and member of National, Math, and Science Honor Societies.
- Played club soccer for Albion Hurricanes, where she served as a co-captain between 2021-25.
Andrea Wilson
Forward • 5-7 • Fairport, N.Y. • Fairport HS • WNY Flash
- Three-time Section V champion (2022, 2024, 2025) and two-time regional champion (2024, 2025) at Fairport HS.
- Received Section V all-star and All-Greater Rochester First Team honors in 2025.
- Earned AP Scholar with Distinction honors, as well as being named a Scholar Athlete … member of High Honor Roll.
- Played club soccer with WNY Flash, earning Second Team Ohio Valley honors in 2023.
- Enrolling in the College of Engineering.
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