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What's been done and what's left to do as Stephanie Rempe's Nevada tenure hits three years

Stephanie Rempe’s three-year anniversary as Nevada’s athletic director was Saturday with the Wolf Pack coming off a strong spring season that helped even out a fall campaign filled with struggles. Nevada carries some momentum into the offseason after winning a pair of Mountain West titles for the first time since April 2022, which came two […]

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What's been done and what's left to do as Stephanie Rempe's Nevada tenure hits three years

Stephanie Rempe’s three-year anniversary as Nevada’s athletic director was Saturday with the Wolf Pack coming off a strong spring season that helped even out a fall campaign filled with struggles. Nevada carries some momentum into the offseason after winning a pair of Mountain West titles for the first time since April 2022, which came two months before Rempe was hired June 21, 2022. Here are three things Rempe has accomplished during her first three years on campus plus three things that must still be accomplished.

Mission accomplished

1. Championships won: Nevada ended its three-year drought without a Mountain West title this spring when softball and baseball both won regular-season championships within two weeks of each other. The “Big 5” sports on campus usually include football, men’s basketball, women’s basketball, baseball and softball, and Nevada’s latter two are both in good shape with coaches Rempe hired in softball’s Victoria Hayward and baseball’s Jake McKinley. Both should bring back most of their rosters from last season in 2026. Nevada’s diamond sports are both ascending.

2. Facility improvements: Nevada has completed more than $28 million in facility improvements during Rempe’s tenure, including the $12 million Lannes Basketball Building; $5 million in other locker-room upgrades; $4 million in improvements at Peccole Park; and the installation of a $3 million playing surface at Hixson Park. Some of that money was raised before Rempe was hired, but she was influential in creating a pathway and funding for the $32 million indoor Fieldhouse in addition to playing a key role in the $435 million GSR Arena moving forward. Both will have groundbreakings this summer.

3. Community branding: Under Rempe, the Wolf Pack has improved its community branding by creating the slogan of “Nevada’s College Town” while increasing licensing deals with Wolf Pack-branded chocolate, coffee, barbeque sauce, beer, liquor and wine, not to mention a co-branded credit card. Except for the credit card, all of these deals have been partnerships with small businesses that have Northern Nevada roots. While there’s a small financial gain with these deals, it’s more about keeping the Wolf Pack brand in the mind of those in Northern Nevada, which should help ticket sales, donations and connectivity.

Still to accomplish

1. Fix football: Nevada football is 7-30 during Rempe’s tenure. She inherited coach Ken Wilson, who she fired after back-to-back 2-10 seasons. Rempe hired Jeff Choate, who went 3-10 last year despite improved on-field performance. Simply put, an athletic department is not healthy unless football is successful. And 7-30 is not successful. Rempe launched an initiative last fall to try and raise $50 million over the next 10 years to help fund Nevada football, with the indoor Fieldhouse a big boon for that program. Nevada football needs to, at minimum, be a regular bowl team. But getting that sport to the championship level in the next couple of years is the goal.

2. Find money for revenue sharing: College athletics is only becoming more expensive, with the advent of legalized revenue sharing allowing schools to directly pay their athletes up to $20.5 million starting July 1. Nevada has opted into revenue sharing with a goal of $5 million in NIL/revenue sharing money for its athletes in 2025-26. How the typically cash-strapped Wolf Pack will come up with that money is undetermined. Under Rempe, Nevada has persuaded the university to contribute an additional $10 million per year to athletics. But the Wolf Pack has struggled to make ends meet even with that money, which was meant to get Nevada to the MW median in public-money support. Finding revenue-sharing money won’t be easy.

3. Conference stability: Nevada was left behind in the Pac-12/MW split with Wolf Pack contemporaries Boise State, Fresno State and Utah State getting Pac-12 invitations along with San Diego State and Colorado State. You can’t pin that on Rempe as that die had been cast with Nevada falling behind the MW curve well before she was hired. But conference realignment never stops. There’s usually massive changes every 10 years. And it’s up to Rempe and her staff to position the Wolf Pack for further conference stability when the next wave of realignment hits, which could come after the MW’s media-rights deal that’s currently being negotiating ends in 2032. Rempe’s job is to make Nevada as attractive as possible for bigger conferences by then.

You can watch our NSN Tonight segment breaking down Stephanie Rempe’s first three years at Nevada below.

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Five-star commit Felix Ojo’s bold prediction

“I feel like Lubbock and Texas Tech is a special place, special program. What coach McGuire is building is great. In the next 2-3 years we’re gonna be a national championship contender” – 5⭐️ Texas Tech OL commit Felix Ojo (@FelixTheOL) Full interview coming to RRS #GunsUp pic.twitter.com/TOS4utlfxS — RedRaiderSports.com (@RedRaiderSports) August 12, 2025 The […]

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The Texas Tech Red Raiders football program is going to be an interesting case study over the next few seasons. A team that has historically been a middling program and has suddenly seen an influx of talent. That isn’t to say that players like Graham Harrell, Michael Crabtree, and Patrick Mahomes weren’t talented.

Lubbock is starting to see five-star talent look their way. It started with five-star WR Micah Hudson, and now the Red Raiders have seen two more five-star players commit to the program, including Felix Ojo, who everyone thought would go the way of the Longhorns. While head coach Joey McGuire brings a lot of energy, the reason that the Red Raiders are in the thick of the recruiting landscape is NIL.

Welcome to the new college landscape, where Board of Regents chairman Cody Campbell is wheeling and dealing to put a championship-caliber team on the field. It certainly helps that he is a billionaire. He turned the softball team into a contender in one season after bringing the top player in the country, NiJaree Canady, to Lubbock. They were one win away from a title. But can he do that with the football program? Ojo thinks so.

“I feel like Lubbock and Texas Tech is a special place, special program,” Ojo said via Red Raider Sports. “What coach McGuire is building is great. In the next 2-3 years, we’re gonna be a national championship contender.”

One shouldn’t be oblivious to the fact that the only reason Tech can compete on the trails with some of the heavy hitters in college football is NIL. That is just the nature of the beast. While it is nice to see a new face jump into the thick of things on the national recruiting trail, the wins need to come, or this is just all for not.

Keep your eyes on the South Plains of Texas, where the Red Raiders look to create a dust storm of their own at Jones AT&T Stadium.





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High school coach provides early frontrunner for quote of the year with comparison involving NIL and his daughters

Every year there’s a press conference moment, or post game interview where a fired up coach blesses us with a sound byte worthy of quote of the year honors. Typically it happens at the college level, but with high school football seasons kicking off around the country the past few weeks, Capital HS (WV) head […]

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Every year there’s a press conference moment, or post game interview where a fired up coach blesses us with a sound byte worthy of quote of the year honors.

Typically it happens at the college level, but with high school football seasons kicking off around the country the past few weeks, Capital HS (WV) head coach Jon Carpenter had a gem roll off his tongue this week.

On August 11th, West Virginia joined a growing number of states who have announced high school athletes can now get paid for Name, Image and Likeness deals. The Mountaineer state is also allowing middle school athletes the same ability as well.

Asked his thoughts on the topic, with the top 2027 running back in the state in David Robinson practicing for his program in the background, Carpenter shared he really doesn’t “pay attention to all that stuff.”

Carpenter contends that NIL has already been a part of West Virginia high school football for years, just take a look at the schools that get 20 transfers each year. He went on to praise the loyalty that Robinson and his family have showed in making the intentional choice to play for the community they take so much pride in before pausing for a second and adding this zinger.

“I tell [the players], I’ve got daughters. Are you going to let your daughters go out with someone who has been to four or five high schools? And have bailed every time for more money or whatever?”

“Nope. I wouldn’t let those guys show up to see my daughter.”

“I think that’s why I like David Robinson so much. If your goal is to get a scholarship, that’s why David Robinson has got them, because he’s turned down money and all that to give back to his community, and he’s got pride in himself.”

“With someone like that, NIL money can’t buy you pride or your guts, so I’ll roll with people like that.”

Carpenter, who led Capital to the state title in 2014 and brought home state coach of the year honors in 2017, stepped away a few seasons ago after a very public battle with the school board was sparked by what he called inequities between Capital and other Kanawha County football programs. Capital, who shares its field with University of Charleston, had over 50 practices cut short or moved over a three year span, was left out of levy money given to every other county team for a new turf playing surface, further igniting issues between Carpenter and the school.

After leading the program to an impressive 91-35 record in 11 seasons from 2010-2020, Carpenter returned to Capital as head coach after a three year absence in December of 2023.

Hear more of his thoughts on West Virginia NIL in the clip. 





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Why Authentic Brands Group Is Playing the Long Game With Reebok

Authentic Brands Group’s acquisition of Reebok in 2022 was a bit of a double-edged sword. On one hand, Reebok found itself finally separated from Adidas. Already a long way from its glory days as Nike’s chief rival in the sneaker wars of the late 1980s when the German footwear giant acquired the Boston-based brand in […]

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Why Authentic Brands Group Is Playing the Long Game With Reebok

Authentic Brands Group’s acquisition of Reebok in 2022 was a bit of a double-edged sword.

On one hand, Reebok found itself finally separated from Adidas. Already a long way from its glory days as Nike’s chief rival in the sneaker wars of the late 1980s when the German footwear giant acquired the Boston-based brand in 2005, by 2022 Reebok was a shadow of its former self. Adidas had long ago siphoned off top athletes and league deals, pigeonholing Reebok into niche categories like cross-training.

“Under Adidas, we were somewhat kind of stifled,” said Reebok chief executive Todd Krinsky, who had been with the company for more than three decades before ABG appointed him to the top job. “It was dark days for us, man.”

But there wasn’t much reason to expect things to get better under the new owner. Primarily known as a holding company for distressed brands like Juicy Couture and Nautica, Authentic Brands Group’s usual strategy was to license faded but well-known names, while investments in product innovation, marketing and retail were typically lower priorities. At $2.5 billion, Reebok was by far ABG’s biggest acquisition to date, and even in its diminished state, in a healthier position than many of its new portfolio-mates.

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Some feared Reebok could be reduced to a logo on cheap T-shirts and bottles of perfume. ABG has hired third parties to operate and distribute Reebok in key markets. But it clearly has big ambitions for the brand, particularly in basketball. Reebok appointed retired NBA superstars Shaquille O’Neal and Allen Iverson as the president and vice president of basketball operations (ABG owns both players’ name and likeness; a Netflix series about their work to revive the brand debuted in June). Menswear designer Jide Osifeso was named head of basketball earlier this year, focusing on design and creative direction. The Engine A unisex hoops silhouette launched to much fanfare in January. WNBA star Angel Reese signed a multiyear deal in 2024 and her shoe is set to launch soon.

ABG has also expanded distribution, inking a deal with JD Group in 2021 before the Adidas sale was formalised in 2022 to place Reebok in nearly 3,000 stores across the US and Europe. In June, Reebok entered into a partnership with Italy-based streetwear company Slam Jam to further bolster the brand’s global presence.

This expansion for Reebok seems to be paying dividends. In January 2024, ABG chief Jamie Salter said the company had in the previous year hit $5 billion in annual sales, up from $1.6 billion in 2020 under Adidas, and planned on reaching $10 billion by 2027, according to Retail Dive.

Reebok’s success under ABG hasn’t entirely quieted scepticism about the company’s ultimate plans for the brand.

“I think the game that’s being played is dangerous because of what we know about Authentic Brands Group,” Collab Lab founder and sneaker marketing expert Bimma Williams said. “I don’t believe they’re in it for the long haul. I don’t believe they have a bone in their body that’s like ‘We are diehard and bullish about basketball.’”

Reports surfaced that ABG was in talks with Anta to potentially sell the brand off. Steve Robaire, Reebok’s executive vice president, denied the report and said ABG is in the Reebok business for the long haul.

“There’s a massive opportunity for Authentic to continue growing into the sport ecosystem. Reebok is at the heart of our strategy,” Robaire said. “We’ll always look for the best opportunity to grow the brand, but we’re not looking to sell the brand at all.”

Why Reebok Is Pushing Basketball

Reebok’s focus on basketball shouldn’t come as a surprise. Founded in 1958, the brand mainly sold tennis and running shoes for its first three decades, but struck gold in the late 1980s and early 1990s with innovative silhouettes like the Reebok Pump, Iverson’s signature Question and Answer shoes, and O’Neal’s Shaqnosis. The performance basketball sector is again having a moment in fashion for the first time in years and the brand knows that. It believes that success in this arena could mean success culturally, too.

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“There’s such a crossover between what’s happening in basketball and what’s happening in culture from a lifestyle perspective,” Robaire said. “If you think about when Reebok was at its best, we were disrupting the sports base in basketball and that reverberated across the brand.”

With that in mind, the brand has been intentional in its approach to the sport. It isn’t working to scoop up every athlete that becomes available on the market and give them a signature shoe deal. Part of that is due to the brand’s selectivity, but many of basketball’s superstars already have deals secured with bigger brands.

Reebok is in a position where it has to do more with less. That’s why the brand’s partnership with Angel Reese has worked so well, Krinsky said. The brand was able to dedicate more resources to the development of her signature shoe and put it on a “fast track.” Other brands in the marketplace are also using this playbook. Working with fewer athletes means dedicating more of the spotlight to establishing younger stars.

“When I want to go back and say, ‘Angel is popping right now. This could be a big opportunity — let’s accelerate it.’ We can all rally around that,” Krinksky said. “We don’t have the most, but we try to build icons.”

Whether basketball alone can propel Reebok to $10 billion in sales is an open question. Basketball shoe sales declined by five percent in 2024 and the market was down by 8 percent year-to-date in May 2025, according to Circana.

“I think Reebok can make a nice name for themselves in basketball. Certainly, Angel Reese is a hot property right now and that’s meaningful,” said Matt Powell, senior advisor at BCE consulting. “But the women’s basketball shoe business is very small compared to the men’s shoe business.”

The End Game

Despite the resources ABG is pouring into Reebok, there are still those out there who are sceptical about the company’s belief in sport and its commitment to Reebok. Count Williams among them.

“Historically, we know that ABG doesn’t invest in brands in that way,” Williams said. “They’re very much … figuring out how to get as much profit out as possible without doing much investment in innovation and new demand creation.”

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While Powell said questions about ABG’s intentions are fair, he said the company has a strong incentive to handle Reebok differently than its other brands.

“This is really the first thriving brand ABG has ever purchased,” Powell said. “It takes a different kind of management to run a thriving business rather than simply trying to squeeze the last bit out of a harvested brand.”

Robaire said Reebok is still charging ahead on sports overall as a category — not just basketball. That expansion is already underway. Reebok signed pro golfer Bryson DeChambeau in December and have launched golf footwear. The brand will also have a focus on “court sports,” Robaire said, including pickleball, padel and tennis. It will dive into soccer soon, which ties into an upcoming move for Reebok’s European headquarters back to London.

ABG has been focused on “the strategy of ‘Let Reebok be Reebok,” Robaire said. “Be unapologetically us and get back into these verticals.”

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West Virginia approves middle & high school athletes to make money through NIL

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West Virginia approves middle & high school athletes to make money through NIL


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Faking injuries will be punished

Recently, the rule changes in College Football have come in the form of off-the-field changes whether it’s to NIL, Revenue Sharing, the transfer portal, and more. As the 2025 College Football season approaches, many may not realize that several key changes were made to the rules between the white lines. The NCAA revisited some of […]

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Recently, the rule changes in College Football have come in the form of off-the-field changes whether it’s to NIL, Revenue Sharing, the transfer portal, and more. As the 2025 College Football season approaches, many may not realize that several key changes were made to the rules between the white lines.

The NCAA revisited some of the biggest issues of the 2024-25 College Football season and changed the rules to either add guidelines for the officials or close any potential loopholes that were exposed. Ahead of the season, every fan should learn about the following new rules that will be in effect for 2025.

Faking Injuries:

Last season, one of the biggest stories came when the SEC had to release what was quickly dubbed “The Lane Kiffin rule” as Ole Miss was blatantly faking injuries to get free timeouts. This season, if a player is “injured” after the ball is spotted by the officials, the team will be charged with a timeout and if the team is out of timeouts they will be given a delay of game penalty. Additionally, the player will have to remain out of the game for one snap even if a timeout is charged.

Overtime Timeouts:

When a game reaches overtime, each team will be granted one time out for the first overtime period and the second overtime period. Once the game reaches the point where they go back and forth attempting 2 point conversions, the team will be granted only one timeout until the game ends. TV timeouts can and will take place after the first two overtime periods but, not during the third overtime period.

Instant Replay Verbiage:

In the past, a referee would declare that a call on the field “stands” if there wasn’t conclusive evidence or they would “confirm” the call if they had clear video evidence to back up the call. The officials will now eliminate both words from their vocabulary and use the term “upheld” if the call stands.

T Signal on Kickoffs:

During Bowl Season, South Carolina and Illinois got into a massive disagreement when Bret Bielema felt that the Gamecocks kick returner used the T-Signal than returned the ball which typically indicates touchback. Now after a player uses the “T-Signal” there will be no return.

Pre-snap Movement:

Defensive Linemen are now prohibited from making any quick or “exaggerated” movement that interfere with offensive snap calls.

Disconcerting Signals:

A defensive player cannot use any words or signals that would indicate the play is going to begin in an effort to confuse the offense. The defense is given two designated words, “Stem” and “Move” while defensive players are no longer allowed to clap which is used by the offense.

Substitution Fouls by the Defense:

Last season, Dan Lanning found a loophole in the rule book and decided to play with more than 11 players during the final snap against the Ohio State Buckeyes as it cost the Ducks 5 yards but, allowed the game to end. Now, the officials will give the defense a 5-yard penalty while allowing the offense to decide if they’d like the clock to be reset to where it was when the ball was snapped with the clock starting again on the next snap.

Eye Shields:

While Football players love the look of a tinted visor, any company producing the visors must submit nearly clear visors to the NCAA for approval. Only Oakley and Nike have submitted and have been granted approval for the season.

Defenseless Players:

This season, any player attempting to recover a loose ball or a fumble is considered a defenseless player bringing some order to scrums for the football.

Unsportsmanlike Fouls:

Any player who simulates brandishing a weapon on the field in 2025 will be given an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty.

More College Football News:



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Joel Klatt reveals his College Football Playoff crashers for 2025

Fox Sports’ Joel Klatt revealed his College Football Playoff crashes for the 2025 season and there are four intriguing teams to look at. Based on the list, he took one from each Power Four conference. These aren’t teams that will necessarily make the College Football Playoff of course. Heck, they might not even be dark […]

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Fox Sports’ Joel Klatt revealed his College Football Playoff crashes for the 2025 season and there are four intriguing teams to look at. Based on the list, he took one from each Power Four conference.

These aren’t teams that will necessarily make the College Football Playoff of course. Heck, they might not even be dark horses to some people, but Klatt likes the moxie.

So, without further ado, let’s dive into the CFP party crashers for this season. We’ll start over in the Big Ten.

Jedd Fisch had to start from scratch when he took the Huskies’ job a little later thane expected. Of course, that’s because Kalen DeBoer left for Alabama following a national title run. But Year 2 under Fisch could be very promising.

Klatt: “They might have, and no one talks about them, the best quarterback, running back, wide receiver combo. That trifecta in the Big Ten: Demond Williams was terrific last year (at QB), Jonah Coleman (RB) is an excellent player, and Denzel Boston is an excellent wide receiver on the outside.”

Missouri HC Eli Drinkwitz
Denny Medley | Imagn Images

Eli Drinkwitz led this team to back-to-back 10-win seasons, albeit win No. 10 came in the bowl game last season. But, the Tigers’ defense might be the best it’s ever been under their current coach. It’s just a matter of the offense stepping up in 2025.

Klatt: “Over the last couple of years, they’ve recruited well, Drinkwitz has a culture at Missouri, I’m a fan of Beau Pribula. I know that they haven’t settled on quarterback yet, but I saw him at Penn State last year. Hard for them to keep him off the field … Here’s what I can say in terms of on the field, it’s off the field, it’s off the field. They hit the schedule lottery in the SEC.”

Utah is an intriguing case every year considering they have Kyle Whittingham at the helm. They totally redid this roster, so it’ll be a case of it working extremely well or blowing up in Utah’s faces.

Klatt: “I put them into my top 25 right at the end, at number 25 because of this: when nobody is talking about them, that is when they’re at their most dangerous. Coming off the season, they went 5-7, that was all injury related for Kyle Whittingham, in particular at the quarterback position … and then they upgraded significantly at that position, with the New Mexico transfer Devin Dampier … I think they will be a little bit more of an RPO style team, which will help their offensive line and run game … Defense should be solid.”

georgia tech notre dame brent key
(Photo by Jamie Rhodes-Imagn Images)

Brent Key might have something cooking at Georgia Tech. Haynes King is back at QB and Jamal Haynes is an intriguing running back. The defense also landed key defensive line transfers AJ Hoffler and Matthew Alexander.

Klatt: “I really love Haynes King … It’s not that I didn’t like Georgia Tech Haynes King and Jamal Haynes the running back, that’s a really good combination (despite not putting them in the top 25 right now). I love the fact that they can play with the best teams in the country … They’ve got an opportunity to put themselves on the radar. Why? Well, because they open at Colorado.”



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