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For years, it’s been hard not to feel at least a little guilty watching March Madness.  The annual college basketball tournament generates over a billion dollars.  Schools, coaches, advertisers, and tv networks make money hand over fist.  Yet, one group was always left out in the cold: the players.  Despite the obvious profit motive of […]

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For years, it’s been hard not to feel at least a little guilty watching March Madness.  The annual college basketball tournament generates over a billion dollars.  Schools, coaches, advertisers, and tv networks make money hand over fist.  Yet, one group was always left out in the cold: the players. 

Despite the obvious profit motive of the entire enterprise—from massive ad campaigns to widespread gambling on the games—the NCAA insisted on preserving the amateurism of the “student athletes” by preventing them from cashing in at all.

In 2021, the Supreme Court’s decision in NCAA v. Alston changed all of that.  Suddenly, college athletes were allowed to profit off of their name, image, and likeness or “NIL.”  Combined with post-COVID changes to student transfer eligibility rules and increased conference realignment, NIL has dramatically reshaped the landscape of bigtime college athletics.  The NCAA’s sanctimonious insistence on the purity of sport without money has given way to a widespread acknowledgement that bigtime college athletics is a mercenary enterprise.

For many of us who criticized the NCAA and have called for players to be paid and receive workplace protections, the last few years have brought positive developments (and allowed for some guilt-free sports watching).  But, the NIL era raises some troubling questions. 

There’s much to be said about whether college sports can (or should) survive the NIL revolution and about equity in the NIL landscape across schools, sports, genders, etc.  

More broadly, though, the rise of the NIL market provides a window into a concerning trend in how labor is commodified.  The NIL framework means that athletes aren’t paid directly for playing sports—the activity that generates value, that requires tremendous skill, and that defines their role in society.  Instead, the athletes are technically paid for advertising, for content creation, and—above all—for being celebrities. 

It may be that more successful athletes on the court or field will make more money off the court or field.  But that’s not necessarily true.  Perhaps the most notable example here is Louisiana State University gymnast Livvy Dunne, who parlayed unremarkable performances at meets into NIL-era fortune and fame as an Instagram model and influencer.   

Of course, a certain number of the NIL payments are “NIL” in name only.  Many NIL deals are a legal version of what most observers long suspected was going on in bigtime college sports: athletes receiving under-the-table payments and gifts from boosters (ostensibly without the knowledge of coaches or universities).  In those bad old days, players weren’t getting paychecks for their performance, but that didn’t mean that they weren’t getting paid.  The current NIL system might not be so different.  Players aren’t on the university payroll.  Instead, NIL collectives arrange deals for players. The NIL money is used in recruiting and as a means of fielding high-priced teams full of blue-chip prospects.

Nevertheless, athletes still can’t be paid for being athletes.  They can be paid for being advertisers (or being advertised).

To be clear, I don’t mean to suggest that many of the off-court activities that college athletes engage in aren’t “work.”  Rather, I think it’s important to recognize that the work that is technically being rewarded involves building a brand. 

There’s something striking about the NIL framing and the fact that the framework and language continues to insist that the basis for compensation can’t actually be the athletic work itself.  What makes Big Time college athletics such big business is the performance on the field or the court. But, the NIL regime refuses to commodify or compensate for the actual valuable commodity.

The NIL regime, then, illustrates a broader cultural and economic phenomenon.

In a post-industrial internet age, the tech entrepreneur and the app inventor became models for success in US society.  And, as social media use has exploded, the influencer economy has taken hold.  At the same time, we’ve seen the rise and entrenchment of the so-called gig or sharing economy.

In each of these contexts, people are doing work.  But what’s celebrated or identified as central to the enterprise is something entrepreneurial. We all are our own business owners. We are all our own promoters.  On social media, each of us is essentially our own agent, publicist, or press secretary—posting our own ads, statements of purpose, or press releases and trying to frame, or sell, or “curate” our image.

The NIL framework reflects a similar dynamic.

Presented with the obvious injustice of a multi-billion-dollar industry where the workers got nothing, the response was to allow for payment but to continue to devalue the work itself.  It’s an approach consistent with a sort of post-postindustrial labor economy: the market isn’t in the direct goods or services that a worker provides; it’s in the worker’s ability to market.

To the extent that the professionalization of bigtime college athletics is here to stay, the next step should be figuring out a new framework for compensating and regulating the actual athletic labor.  Thankfully, there are any number of professional sports leagues—and professional players associations’ collective bargaining agreements—to look to for examples. 

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2025 NCAA Softball Tournament: Super Regional matchups officially set

The first stage of the NCAA Tournament has concluded, and we are one step closer to crowning a champion of college softball. Following an exciting Regional round this weekend, the Super Regionals are set. The second stage of the tournament will feature eight best of three series between Regional champions. These matchups will begin play […]

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The first stage of the NCAA Tournament has concluded, and we are one step closer to crowning a champion of college softball. Following an exciting Regional round this weekend, the Super Regionals are set.

The second stage of the tournament will feature eight best of three series between Regional champions. These matchups will begin play on May 22 and conclude on May 26, if a game three is necessary. The winners of these two cities will meet in Oklahoma City at the 2025 Women’s College World Series later this month.

One of the biggest storylines to follow coming into the tournament is whether or not Patty Gasso and the Oklahoma Sooners can win a fifth-straight NCAA Championship. In their first-year in the SEC, they won the regular season outright and were co-SEC Tournament champions with Texas A&M after a weather delay turned into a cancellation of the conference championship game. Their road to the College World Series is not yet paved, though, and they’ll have some stiff competition if they want to achieve the ultra-rare five-peat.

2025 NCAA Softball Super Regional matchups

Eugene Super Regional: Liberty vs. No. 16 Oregon

Game 1: TBD
Game 2: TBD
Game 3 (if necessary): TBD

Norman Super Regional: No. 2 Oklahoma vs. No. 6 Alabama

Game 1: TBD
Game 2: TBD
Game 3 (if necessary): TBD

Gainesville Super Regional: No. 3 Florida vs. Georgia

Game 1: TBD
Game 2: TBD
Game 3 (if necessary): TBD

Fayetteville Super Regional: No. 4 Arkansas vs. Ole Miss

Game 1: TBD
Game 2: TBD
Game 3 (if necessary): TBD

Tallahassee Super Regional: No. 5 Florida State vs. No. 12 Texas Tech

Game 1: TBD
Game 2: TBD
Game 3 (if necessary): TBD

Austin Super Regional: No. 6 Texas vs. No. 11 Clemson

Game 1: TBD
Game 2: TBD
Game 3 (if necessary): TBD

Knoxville Super Regional: No. 7 Tennessee vs. Nebraska

Game 1: TBD
Game 2: TBD
Game 3 (if necessary): TBD

Columbia Super Regional: No. 8 South Carolina vs. No. 9 UCLA

Game 1: TBD
Game 2: TBD
Game 3 (if necessary): TBD

All times ET.

2025 Women’s College World Series

May 29 through June 5 or 6 at Devon Park in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma



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Cowgirl Softball falls to No. 4 national seed Arkansas in Fayetteville Regional final

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — The No. 24 Oklahoma State softball team dropped the Fayetteville Regional final to No. 4 national seed Arkansas, 12-0, at Bogle Park Sunday.     The Cowgirls finished the season with a 35-20 record, while the Razorbacks advance to the NCAA Super Regional round at 43-12.    Storms in the area produced a […]

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FAYETTEVILLE, Ark.The No. 24 Oklahoma State softball team dropped the Fayetteville Regional final to No. 4 national seed Arkansas, 12-0, at Bogle Park Sunday.  

 

The Cowgirls finished the season with a 35-20 record, while the Razorbacks advance to the NCAA Super Regional round at 43-12. 

 

Storms in the area produced a delay of more than four hours, as first pitch was originally slated for 3 p.m., but didn’t actually come until 7:15 p.m. 

 

Arkansas got off to a hot start with three runs in the first inning via two RBI singles and a run-scoring walk. The Razorbacks piled on three more runs in the third to break the game open. 

 

Arkansas took the contest into run rule territory in the sixth inning with six runs, highlighted by a three-run home run from Karlie Davison. 

 

OSU starter Ruby Meylan took the loss and dropped to 21-10. The Razorbacks’ Robyn Herron improved to 18-6.  

 

For season-long coverage of Oklahoma State Softball, visit okstate.com and follow @CowgirlSB on X and @osusoftball on Instagram. For tickets, visit okstate.com/tickets  

or call 877-ALL-4-OSU. 

 

 

WP: R. Herron (18-6); LP: R. Meylan (21-10); SV: None 

HR: OSU – None 

HR: UA – Davison (4) 

Duration: 2:20; Attendance: 3,145 



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In the free transfer era, Billy Napier built his 2025 team through recruiting

The 2025 season is a milestone in the quickly changing landscape of college football. It’s the fourth season where NIL was a real factor for recruits in addition to college players. It probably feels like it’s been longer than that, but the first freshmen to get recruited with the concrete reality of compensation outside of […]

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The 2025 season is a milestone in the quickly changing landscape of college football. It’s the fourth season where NIL was a real factor for recruits in addition to college players. It probably feels like it’s been longer than that, but the first freshmen to get recruited with the concrete reality of compensation outside of scholarships are now seniors.

The free-transfer era is even younger than the NIL era, so we are still all trying to work out what the optimal strategy is for building a team in this time. A few folks like Lane Kiffin and Deion Sanders chose to bet big on transfers. Some, epitomized in the extreme by Dabo Swinney but also including some others, choose to stay big on high school recruiting with little portal supplementing. Most coaches have been somewhere in between.

Billy Napier went slowly at first, choosing not to try to do any serious roster flipping right after his hire in winter of 2021-22. He then had a couple a large portal years as he turned over a lot of the old Mullen recruits and got largely his own team in place.

By late in the 2024 season, Napier had weathered some serious September turmoil, much of it self-inflicted, to get back on more solid footing. He had a choice of whether to use Scott Strickin’s pre-Texas vote of confidence to try to load up on high school recruits or to hold scholarships back for more serious portal shopping. No one would’ve batted an eye if he’d chosen the latter route, given that the game result after Stricklin’s pronouncement dropped his team below .500 on the season.

And yet, he chose to go the former route and load up on high school players. He signed a bumper crop of 27 recruits with just five winter portal transfers and one spring portal transfer. He did try to get another nose tackle and safety in portal with no luck, so the fairly extreme 4.5-to-1 imbalance of signees to transfers is only mostly due to choice.

Even so, it’s very obvious from his actions that Napier is strongly on the side of wanting to build through traditional recruiting while using the transfer portal as a means to fill holes rather than a primary source of talent.

It’s also clear from the roster that Napier has largely achieved his vision of building through recruiting.

On offense, 19 members of what I project to be the top two lines of the depth chart have played nowhere else but Florida. There are 17 guys who signed with Napier out of high school or JUCO, two more who signed with Mullen, and just three transfers.

The two holdovers are starting offensive linemen Jake Slaughter and Austin Barber, both 2021 high school signees with the prior regime. Two of the transfers are also expected starters, RT Damieon George and WR J. Michael Sturdivant. Likely backup quarterback Harrison Bailey is a transfer, and the only other real option there is Yale transfer Aidan Warner. There is another high school signee besides starter DJ Lagway, but Tramell Jones will need some time to get ready. Not every quarterback can compete for a backup job in the SEC in his first season, and there’s nothing wrong with that.

Those guys aside, though, all the rest of the starters and backups are Napier signees. There could be some question about whether Caden Jones might pass up Bryce Lovett at right tackle, since both won spring awards, but it doesn’t matter since they’re both Napier recruits. I also am not 100% sure right now whether Dallas Wilson or Aidan Mizell is going to be the third starting wideout when UF is in 11 personnel, but again, it doesn’t matter for these counting purposes. I do have Roderick Kearney as the backup at both offensive guard spots because I think he’s the next man up at those spots either way, so adjust as you need depending on your analysis of the OG spots.

There are double the transfers on defense, but it’s still a small share. UF has 15 Napier signees in my projected two-deep, plus one holdover and six transfers.

The holdover is Tyreak Sapp, a fellow ’21 signee with the two offensive linemen. Three projected starters are transfers in Caleb Banks, George Gumbs, and Pup Howard. The other three are backups, with Cormani McClain, Michael Carraway, and spring transfer DL Brendan Bett.

I’ve seen a few people slotting McClain in as a starter, but I’m not there yet unless Dijon Johnson misses time related to his recent arrest. I still think Devin Moore is the starter over McClain, but also the next season Moore completes healthy will be his first.

There are some questions about slotting like on offense, but not many. Will Aaron Gates or Sharif Denson play more snaps at Star? I don’t know, but both signed with Napier. Who will play the most alongside Howard at inside linebacker between Jaden Robinson, Myles Graham, and Aaron Chiles? I’d bet Graham for now, but again, for these purposes it doesn’t matter.

So those are the numbers for this year. How do they compare to last year? Well, I have just five transfers in the likely starting lineup for 2025. In Week 1’s official depth chart last year, there were six on offense alone: Graham Mertz, Montrell Johnson, Chimere Dike, Elijhah Badger, George, and Kam Waites (Brandon Crenshaw-Dickson, another transfer, started most of the year). Three more regular transfer starters on defense — Banks, Howard, and Cam Jackson — meant that the 2024 starters had the same number of transfers as the entire likely two-deep this year. One extra, even, if Asa Turner hadn’t gotten hurt, or if you’re counting back-half starter Trikweze Bridges. That’s how big a change it is.

If you’re still with me by now, you’re probably wondering where my full two-deep is to look over. I didn’t put it here on purpose. If you’re more than 950 words into a detailed roster analysis piece in May, there’s probably little for me to add that you don’t already know.

And that’s kind of the point of this too. I’ve noted some spots of uncertainty, but there aren’t that many and most involve players you know. The Napier roster flip is complete. The depth chart is covered in familiar names, and there is a largely (though not entirely) experience-based pipeline established all around the roster.

There are some unusual aspects to the two-deep, like the backups at safety likely being true freshmen due to graduations, Greg Smith leaving, and no safeties entering via the portal. There are some question marks, which I discussed above.

However largely, the top 22 on both sides of the ball are familiar faces in familiar places. I have no breaking news, no inside information to blow your mind with in regards to this team.

It’s totally and completely Napier’s team, with even the few remaining holdovers having spent over three times as much time under his and his staff’s tutelage than they did with the prior regime. There has been plenty of time to address any issues remaining from a head coach who was fired in no small part because he didn’t recruit hard enough.

This is it. This is a Napier team through and through with very little gap-filling via the portal anymore. We’re all about to find out how well a fully Napier-built Florida team can compete in the SEC and on the national stage.



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David Pollack calls for rookie salary cap in NIL

David Pollack has a solution that could help address some of the public’s biggest concerns about name, image, and likeness from the very start. Pollack shared that idea last week during the latest episode of his podcast ‘See Ball Get Ball.’ The famous Georgia alumn thinks the first thing that needs to be fixed about […]

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David Pollack has a solution that could help address some of the public’s biggest concerns about name, image, and likeness from the very start.

Pollack shared that idea last week during the latest episode of his podcast ‘See Ball Get Ball.’ The famous Georgia alumn thinks the first thing that needs to be fixed about NIL is the inflated amounts being awarded to incoming freshmen, leading him to suggest a cap on how much they can profit in NIL before ever playing a snap in college.

“I have a proposal to start round one. Like, again, I’m seeing all this stuff and you see all these topics, like, how do I really fix NIL? I know the number one thing that needs to be changed,” Pollack said on his podcast. “Like, if you want to start with something and change college football, and make it better and make it better for the athlete, the athlete’s future and everything about it? We need a rookie salary cap. A coming into a university salary cap. It cannot exceed X.”

This came during a conversation about the commitment of five-star offensive tackle Jackson Cantwell, who committed to Miami last week. On3’s Pete Nakos reported the Hurricanes offered Cantwell, the No. 1 overall recruit in 2026 according to the On3 Industry Ranking, between $2-$2.5 million to come to Coral Gables.

Pollack’s point is that most recruits coming in as freshmen don’t have much equity in name, image, or likeness to profit from, even if they’re top overall recruits in high school. Also, from the player’s perspective, Pollack suggested a cap for freshmen will allow them can make an informed decision in their recruitments without it being just about the NIL money.

“NIL — name, image, and likeness. What you did on the field should dictate how much money you get paid. It should not be what you did in high school. Like, it should’t be,” Pollack added. “Not everybody comes from the same background, same stuff. I mean, there’s a lot of factors that go into that.

“Have a rookie cap. Now, you can choose the spot that’s best for you and it’s not just based on money,” Pollack continued. “Here’s the thing. When you make a decision based on money and not looking towards the future, how many of those decisions have you made and you regretted? Like, a lot for me. If I’m making them just on money, I’m blinded, it’s harder. I can’t make a decision based on what’s really best for me.”

Getting something like this enacted would be difficult considering the free-wheeling precedent set over the past few years of NIL.

“You want to do something that’s really better for the players? Institute that and it immediately will get better,” said Pollack.



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Where Does 2025 Transfer Portal Group Class Rank for Dennis Gates?

The transfer portal has been a significant factor in the success Dennis Gates has had in some seasons, or not had in others, with the Missouri Tigers. It’s been a key part of college athletics ever since he took over the program in 2022. The 2025 offseason has arguably been the quietest for Gates, however. […]

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Where Does 2025 Transfer Portal Group Class Rank for Dennis Gates?

The transfer portal has been a significant factor in the success Dennis Gates has had in some seasons, or not had in others, with the Missouri Tigers. It’s been a key part of college athletics ever since he took over the program in 2022.

The 2025 offseason has arguably been the quietest for Gates, however. It’s a change of approach after finding building blocks of the roster through the portal in previous seasons.

“We’re not successful going to two NCAA tournaments out of three years without innovation, without relationships, without the ability to have conversations with not only agents, but students,” Gates said April 29. “Emotionally, there is a way to connect with them in a special way.”

Entering 2025, Gates is instead betting on the development of young returners. Rising sophomores T.O. Barrett, Annor Boateng and Trent Burns will all have to take strides in development. But, Mark Mitchell, who Missouri acquired through the transfer portal from Duke ahead of last season, will also be a star on the team.

READ: Mizzou Projected to Return Second-Most Minutes in SEC for 2025-26 Season

Because of the in-house approach, Missouri hasn’t swung for too many home runs in this year’s portal class. According to recruiting sites, it’s by far Gates’ lowest-rated class during his time at Missouri.

Here’s a look at how On3 and 247Sports have graded each of Gates’ transfer portal classes thus far with the Tigers.

Highest-rated additions: G Sebastian Mack, C Shawn Phillips Jr., C Jevon Porter
247Sports: 55th
On3: 70th

Highest-rated additions: F Mark Mitchell, G Tony Perkins, G Marques Warrick
247Sports: 13th
On3: 23rd

Highest-rated additions: G Tamar Bates, G Caleb Grill, G John Tonje
247Sports: 40th
On3: 3rd

Highest-rated additions: G Isiaih Mosley, G Nick Honor
247Sports: 8th

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Former SEC player returns to Mississippi Valley in bold HBCU homecoming

In a college football era defined by transfer portals and NIL deals, one player just made a decision rooted in loyalty, legacy, and love for home. Dante Kelly, a 6-foot-3, 210-pound safety and former 3-star standout, is coming back—not just to Mississippi, but to the same dirt roads and Friday night lights that shaped him. […]

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In a college football era defined by transfer portals and NIL deals, one player just made a decision rooted in loyalty, legacy, and love for home.

Dante Kelly, a 6-foot-3, 210-pound safety and former 3-star standout, is coming back—not just to Mississippi, but to the same dirt roads and Friday night lights that shaped him. The Leflore County native is transferring to Mississippi Valley State University, bringing SEC experience and big-time potential back to Itta Bena.

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Kelly’s journey has taken him across conferences, but his story started on the fields just minutes from Rice-Totten Stadium. He led Leflore County High School to back-to-back district titles, earning Mississippi Small School All-State honors in 2022 with 105 tackles and 4 picks. He was ranked among Mississippi’s Top 50 prospects, eventually committing to Vanderbilt over offers from Power 4 programs.

“A very special player who I think one day will be a NFL talent. The sky is the limit for Dante,” said former coach Eric House. “The things that stick out with Dante is his physical attributes. He’s very athletic. What sticks out is definitely his speed especially his speed and agility for that size.”

But after a redshirt year at Vanderbilt and a short stint at Southern Miss, Kelly chose a route few former SEC players take—he came home to an HBCU. And not just any HBCU: Mississippi Valley State, a program with a proud past and a struggling present.

The Delta Devils went 1-11 last season. They haven’t posted a winning record in over a decade. But change is coming. With Terrell Buckley—former NFL star and Pascagoula native—now at the helm, Kelly’s arrival feels like the beginning of a cultural shift.

Former NFL DB and new Mississippi Valley State head coach Terrell Buckley© Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images

Former NFL DB and new Mississippi Valley State head coach Terrell Buckley© Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images

“We’re going to build a culture of accountability, hard work, and belief – because winning starts with the standards we set and the mindset we bring every single day,” Buckley stated.

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More than just a transfer, Kelly’s return is symbolic. It’s about believing in your roots when the spotlight fades elsewhere. In a region where football is religion and history runs deep, this move isn’t just about playing time—it’s about pride, purpose, and the power of coming home.

Delta Devils fans, take notice—Dante Kelly is back. And he’s not here to blend in. He’s here to change everything.

Related: NFL icon beams with pride at daughter’s HBCU graduation

Related: NBA legend steps up with major donation for HBCU



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