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A New Era of College Sports

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A New Era of College Sports

The NCAA House settlement agreement has been the subject of significant discussion and controversy, with multiple hearings reflecting the magnitude of its implications. However, on Friday, June 6, Judge Claudia Wilken granted final approval of the settlement, marking what is considered the most transformative shift in the history of college sports. Before the settlement, student-athletes could only receive compensation via third parties for their Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL). However, following the settlement, athletic departments at colleges and universities across the country can now directly compensate their student-athletes. The major components of the settlement are outlined below:

1. Back Pay

A central provision of the settlement is the allocation of approximately $2.8 billion in back pay to current and former student-athletes who participated in college athletics between June 15, 2016, and September 15, 2024. Eligibility and payment amounts will vary based on each student-athlete’s sport, institution, and duration of participation. Additionally, these payments will be distributed over a 10-year period and will be administered under the oversight of a newly formed College Sports Commission. The Commission is also tasked with enforcing settlement terms, including the regulation of third-party NIL deals exceeding $600.

2. Revenue Sharing

Beginning in the 2025–2026 academic year, the settlement permits institutions to share up to 22% of certain revenue, which excludes earnings from media rights, ticket sales, and scholarships, with student-athletes. Participation in this revenue-sharing model is mandatory for Power Five conference schools but is optional for non–Power Five Division I institutions.

It is important to note that the 22% cap excludes earnings from third-party NIL agreements or sponsorships secured independently by student-athletes. Institutions are responsible for determining their own allocation and distribution processes if they participate in revenue sharing. Additionally, the settlement also imposes annual financial reporting requirements, and the College Sports Commission will oversee compliance with the terms of the settlement.

3. Roster Limits and Scholarships

The settlement eliminates previous scholarship limits, allowing Division I schools to award athletic aid to all athletes on a team’s roster. However, it introduces sport-specific roster caps, which apply only to institutions participating in the new revenue-sharing model. Notably, a grandfathering provision ensures that current student-athletes already on rosters will not count toward these new limits. The revised model will take effect on July 1, 2025.

4. College Sports Commission  

Although not included within the settlement, it should be noted that on the same day the settlement was approved, the SEC, Big Ten, ACC, and Pac-12 launched the website for the College Sports Commission, an independent regulatory body responsible for overseeing student-athlete compensation in the new era of collegiate athletics and student-athlete compensation. The College Sports Commission will be led by Bryan Seeley (a Major League Baseball executive) as its CEO.

Implications and Considerations

Looking forward, institutions will need to strategically budget to permit student-athlete compensation and must adapt to an evolving regulatory and financial environment. Some athletic departments have already taken such steps in anticipation of the settlement, including but not limited to establishing their athletic departments as separate for-profit organizations that are not bound by the charitable restrictions of the institutions they are attached to. Taking such action will assist their ability to raise capital and manage the portfolio of payments to student-athletes. Additionally, the settlement may widen the competitive and financial gap between Power Five schools and smaller Division I programs, considering disparities in resources and required revenue-sharing participation. Similar to the College Sports Commission, there will be a host of corollary issues that will undoubtedly further shape the landscape of college sports, including potential Title IX and student employment implications, among others. 

During this critical time in college sports, Akerman will continue monitoring all developments in this space and stands ready to assist the compliance needs of colleges and universities. 

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Douglas Hoover – Women’s Track & Field Coach

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Coaching Highlights at Saint Francis

  • Six-time NEC Coach of the Year – 2017 (Women’s Cross Country), 2019 (Men’s Indoor and Outdoor Track & Field), 2021, 2022, 2023 (Women’s Track & Field)
  • Coached two NCAA Participants – Deshaun Jackson (2019, 4th 110m hurdles), Sara Phelan (2019, 21st, javelin)
  • Five-time NEC Champion – 2016 Women’s Cross Country; 2019, Men’s Track & Field; 2021, 2022, 2023 Women’s Outdoor Track & Field
  • Coached 15 NCAA East Preliminary Participants
  • Coached 39 All-NEC Cross Country Performers – 17 Men’s Cross Country; 21 Women’s Cross Country
  • Coached 119 NEC Track and Field Champions – 25 Men’s Indoor Track & Field; 13 Women’s Indoor Track & Field; 32 Men’s Outdoor Track & Field; 39 Women’s Outdoor Track & Field
  • 35 Times An Athlete Named NEC Outstanding Performer: Men’s Cross Country – Bryce England (Performer, 2017); Women’s Cross Country – Anna Quackenbush (Rookie, 2023) Rosie Gaydos (Rookie, 2024); Men’s Indoor Track & Field – Jesse Brown (Rookie, 2016), Bryce England (Performer, Distance, 2018); Nickolas Hyde (Throws, 2024); Men’s Outdoor Track & Field – Bryce England (2017, Distance; 2018, Distance), Chris Frederick (2018, Rookie); Deshaun Jackson (2019, Performer), Chris Frederick (2019, Sprints); Benjamin Ross (2019, Throws); Nickolas Hyde (Throws, 2021, 2022, ; Rookie, 2021); Julian Saunders (Sprints, 2023); Women’s Cross Country – Hannah Dorian (Rookie, 2014); Women’s Indoor Track & Field – Madeline Murphy (Jumps, 2023); Women’s Outdoor Track & Field – Brittany Jackson (Track, 2013), Paris Cotman (Rookie, 2013), Emma O’Hara (Rookie, 2013), Jennifer Hahne (2017, Track); Emily Lunger (2019, Rookie); Mylan Crews (Performer, Sprints, 2021); Madeline Murphy (Jumps, 2022; Performer, Jumps, 2023); Carly Sedun (Rookie, 2022; Thrower, 2024)

Douglas Hoover enters his 14th season at the helm of the Saint Francis University men’s and women’s cross country and track & field program in 2025-26. A 20-year veteran of the collegiate coaching ranks, Hoover previously served two years as an assistant coach with the Red Flash from 2000-2002.

Saint Francis cross country and track and field has had a long tradition of success before Hoover took over in 2012 and he has continued to build on the legacy in his time in Loretto. Hoover has helped the Red Flash to four track and field championships between the men and the women and the women’s cross country team won the 2016 NEC title. In addition, two athletes have competed in the NCAA Championships with Deshaun Jackson finishing fourth in the 110m hurdles to earn All-American first-team status. Sara Phelan also competed at the national championships in 2019 and finished 19th in the javelin. 

Hoover was also instrumental in moving the home cross country course from Immergrun Golf Course to B & D Acres in Tyrone. The Red Flash has held home events at B & D for the last four years, including hosting the NEC Championships in 2022 and 2025. The 2017 women’s cross country team won the NEC Championships and the 2016 Red Flash men took home the NEC Men’s Track & Field Championships in 2019.

Saint Francis won the NEC Women’s Outdoor Track and Field Championships in 2021, 2022 and 2023. It was the first time the Red Flash women’s track and field team won three titles in a row. The 2021 title was by one of the widest point margins in NEC history (82 points). 

During Hoover’s time at Saint Francis, the squads have become perennial contenders in the NEC, and have captured two conference team titles, breaking several school records and having several athletes compete on the national stage with 15 competing at the NCAA East Preliminary along with Jackson and Phelan on the national stage. In his first 13 years as head coach, 35 times an athlete was named an outstanding performer at the NEC Championships, an athlete has won an event at the NEC Championships 119 times and 39 times cross country had a All-NEC performer. 

Hoover’s teams have excelled in the classroom, as well as in competition. Four of his six teams have won the Northeast Conference Team GPA award, earning the highest GPA in their sport in the conference: men’s and women’s Cross Country, and women’s indoor and outdoor Track & Field.  

Hoover came to Loretto from Juniata College, where he served as an assistant coach with the men’s and women’s track & field and cross country teams from 2007 to 2012.  While there, he helped the women’s cross country team to a Landmark Conference Championship in 2007.  During his tenure Juniata produced three All-America selections, an NCAA Championship qualifier in cross country, and a NCAA provisional qualifier in track & field.  The men’s cross country squad landed 14 student-athletes on the Landmark Conference’s first or second teams, while the women’s cross country team had 12 who were honored.

Prior to Juniata, Hoover spent five years as the head coach for the men’s and women’s cross country teams at Penn State Altoona, where he was instrumental in the founding of the program in 2002.  In his first five years with the newly-minted program, Penn State Altoona teams placed among the top three in the conference championships eight times while earning one team championship and one individual championship.  He was named the Allegheny Mountain Collegiate Conference Women’s Cross Country Coach of the Year in 2004 and 2005.

Prior to that, Hoover served as a graduate assistant coach with the Saint Francis men’s and women’s track & field and cross country teams from 2000 to 2002.  During that time, the men’s teams won every NEC Championship, and future Olympian Brian Sell qualified for the 2001 NCAA National Championship in the 10,000m run.  Kevin Doyle also captured the 2001 NEC individual cross country championship.  The women’s cross country team captured the 2001 NEC team title.  Five women and four men earned All-NEC cross country honors in 2001.

Hoover’s competitive career was spent in the Summer Biathlon, which combines the disciplines of cross country running and rifle marksmanship.  He was a member of the United States Summer Biathlon National Team from 1997 to 2012.  Hoover was a five-time National Champion (2006, 2007, 2008, 2010, and 2012).  He had a total of 13 top-ten finishes in the National Championships during his competitive career.  He also represented the United States in five World Championships (2003, 2006, 2007. 2008, and 2009), earning two top-twenty finishes, while leading the United States team four times.  He was the USA Flag Bearer at the World Championships in 2007, and was the USA Team Captain in 2009.

In 2016, Hoover was inducted into the Blair County Sports Hall of Fame.

Hoover received his Bachelor’s degree in Finance with a minor in Economics from the Pennsylvania State University in 1994, and earned his Master’s in Business Administration from Saint Francis University in 2002.

A native of Tyrone, Pennsylvania, Hoover now resides in Loretto.



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Women’s Basketball Beats CSUN for Best Start in 45 Years

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MALIBU, Calif. – Pepperdine women’s basketball (9-3) beat CSUN (5-6) 69-63 Saturday afternoon in Firestone Fieldhouse for the program’s best start in 45 years.
 
“We created a lot of great opportunities, and found a way when shots weren’t falling,” head coach Katie Faulkner said. “I think we know we want a better effort defensively in the second half but people stepped up in different ways throughout the game.”
 
Shooting just .382 on the afternoon, including .280 from distance, the Waves had to find a way to win with the offense being cold for the majority of the game.
 
The most from a single player in the first quarter on either side would be Shorna Preston with four points as neither squad found an offensive rhythm. With an average of .270 shooting from the field for both teams after the opening 10, Pepperdine led 12-11.
 
More than doubling the first quarter’s production, the Waves’ shots started to fall in the second. Lina Falk led the way with eight points as Shorna Preston hit her second from distance, nearly securing a double-double before the half with 11 rebounds and nine points. With the defense outrebounding CSUN 9-4, the Waves erased all second-chance opportunities for the Matadors, taking a 31-18 lead into the locker room at half.
 
Momentum swung in the visitor’s favor coming out of the break as the 13 point-lead was erased for Pepperdine throughout the third quarter. Two separate lead changes and three ties in the 10-minute stretch proved the game would come down to the wire. Being outshot .294 to .558, the Waves fought through the swing of favorability, taking a slim 44-43 lead into the final quarter.
 
After another cold 10-minute stretch, the offense found a groove for the final stretch. Shooting .500 from the field as well as from three, the Waves kept a hungry CSUN team at bay. Seleh Harmon hit one of her two from distance in the fourth, making it six straight games with a three from the freshman who has netted one in 11 of the 12 games played this season. Falk led Pepperdine to victory in the second half with 10 points as the Waves pulled off the 69-63 win.
 
Closing out the nonconference stretch of the season 9-3, it is Pepperdine’s best start in 45 years and the fourth best start in program history. After the Holidays, the Waves begin West Coast Conference play on the road, going to Pullman, Wash. to take on the Cougars of Washington State Dec. 28. The game will be available on ESPN+ (subscription required) with live stats available at pepperdinewaves.com.
 
GAME NOTES
 

  • Lina Falk dropped a season-high 18 points, two shy of her career-high. 
  • Falk’s season-high of 18 led the team this afternoon.
  • Shorna Preston secured her fourth double-double of the season with 13 points and a season-high 16 rebounds.
  • The third and final Wave in double digits was Seleh Harmon, dropping 10.
  • Taija Sta. Maria, who leads the team in assists, was the leader once again tonight with four.
  • The Waves and Matadors split 30 turnovers evenly with 15 apiece.
  • Pepperdine scored 13 in transition compared to CSUN’s zero.
  • The Waves outrebounded the Matadors 47-36, including 17-10 on the offensive side of the glass.

 
 
 
ABOUT PEPPERDINE WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
Pepperdine women’s basketball has made four NCAA postseason appearances in its history, having won the WCC regular-season four times and the WCC Tournament on three occasions. With six All-American selections in program history, the Waves have also seen success in the WNIT Tournament which included a run to the Sweet Sixteen in 2019.
 
TICKETS
For more information and to purchase tickets to upcoming home events, visit here.
 
FOLLOW
To stay up-to-date on the latest Pepperdine women’s basketball news, follow the Waves on social media @PepperdineWBB



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Craig Skinner, Addi Applegate represent Muncie in NCAA volleyball final

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Dec. 21, 2025, 4:02 a.m. ET



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How to watch Kentucky vs. Texas A&M volleyball in NCAA championship

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Dec. 21, 2025, 6:04 a.m. ET



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How to watch 2025 NCAA women’s volleyball championship: Texas A&M, Kentucky play for title

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By now, almost everything that can be said about the NCAA women’s volleyball final has been said. The serve zones have been diagrammed. The rotations studied. Every star has been labeled and ranked and debated into exhaustion. What Sunday in Kansas City does is ask two teams that have spent the whole season proving themselves to do it again, once more, as if none of it counted yet.

It is No. 1 Kentucky vs. No. 3 Texas A&M, the first all-SEC championship match in Division I women’s volleyball history. Kentucky has been here before, winning the 2020 national title. Texas A&M has not. 


2025 NCAA women’s volleyball championship

ABC is available for free over the air and also streams on ESPN Unlimited. 


The Aggies bulldozed their way into the program’s first championship match by knocking out top overall seed Nebraska in five sets and then sweeping Pitt, another No. 1 seed, in the national semifinal. They arrive with a first-time finalist’s resume and are led by Jamie Morrison, who was just named the national coach of the year.

They’re also the harder team to know. You think you’ve seen their ceiling, and then they elevate. When the Aggies are in system, they can bury you before you’ve adjusted. When they’re not, they don’t panic. Texas A&M standout Logan Lednicky called the Aggies “the grittiest,” and they’ve played like it, especially during the late-set messiness that usually eats upstart teams. Clean volleyball doesn’t really exist in a title match, anyway.

Kentucky comes in with the steadier resume and scar tissue. The Wildcats survived Wisconsin in five sets in the semis. Kentucky’s Craig Skinner and Wisconsin’s Kelly Sheffield coached junior varsity volleyball together in Muncie, Ind., in 1990 and went undefeated. That history is part of how you get here. So is what happened Thursday, when Skinner’s team ended Sheffield’s season.

Here’s the boring truth of a championship: It usually comes down to first contact. If serve receive holds, the setter has options and the block can be manipulated. If serve receive cracks, the whole thing turns into emergency swings.

Notably, Kentucky beat Texas A&M 3-1 when they met during the regular season in early October. That matters as evidence that Kentucky can solve this puzzle. It does not matter as a prediction. Finals are their own species.


Ticketing and streaming links in this article are provided by partners of The Athletic. Restrictions may apply. The Athletic maintains full editorial independence. Partners have no control over or input into the reporting or editing process, and do not review stories before publication.



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UK Wildcats News: Kentucky Volleyball National Championship Gameday

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Good morning, BBN! It’s game day!

The Kentucky Wildcats compete for a volleyball national championship this afternoon against Texas A&M. It’s Kentucky’s second appearance in the NCAA Volleyball National Championship and Texas A&M’s first appearance. It’s also the first time two SEC teams have competed for the national championship.

It’s been a fantastic postseason run for the Wildcats, going back to that thrilling win over Texas in the SEC Championship and all the way to that come-from-behind win over Wisconsin in the semifinals. Now, the Cats have a chance to top it off with a national championship.

Game time is set for 3:30 PM ET on ABC.

This will serve as today’s open thread, so make sure to come back here to talk about the game!

The SEC is stepping up its volleyball game.

She’s been a key piece for this team.

JQ wasted no time making his presence known.

Big performances from Quaintance and Lowe.

He certainly looks like a difference-maker moving forward.

Will Stein’s offense looked good last night.

Texas Tech vs Oregon is the most interesting to me. How about you?

Could you imagine how different things look?

Not a great Year 1 for Schottenheimer.

That’s a game Duke will wish they could have back.



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