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NIL

How NIL is playing role in Tennessee’s swim and dive program  – The Daily Beacon

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When Tennessee swim and dive graduate Griffin Hadley arrived at the University of Tennessee, he entered a college athletics landscape that was already in flux. 

The NCAA had just passed its name, image, and likeness (NIL) policy, allowing college athletes to make money from their brand. Swimmers were just trying to make sense of these changes. 

Now, four years later, Hadley has graduated, but the chaos of NIL remains, and the UT swim team in particular tries to adjust to a new series of changes stemming from the House v. NCAA settlement. 

This lawsuit allows schools like Tennessee, which opt into the deal, to start paying athletes a piece of the school’s athletic department revenue. The House v. NCAA also enforces a roster cap, which limited swimming and diving to only 30 athletes, with the SEC now proposing to lower caps even further, dropping the men’s cap down to 22. 

These changes bring great concern for Hadley, who worries this will only create a divide between Olympic sports and the sports that are deemed to be ‘revenue-generating.’ 

“As far as Olympic sports go, Olympic sports are gonna start fighting for their life,” Hadley said. 

With the new era of NIL and revenue sharing, UT swimming and diving is a unique place as a high-performing team at an ‘Everything School,’ but a non-revenue-generating Olympic sport in the era of the House settlement. Hadley, fellow graduate and 2024 Olympian Jordan Crooks, and former swim and dive strategic information director Josh Lively believe in the future of this team, but recognize that the financial realities of college athletics pose new challenges for programs like this. 

Revenue sharing at Tennessee 

The House settlement allows UT to allocate up to 18.5% of the school’s athletic revenue to athletes. Tennessee has chosen to divide this money, a total of $215,469,808, across all 16 NCAA-sanctioned sports.  

During an October press conference, Tennessee’s Athletic Director Danny White shared the specifics of this revenue-share split. The football team receives 75% of the share, men’s basketball receives 15%, women’s basketball receives 5% and the last 5% is left to “other.” 

The other comes out to about $900,000, he noted.

Based on those percentages and budget reports, during the 2024-2025 season, the football team received $162,539,638 in revenue, men’s basketball received $35,316,920, and women’s basketball received $4,352,348, according to Tennessee athletic public records. Swim and dive earned a percentage of the 5% left, which came out to $370,687 for the combined teams. 

White said that these numbers are “consistent with the House settlement.” 

While swimming & diving’s numbers remain low, despite both the men’s and women’s teams finishing top-five nationally in both of the last two seasons, Lively is still impressed that White allocated any money to swimming and diving. Opting to rev share with those programs, Lively said, emphasizes White’s commitment to the ‘Everything School’ tagline at Tennessee. 

“Danny specifically has been all in on day one of ‘We’re gonna be an everything school. We’re gonna try to give everyone a piece of the pie when it comes to rev share,’” Lively said. “And he has never wavered from that.” 

UT sports studies professor and NIL expert Dr. Adam Love said Olympic sports like swimming have always faced an uphill battle for equitable funding and support, even on campuses like Tennessee’s, where swimming and diving are still getting some portion of the revenue-sharing pie. 

“There are certainly inequities that exist when it comes to NIL rights,” Love said. “But to emphasize, those are also long-running inequities where there is a long struggle for Olympic sports seeking to carve out a little bit more of the pie.”

One way athletes bring in revenue is through storytelling, both at the individual and team level. But on an SEC campus largely dominated by football, capturing audience attention can be challenging.  

Lively’s job was to help sell a story of the swimming and diving team that inspired audience care. He wrote press releases for the program, managed media requests and ran the team’s social media account. 

While his job now falls to Bryant Avery, these athletes have also taken it upon themselves to tell their own stories through social media in an effort to spread the word about the team’s success and generate individual side income through brand deals and social media advertising. UT even links to athletes’ Instagram accounts on the official school roster as a way to drive more traffic to those athletes’ profiles. 

JB Bowling, Tennessee’s chief NIL officer, said that UT is committed to helping athletes capitalize on their experience as student-athletes at Tennessee in the NIL era. 

“The ability to leverage their hard work to build a personal brand and potentially earn money is a tremendous advantage for students at schools like the University of Tennessee,” Bowling said in an email. “The benefits of NIL agreements go beyond immediate financial gains; they also include valuable connections with companies and brands that can lead to further opportunities after their athletic careers.” 

Gui Caribe leads the men’s team in followers with 44.5K, while Mizuki Hirai leads the women’s team with 8,949 followers as of Nov. 17, 2025. Their content serves as an additional marketing arm for themselves and their program.

“It’s hard to showcase people multiple times, let alone consistently enough to be like ‘OK, let me help you build your brand up,’” Lively said.

Olympian Crooks would be one of the most obvious social media and NIL stars amongst the team, but Crooks says he, like Hadley, doesn’t have a ton of interest in social media or NIL. He finds it overwhelming, especially given everything else that he has going on as a student-athlete. 

“It was just very confusing to me, and I wanted to just focus on my sport and be able to have a great four years in that aspect,” Crooks said. “I just didn’t really understand it, so I left it alone.” 

Crooks finished his career at UT as a four-time NCAA champion, two-time SEC Swimmer of the Year and an 11-time conference champion. He credits some of his success to the fact that he chose not to have the distraction of NIL. Instead, Crooks focused solely on his sport and his studies while being on scholarship. 

That was enough for him. 

Investing in building a personal brand in the NIL is extra labor that some athletes choose to engage with, according to Love, but others like Crooks recognize that they aren’t interested in allocating time to such efforts. 

“When I talk to people that have those kinds of followings, they often talk about how it takes a lot of time and effort to build that kind of brand and then develop content that’s gonna keep a large group of followers engaged,” Love said. “So certainly some people have benefited tremendously financially at least from being able to profit from NIL, but of course it’s also given rise to other conflicts, other complications both for student athletes and for athletic departments to deal with.” 

These complications could include time management strains, interpersonal conflicts with teammates over brand deals and revenue, or other financial and personal stressors, situations that Crooks chose to avoid, despite the potential to generate revenue from his brand by pursuing such opportunities. 

Future

During Hadley and Crooks’ careers, the men’s swim team progressed from an 18th-place finish to three top-10 finishes nationally. Meanwhile, the women’s team placed inside the top 10 all four years, climbing as high as No. 4

While Crooks and Hadley appreciate the investment UT has made into swimming and diving as part of its commitment to an “Everything School,” they still worry about the potential implications of this changing landscape on the future of the sport. 

Bowling is more reassuring. 

“NIL will always be a part of the landscape, but I don’t believe it will be the primary factor shaping the future of Olympic sports,” Bowling said. “Providing resources and creating opportunities will be crucial, and we will work to maximize those opportunities for our sports. However, we believe that a significant aspect of the future of our sports will continue to be the overall support we offer and the excellence of our coaches.”  

Swimming and diving is objectively part of UT’s future in the House settlement plan, and 21st-year swimming and diving head coach Matt Kredich does have $370,687 in revenue sharing to play with on the recruiting trail and within his team. 

Kredich is leading a stronger team, athletically and financially, than he ever has before, but Hadley knows as well as any Vol that so much can change in the college landscape in four years. 

“This is the modern day of college athletics, and non-revenue and Olympic sports have to respond. It’s up to us,” Hadley said.



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NIL

The Ohio State football program is in Transfer Portal crisis thanks to Ross Bjork

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When Ohio State made the decision to hire Ross Bjork as athletic director once Gene Smith stepped down, a large reason was that he was supposed to be an expert in the NIL space. Bjork touted his ability to galvanize donors and pay the athletes what they rightly deserved.

The end of his tenure at Texas A&M did see the football program spend a lot of money on recruits. It backfired spectacularly. Jimbo Fisher did not coach the team well, and Bjork had to fire him and pay him around $77 million to not coach the program.

Since coming to Columbus, Bjork has used the opposite approach. He has been borderline stingy at every corner when it comes to NIL for the Ohio State football program. Instead of helping the Buckeyes, he is actively sinking the ship just a year after winning a national title.

Ross Bjork is actively hurting the Ohio State football program

30 players have entered the Transfer Portal from this year’s version of the Ohio State Buckeyes. That is by far the most since the portal became a widely used thing. What’s even worse is that Bjork has refused to pay enough to bring enough players in to replace those guys leaving.

There have been several instances of the Buckeyes losing out on talented portal players because they did not use their NIL money correctly. Bjork seems to think that the College Sports Commission is actually going to be able to enforce any sort of cap when it comes to revenue sharing.

No other high-major program is operating under those assumptions. In fact, most of Ohio State’s competitors keep reloading in the portal. Indiana is arguably passing the Buckeyes when it comes to finding talented older players in the portal, and that’s why they are playing for a national title.

Bjork was a questionable hire when he was brought in. The shine has worn off from the 2024 national championship, and more people are realizing that the title was won in spite of him, not because of him. Ryan Day needs to start putting his foot down when it comes to the football program.



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No. 1 portal WR Cam Coleman commits to Texas

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After some marquee portal losses, the Texas Longhorns needed to add elite talent to the wide receiver room and did just that with the addition of Auburn Tigers transfer Cam Coleman over the Alabama Crimson Tide, Texas A&M Aggies, and Texas Tech Red Raiders.

Coleman is one of the crown jewels of the portal class, the No. 4 player overall and the No. 1 wide receiver and five spots ahead of the next-best offensive player — former Alabama wide receiver Isaiah Horton. The elite wideout made the most of his second recruiting cycle, but traveled to Austin first before trips to College Station, Lubbock, and Tuscaloosa. He’s ranked as a five-star portal prospect after arriving at Auburn two years ago as a five-star high school prospect, the second-ranked wide receiver behind Ohio State’s Jeremiah Smith.

In two years at Auburn, the 6’3, 200-pound wideout emerged as one of the nation’s most explosive targets despite the Tigers struggling to find consistency at quarterback. In two seasons, he accounted for 1,306 yards and 13 touchdowns catching passes from Peyton Thorne, Jackson Arnold, and Ashton Daniels. The hope for both Texas fans and Coleman is that putting him with a quarterback who specializes in the deep ball, like Arch Manning, will both open up the Texas offense and set him up for a one-year springboard on the Forty Acres.

This plan has worked wonders for Texas in previous years, with Matthew Golden and Adonai Mitchell putting up big numbers in Burnt Orange and hearing their names called early in the NFL Draft.

Texas was likely heading to the portal in the offseason regardless, but the departures of DeAndre Moore and Parker Livingstone made it a true necessity for the Longhorns. The Longhorns have bolstered the skill position talent on offense with the additions of Coleman and former Arizona State running back Raleek Brown.



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Legend posts Transfer Portal message that Ohio State football fans needed to see

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As more and more Ohio State football players enter the Transfer Portal, the Buckeyes continue to let prospects go by without adding them to the roster. Despite several high-profile visits, the Buckeyes have only brought in five players from the portal to offset the 30 they’ve lost.

Ross Bjork should receive the majority of the blame. His failure to use NIL effectively, while every other major program seems to be able to, is a massive problem. Of course, there is something to be said for the change in mindset for some of the college football players these days.

Former Ohio State running back Maurice Clarett had his own gripes with the NCAA. He tried to challenge the NFL rule so that he could enter the NFL after his freshman season. Ultimately, that failed. Regardless, he gave his take on the portal situation.

Maurice Clarett explains why Ohio State football players are transferring

From Clarett’s perspective, he believes that college kids are just looking around to capture the most money possible.

Clarett isn’t wrong that Ohio State certainly props up other kids who aren’t at the top of the depth chart. The cache of being at an elite program for a year helps them get more NIL money from a lower-level school, allowing them to maximize their earning potential.

That’s still no excuse for what is happening with the Ohio State Buckeyes. There is no reason that they should have this many players exiting the program and so few coming in. Ryan Day needs to get Bjork’s expectations in line for how the NIL game is played.

If that doesn’t happen, Ohio State is going to start to fall behind very quickly. Other programs have risen, and old powers are using NIL to get back to the top, as well. The Buckeyes need to fix their approach before it is too late and they fall too far behind.





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Oregon’s Linebacker Depth Takes A Hit With Latest Transfer Portal Entry

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The Oregon Ducks took a hit to their linebacker depth with Kamar Mothudi entering the transfer portal the day after Oregon’s season-ending Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl loss according to 247Sports’ Matt Zenitz.

Mothudi appeared in six games this past season and recorded four tackles. He is the first Oregon linebacker to enter the transfer portal.

High Expectations, Low Production

Oregon Ducks dan lanning schedule Dante moore Kamar Mothudi Recruiting NIL Transfer Portal Big Ten College Football Playoff

Jan 9, 2026; Atlanta, GA, USA; Oregon Ducks head coach Dan Lanning on the field prior to the 2025 Peach Bowl and semifinal game of the College Football Playoff against the Indiana Hoosiers at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images | Brett Davis-Imagn Images

Mothudi came to Oregon as apart of their 2024 recruiting class. Listed as the No. 13 linebacker and No. 145 player in the country according to 247Sports’ rankings, Mothudi came into Eugene with big expecations as he was the top-ranked linebacker in the Ducks’ 2024 class. However, he never really found his footing in the Ducks’ linebackers.

After appearing in only one game as true freshman, the 2025 Big Ten Championship game, Mothudi was still buried on the depth chart as a redshirt freshman. He played mainly in blowout wins for Oregon and made his last appearance in the Nov. 22 win over USC.

Potential Landing Spots For Mothudi

Oregon Ducks dan lanning schedule Dante moore Kamar Mothudi Recruiting NIL Transfer Portal Big Ten College Football Playoff

Oregon defensive coordinator Tosh Lupoi directs practice March 29, 2022.

Tosh Lupoi | Chris Pietsch/The Register-Guard / USA TODAY NETWORK

The Los Angeles native took five official visits during his high school recruitment. Mothudi visited Oregon, Oregon State, Washington, Michigan State, and Utah.

One schoool that stands out among the rest for Mothudi is Cal. The Golden Bears hired Oregon defensive coordinator Tosh Lupoi as their head coach following the dismissal of Justin Wilcox. Lupoi is known as a tenacious recruiter and was a big reason why the Ducks’ constantly reeled in top talent, including Mothudi.

247Sports lists Lupoi as one of the primary recruiters in Mothudi’s recruitment. The two could reunite in the Bay Area next season as the Golden Bears reload their roster via the transfer portal.

UCLA has been quietly making some noise in the transfer portal. Mothudi spent his first three years of his high school career at Campbell Hall, which is 12 miles away from UCLA’s campus. The Bruins also went through a coaching change and brought in James Madison’s Bob Chesney, making them active in the portal as well. They could make a push to bring Mothudi home to close out his college career.

MORE: What Dan Lanning Said After Oregon’s Loss to Indiana

MORE: Instant Takeaways From Oregon’s Playoff Loss to Indiana

MORE: Dante Moore NFL Outlook Comes Into Focus After Peach Bowl Loss

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Ducks Will Be Okay

Oregon Ducks dan lanning schedule Dante moore Kamar Mothudi Recruiting NIL Transfer Portal Big Ten College Football Playoff

Oregon outside linebacker Nasir Wyatt celebrates a sack as the Oregon Ducks take on the Washington Huskies on Nov. 29, 2025, at Husky Stadium in Seattle, Washington. | Ben Lonergan/The Register-Guard / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Although Mothudi was a promising underclassman, his departure isn’t the end all, be all for the Ducks’ linebacker unit. With Devon Jackson, Nasir Wyatt, and Blake Purchase all set to come back next season, Oregon will have plenty of talent coming back in addition to their 2026 recruiting class signees.

Oregon 2026 signees’ Braylon Hodge and Tristan Phillips both rank as top 15 linebackers in the country according to 247Sports’ rankings.

That’s not taking into consideration the fact that Mixon and Teitum Tuioti, both starters, still have eligibility left.

The departure of Bryce Boettcher will be the biggest impact on the linebacker unit as he was a multi-year starter and a leader of the team. But if Oregon coach Dan Lanning has proven anything during his time with the Ducks, it’s that they will be ready on the defensive side of the ball. Especially with the front seven.

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Freshman All-Conference QB delivers bad news to major college football programs

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The college football transfer portal often features unproven talent looking for a second chance, but this cycle featured a rare commodity in a proven statistical leader with multiple years of eligibility remaining.

Several top-tier programs engaged in a competitive pursuit to land one of the most productive passers from the FCS level to bolster their rosters for the 2026 season.

Coaches from the ACC, Big 12 and national independent brands identified this young signal caller as a primary target to solve depth chart issues or compete for a starting job immediately. His availability sparked a significant recruiting battle that spanned multiple time zones and conferences following his breakout debut campaign.

That pursuit ended abruptly on Sunday when the highly coveted prospect announced his decision to head to the Pacific Northwest. The move sends a ripple effect through the market and forces several major programs to look elsewhere for quarterback help as the offseason moves forward.

Mercer QB Braden Atkinson commits to Oregon State over Notre Dame, Baylor

Former Mercer quarterback Braden Atkinson has committed to Oregon State. His agents at AiC Athletes confirmed the decision to On3’s Hayes Fawcett. The move is a significant recruiting victory for the Beavers and a setback for five other major programs that showed interest in the prolific passer.

Atkinson enters the Oregon State program following a historic season at the FCS level. He threw for 3,611 yards and 34 touchdowns while completing 66 percent of his passes. Those numbers helped him win the Jerry Rice Award, which is given annually to the national freshman of the year in the FCS. He also finished fifth in voting for the Walter Payton Award while leading his team to a 9-3 record and a playoff berth.

Mercer Bears quarterback Braden Atkinson (11)

Mercer Bears quarterback Braden Atkinson (11) threw for 3,611 yards and 34 touchdowns in his freshman season. | John Reed-Imagn Images

His entry into the portal came after Mercer head coach Mike Jacobs left for Toledo. That coaching change sparked a recruitment battle involving Notre Dame, Baylor, Syracuse, Boston College and Cal. Each program had specific reasons for pursuing the 6-foot-1 standout.

Notre Dame explored adding Atkinson to a room that features starter CJ Carr. The Fighting Irish sought experienced depth to protect against injury, but will now have to look elsewhere. Baylor viewed Atkinson as a potential solution to replace Sawyer Robertson after he leaves for the NFL Draft. Head coach Dave Aranda faces pressure to find a competent starter after a difficult 5-7 season.

The ACC also missed out on a potential starter. Boston College is losing Grayson James to graduation and Dylan Lonergan to the transfer portal. This leaves head coach Bill O’Brien with limited proven options on the roster. Syracuse hoped to add competition behind Steve Angeli but failed to close the deal.

Cal viewed Atkinson as a way to bolster the roster under Tosh Lupoi, despite the presence of Jaron-Keawe Sagapolutele. The Golden Bears’ freshman starter has indicated he plans to return, but depth remains a priority.

Atkinson ultimately chose the Beavers and brings three years of eligibility to Corvallis.

Read more on College Football HQ





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On3 CEO shares telling Alabama NIL statement after Hollywood Smothers flips to Texas

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Frequently these days, we’re reminded that the Alabama Crimson Tide is no longer, in fact, the biggest, baddest recruiting powerhouse in the country. Not with rev-share and NIL essentially serving as a salary cap-less spending spree.

Rev-share has a cap, but NIL doesn’t. Schools can only offer $20.5 million as part of the sport’s rev-share agreement that went into effect at the start of the 2025-2026 academic calendar. NIL is the supplemental cash that big-time boosters, like Cody Campbell with the Texas Tech Red Raiders and Larry Ellison with the Michigan Wolverines, pay beyond that. How every team’s payroll shakes out each season isn’t as transparent. It’s unclear what comes from the school and how much comes from the boosters. Much of it is via taxpayers, who pick up the slack in states across the South because of tax-free NIL payments to players that exist because of these states’ laws.

To that end, the Texas Longhorns have multiple high-spending boosters that can help UT win any bidding war. The Crimson Tide does not.

On3’s Shannon Terry reminded the College Football world of that in the aftermath of former NC State Wolf Pack and Oklahoma Sooners running back Hollywood Smothers flipping his commitment from Alabama to Texas on Sunday.

“Another NIL-driven move. Texas is loading up and has the resources to do it. Alabama has resources, but not at this level. ‘FU money’ is driving the game — just the facts,” Terry wrote.

The Longhorns’ booster network is powered by its top donor, TRT Holdings, the parent company of Omni Hotels and Gold’s Gym, and its owner, Robert Rowling.

Who is Alabama’s top booster?

The Crimson Tide, like Terry, said, isn’t broke. C.T. and Kelly Fitzpatrick, the founders of Vulcan Value Partners, a Birmingham-based investment firm, are financially invested in the program. Yea Alabama, the Tide’s official NIL collective, also chips in for the cause.

UAT AD Greg Byrne has gotten on Yea Alabama’s case for not doing enough spending. We’ll see if the fanbase has enough Bama in them to donate the Tide back into contention with deep-pocketed Texas schools.



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