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Could Cooper Flagg Become First North American Athlete to Earn $1B In Contracts?

Cooper Flagg, the No. 1 overall pick in the 2025 NBA Draft, is poised to become the first North American athlete to earn $1 billion in contracts. Following a lucrative college career and a rookie contract worth $62.7 million over four years, projections indicate that Flagg could land contracts worth over $70 million and $100 […]

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Could Cooper Flagg Become First North American Athlete to Earn $1B In Contracts?

Cooper Flagg, the No. 1 overall pick in the 2025 NBA Draft, is poised to become the first North American athlete to earn $1 billion in contracts. Following a lucrative college career and a rookie contract worth $62.7 million over four years, projections indicate that Flagg could land contracts worth over $70 million and $100 million in his subsequent deals. Given his generational talent, Flagg’s trajectory could see him racking up $930 million in just over a decade. If he meets performance benchmarks for supermax contracts, he stands an excellent chance of breaking the $1 billion barrier in on-court earnings.

By the Numbers

  • Flagg’s rookie contract is valued at $62.7 million over four years.
  • His potential earnings could total $930 million through his first 14 seasons.

State of Play

  • Flagg’s projected second contract could exceed $359 million if he meets supermax criteria.
  • His third contract may be worth around $509 million, boosting his total career earnings substantially.
  • Other young superstars like Victor Wembanyama also have potential to reach similar earnings.

What’s Next

As Flagg’s career unfolds, his performance and ability to secure lucrative contracts will determine if he can be the first to reach $1 billion in on-court earnings. Continued growth in the NBA’s salary structure may further enhance his opportunities. If he succeeds, other emerging stars may follow a similar path.

Bottom Line

If Flagg fulfills his potential in the NBA, he could redefine the boundaries of athletic earnings, marking a historic milestone in sports contracts and paving the way for future generations of athletes.

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Rivers Set To Jump At USATF Outdoor Championships

Story Links 2025 USATF Outdoor Championships Page 2025 USATF Outdoor Championships Live Results OSHKOSH, Wis.- The two-time defending NCAA Division III long jump champion and division record-holder in both the indoor and outdoor events, Joshua Rivers (Bolingbrook, Ill./Bolingbrook) will compete […]

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OSHKOSH, Wis.- The two-time defending NCAA Division III long jump champion and division record-holder in both the indoor and outdoor events, Joshua Rivers (Bolingbrook, Ill./Bolingbrook) will compete at the USA Track & Field (USATF) Outdoor Championships on Friday (Aug. 1).
 
The USATF Outdoor Championships, the second national meet of the year for Rivers following his fifth-place performance of 7.96 meters at the indoor championships in Staten Island in February, will be hosted by Division I Oregon at Hayward Field in Eugene between Thursday and Sunday (July 31-Aug. 3) and will be broadcast both live and on demand on NBC. The live stat
 

“We are all extremely proud of Josh and all that he has accomplished with the program in his career,” stated head men’s and women’s track and field coach Justin Kinseth. “Josh is one of very few student-athletes that can say they have won four individual national titles and competed at two USATF championships as a collegiate athlete. He is a shining example of the continued excellence of both our track & field program and our athletics department in Oshkosh”.
 
The men’s long jump is scheduled for 4:10 p.m. pacific time (6:10 p.m. central) on Friday.
 

Rivers set both the indoor and outdoor Division III long jump records this season at a pair of home meets. He leapt 8.13 meters at the Early Bird Open & Multi on December 7 and 8.04 meters at the WIAC Outdoor Championship on May 2. The now four-time individual national champion with two indoor titles and a pair of outdoor crowns over the last two seasons, is the only long jumper in Division III history to surpass the eight-meter mark.
 

When asked about what it means to be able to compete at such a high-profile meet, Rivers said, “I am honored to have the opportunity to represent UW-Oshkosh track & field at the USATF Championship for the second time this year after competing at the indoor championship in Staten Island back in February”.
 
The 2025 World Athletics Outdoor Championships will be held in Tokyo, Japan between September 13-21.



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Tia Shum – Women’s Volleyball

ECU • Helped lead Pirates to two consecutive Super 16 appearances at the National Invitational Volleyball Championship • Averaged 14.5 digs/match in 2023 season • Totaled 633 digs in 80 matches over three years in Greenville, N.C. • Secured starting libero role with team bests in digs (359) and digs/set (3.86) as a freshman. BEFORE […]

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ECU

• Helped lead Pirates to two consecutive Super 16 appearances at the National Invitational Volleyball Championship

• Averaged 14.5 digs/match in 2023 season

• Totaled 633 digs in 80 matches over three years in Greenville, N.C.

• Secured starting libero role with team bests in digs (359) and digs/set (3.86) as a freshman.

BEFORE COLLEGE

• Led Saunders Secondary School to first provincial title as a sophomore with a 55-2 mark, while not losing a set in the tournament

• Averaged 12 digs/match as a senior leading team to city and Western Ontario titles

• 2020 Team Ontario Elite member

• Silver medal-winner for Team Ontario at the 2019 USA VB High Performance Championships

• 2017 gold medal winner in the U16 competition of the Volleyball Canada Indoor National Championships in 2017

PERSONAL

• Daughter of Sandra Lee and Wayne Shum



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Prep football 2025 | Sports

Editor’s Note: Today we continue our summer offseason prep football package detailing area teams in the mid-valley region. We are working to compile data for our annual locker room tab in August and have sent out email communications to area football coaches and administrators. What we need from our community partners is emailed responses to […]

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Editor’s Note: Today we continue our summer offseason prep football package detailing area teams in the mid-valley region. We are working to compile data for our annual locker room tab in August and have sent out email communications to area football coaches and administrators. What we need from our community partners is emailed responses to three questions sent out to all area football coaches, as well as a photo shoot date response sent to A-D Photographer Angela Guglielmino at angela@appealdemocrat.com. Also please update Appeal-Democrat Sports Editor Jeff Larson at jlarson@appealdemocrat.com and Editor Chuck Smith at csmith@appealdemocrat.com if any coaching and/or administrative changes have occurred since 2024.





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UT Dallas cuts track and field programs ahead of fall semester – NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth

Some North Texas athletes say they’ve been left scrambling after their sport was cut. The University of Texas at Dallas announced Monday it is dropping its track and field and cross-country programs this upcoming semester. “It’s like the perfect school that I wanted,” said incoming UTD freshman Saniya Bosby. UTD is where Bosby, a Rockwall […]

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Some North Texas athletes say they’ve been left scrambling after their sport was cut.

The University of Texas at Dallas announced Monday it is dropping its track and field and cross-country programs this upcoming semester.

“It’s like the perfect school that I wanted,” said incoming UTD freshman Saniya Bosby.

UTD is where Bosby, a Rockwall resident, thought she would start and finish her college career as a student and athlete.

Bosby said she signed with UTD earlier this year, accepting a track and field scholarship for the fall, and was shocked to learn—in an email—that the program is being discontinued.

“Track is the thing I wanted to do. It’s the college experience. I love making friends through my sport, I love the traveling. I don’t think I would’ve gone had I known that it wouldn’t be an option,” explained Bosby.

Bosby is among several athletes who’ve contacted NBC 5, frustrated by the timing of Monday’s announcement—just three weeks before the semester starts.

“It just breaks my heart, it does,” said Madison Avery, a track team member entering her sophomore year. “We have 65 athletes in this program, and there is no remorse, no emotion, sympathy for us at all.”

“It really is a part of who we are, so for something like this to be stripped away from us in the blink of an eye with no warning, no nothing, it hurts beyond compare,” said Randi Beckham, former women’s sprinting team captain.

UT Dallas says it decided to discontinue men’s and women’s track and field and cross country “because of ongoing budget constraints and a lack of on-campus facilities.”

“We recognize the disappointment this decision brings to our student athletes and the impact on their experience at UT Dallas,” Angela Marin, UT Dallas director of athletics, said in a statement to NBC 5 on Monday.

The announcement comes after UTD joined the Lone Star Conference earlier this month and as it transitions from a Division III to a Division II school.

“We were so excited about going D-2,” said Beckham.

Scott Casterline, a tenured agent, said the shifting NIL landscape in college sports is creating an uneven playing field.

“Any program like that’s going to get cut because they don’t make any money, unfortunately,” said Casterline.

UTD says athletes can keep their scholarships through the upcoming school year if they choose to remain at the school.

Bosby said she’s trying to figure out her next move to keep her college dream of being a student-athlete on track.

“We’re all very unsure,” said Bosby.

NBC 5 reached out to UTD for additional comment for this report, but has not heard back.



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Trio of Millikan Football Players Make College Commitments – The562.org

As we inch closer to the start of the 2025 high school football season, three members of the Millikan football program have made their college commitments before they open their senior seasons. Pass catcher Jude Nelson, defensive end Peyton McCutcheon, and linebacker Aisa Taeleifi have all recently made commitments to play at the next level, […]

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As we inch closer to the start of the 2025 high school football season, three members of the Millikan football program have made their college commitments before they open their senior seasons.

Pass catcher Jude Nelson, defensive end Peyton McCutcheon, and linebacker Aisa Taeleifi have all recently made commitments to play at the next level, continuing Millikan’s recent run of churning out college football talent.

Nelson made his commitment to Colorado State, where he will be utilized as a dynamic receiver, playing either tight end or out at wide receiver. It’s easy to imagine how Nelson will be utilized by CSU, since those Rams run a similar Air Raid offense to what his current Rams run.

“I think it’s huge, you know, it’s good for him and his family, (Colorado State) runs a similar offense to us, and I think they’re going to use him the right way,” said Millikan head coach Romeo Pellum of Nelson’s commitment. “I think Jude’s best football is ahead of him. I think he’s going to be a guy this year and wow a lot of people. We’re just fortunate to have him on our team, he’s a guy on both sides of the ball, so look out for him this year.”

While Nelson has shown the ability to fill in and cause havoc on the defensive line, the plan is for him to play tight end at the next level. He was down to Boise State and Colorado State for his decision, but went with the Rams due to how compatible he felt with the coaching staff and the offensive system.

“It’s a dream come true, I’ve been working for it for my whole life, basically,” Nelson said of his commitment. “I think the difference was really how I fit in the offense. That was a really big thing for me. I love both places, both staffs were like family to me; it just felt right when I went up to Fort Collins. I loved the town more than I thought I was going to … I feel like I can get on the field early and make some plays there.”

On the defensive line, McCutcheon plans to continue his playing career at San Diego State, and is looking like a disruptive playmaker going into his senior season. After transferring in from Dominguez High last season, McCutcheon joined a solid defensive unit up front for the Rams, helping them win the Moore League title.

Coach Pellum said that McCutcheon’s physical development this offseason has been a big key in his development, and the attention from college recruiters was quick to follow. He missed a handful of games due to injury as a junior, but is hoping to be ready for a full slate of games in his 12th grade year.

“He looks like a grown man,” Pellum said of McCutcheon. “Colleges come by and they tell me he looks like what’s in their locker room right now, and looks better than a lot of their guys. I just feel for guys that have to block him, and I feel bad for quarterbacks, because he’s big, he’s strong, he’s fast, he’s athletic, and he hits really, really hard. He’s a mean son of a gun on the football field.”

McCutcheon will be reunited with former Millikan teammate JP Mialovski at San Diego State. The quarterback signed with the Aztecs after last season.

Finally, Taeleifi made his commitment to play college ball at Portland State. The hard-nosed linebacker was a key figure for the Rams’ stop unit in 2024, finishing second on the team with 58 tackles.

“He played almost every snap last season, I believe. So it’s huge for our defense to have a guy like him coming back–he knows our defense inside and out,” said Pellum of Taeleifi. “He’s a ball player. He was arguably up for Defensive Player of the Year last year, so look out for him. Portland State is getting an absolute steal. So I’m excited to see him this year.”

Taeleifi said he’s been working on his closing speed and reaction time in dissecting plays this offseason. His decision to head to the Pacific Northwest was all about the comfortability he felt with the coaching staff on his visit.

“They just made it feel like home for me,” Taeleifi explained. “Immediately, right when I met them, I just felt like they really wanted me to come there. And that’s what it’s all about for me. They really want me, then that’s where I want to go. I want to go where I’ll be treated well and be taken care of.”

Millikan had more than a dozen football players sign college scholarships by the end of last year’s recruiting cycle, and the Rams are already off to a strong start with the Class of 2026.



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Fred Kerley to miss Toyota USA Track and Field Outdoor Championships

Two-time Olympic 100m medalist Fred Kerley will miss this week’s Toyota USA Track and Field Outdoor Championships, according to his social media. “The 100m should be a straight sprint,” was posted on Kerley’s accounts. “2025 has presented many hurdles. Taking some time out to get back on track. No USATF Champs this year. Thanks to […]

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Two-time Olympic 100m medalist Fred Kerley will miss this week’s Toyota USA Track and Field Outdoor Championships, according to his social media.

“The 100m should be a straight sprint,” was posted on Kerley’s accounts. “2025 has presented many hurdles. Taking some time out to get back on track. No USATF Champs this year. Thanks to all my supporters.”

Kerley, 30, won Olympic 100m silver in Tokyo and bronze in Paris. In between, he won the world 100m title in 2022, running 9.77 and 9.76 seconds in the semifinals and final.

It took three years until another sprinter ran faster — Jamaican Kishane Thompson’s 9.75 last month, the world’s best time in a decade.

Kerley’s best wind-legal 100m time of 2025 was 9.98, ranking him tied for ninth-fastest among Americans this year, according to Tilastopaja.info.

The top three in Friday’s 100m final at nationals in Eugene, Oregon, are in line to make the team for September’s World Championships.

They would join Noah Lyles, who has a bye onto the team as the defending world champion and is expected to race the 200m only at nationals.

The men’s 100m entries for nationals include two-time Olympic 200m silver medalist Kenny Bednarek, 2019 World champion Christian Coleman and two-time world bronze medalist Trayvon Bromell.

USA Track and Field Outdoor Championships

National champions and world championships team members will be determined in Eugene, Oregon.





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