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Sea Eagles Launch Sports Business Academy at Penn Centre

The Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles Penn Centre of Excellence is set to become a hub for aspiring sports administrators as the NRL club launches the Sea Eagles Sports Business Academy. In a new partnership with TAFE Queensland, the Institute will offer the double Diploma of Sport, and Diploma of Leadership & Management, as an accredited education […]

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Sea Eagles Launch Sports Business Academy at Penn Centre

The Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles Penn Centre of Excellence is set to become a hub for aspiring sports administrators as the NRL club launches the Sea Eagles Sports Business Academy.

In a new partnership with TAFE Queensland, the Institute will offer the double Diploma of Sport, and Diploma of Leadership & Management, as an accredited education pathway that embeds hands-on learning across an entire sporting organisation.

Commenting on the launch, Sea Eagles CEO, Tony Mestrov, said: “The new Sports Business Academy is really important for us as a club as we continue to build for success on and off the field.”

“This is a tremendous opportunity for students to gain hands-on experience at an NRL club, while at the same time furthering their education.

“They will interact with club staff, players, and coaches, bolstering their credentials and readiness for a career in the industry,” Mestrov said.

TAFE Queensland general manager for Brisbane, Brent Kinnane, added: “At a time when people with job-ready skills are in high demand across Australia,”

“Students will have the unique opportunity to gain a nationally recognised qualification and the chance to secure employment either at the Sea Eagles or other elite sporting organisations.

“Training will be contextualised to support the specific skills required to succeed in elite sport and will give students valuable insights into the broader business of NRL as they develop skills in sport, leadership and management,” he said.

Students will complete 100 hours of work integrated learning across various club departments, including management, marketing, and media.

Two full-time employment roles at the Sea Eagles will then be offered to selected students upon course completion.

Initially capped at 35 students, the first intake of the 12-month course will commence in July 2025 and run through until May 2026, with a second intake to kick off in January next year.

In addition, the program offers graduates direct articulation into a range of university pathways for those students who wish to continue their studies.

The year-long course will offer students unparalleled insights into the operations of an NRL club, with students immersed in the Sea Eagles’ daily operations.

These pathways cater to degrees specialising in sports development, sports management, and business, allowing students to further their education and pursue higher education in the sports industry, enriching their career prospects and industry knowledge.

Don’t miss out on the latest in sports business – Subscribe today to the free Ministry of Sport newsletter and stay ahead of the game. For even more exclusive insights, event tickets, professional development and networking events, become a MoS Member today!

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Federal judge approves $2.8B settlement, paving way for US colleges to pay athletes millions

What the settlement does not solve is the threat of further litigation. Though this deal brings some uniformity to the rules, states still have separate laws regarding how NIL can be doled out, which could lead to legal challenges. Baker has been consistent in pushing for federal legislation that would put college sports under one […]

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What the settlement does not solve is the threat of further litigation.

Though this deal brings some uniformity to the rules, states still have separate laws regarding how NIL can be doled out, which could lead to legal challenges. Baker has been consistent in pushing for federal legislation that would put college sports under one rulebook and, if he has his way, provide some form of antitrust protection to prevent the new model from being disrupted again.

AP college sports: https://apnews.com/hub/college-sports



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The House v. NCAA settlement is officially approved. What does it mean for Duke and college sports?

Judge Claudia Wilken has finalized the consequential settlement that will fundamentally change college sports.  More than a year after the two sides in the House v. NCAA case voted to settle, Wilken approved the revised terms Friday evening. Schools will be able to directly pay players from their athletic department budgets for the 2025-26 school […]

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Judge Claudia Wilken has finalized the consequential settlement that will fundamentally change college sports. 

More than a year after the two sides in the House v. NCAA case voted to settle, Wilken approved the revised terms Friday evening. Schools will be able to directly pay players from their athletic department budgets for the 2025-26 school year, also known as revenue sharing.

Ever since student-athletes began profiting off their name, image and likeness (NIL) in 2021, the sport has faced a roller coaster of litigation and uncertainty. NIL money has already transformed college sports, and this approval further revolutionizes the relationship between athletes and schools. Athletes can now earn financial benefits for their performance in three ways: scholarships, NIL deals and revenue sharing. 

Duke athletics did not immediately respond to The Chronicle’s request for comment on the settlement. 

House v. NCAA settlement details

The settlement resolves three antitrust cases against the NCAA. Former Duke football captain DeWayne Carter is one of three plaintiffs in Carter v. NCAA, and former Arizona State swimmer Grant House is the namesake plaintiff in the main case.

The athletes argued that the NCAA, through control of TV markets and NIL, was illegally limiting their true playing value, which they said was more than scholarships and education funding. The NCAA and power conferences — ACC, SEC, Big Ten, Big 12 and Pac 12 — settled with the plaintiffs in May 2024.

The two main parts of the settlement are payments to past players and a framework for paying those of the future. More than 88,000 former student-athletes have filed claims for the back-pay portion of the case, with $2.8 billion from the NCAA and power conferences intended to compensate players from 2016-21 who were not able to profit off of their name, image and likeness. 

The second and more consequential part of the settlement, revenue sharing, allows schools to use their athletic department budgets to directly pay players. Currently, schools can only work with collectives, independent booster-funded organizations that raise money from the respective team’s fans and corporations. Collective money pays players, not the schools. 

But now that the settlement is officially approved, schools can use up to roughly $20.5 million of their TV revenue, ticket sales and merchandise, among other things, to directly pay student-athletes. That number is equivalent to 22% of the average power conference school’s athletic department revenue. It will also increase over the next 10 years and will likely eclipse $30 million by the 2034-35 season. For Duke’s last reported athletics year of 2023-24, the total revenue figure was $166.8 million, the 28th-highest in the nation. 

A good comparison to understand revenue sharing is professional sports leagues’ salary cap. For instance, the NBA’s salary cap in the 2024-25 season was roughly $140.6 million. It bars teams from spending over this amount (although in the NBA, teams can pay luxury taxes and have exceptions to work around the figure). The revenue-sharing structure will be in the same format; teams get the roughly $20.5 million amount to pay out, but they are limited to that cap, and can choose to pay the full amount or less. 

“I think that all we’re looking for is consistency, and not [the guidance] changing every week, or every two weeks, or every month,” said Terrell Smith, Duke’s assistant director of athletics and NIL strategy, prior to the approval. “We will know … how we need to operate, at least for the next year.”

He underscored the stability the case provides and the importance of guidance, because at the end of the day, the majority of the athletic departments are trying to play by the rules and navigate the ever-changing landscape. 

“You have to play the card that you were dealt,” Smith said. “But if after every time you put a card down, you’ve got to reshuffle the deck and play again, it’s like the game is never over.”

Athletic departments will face tough conversations around how to fund their vast array of varsity sports, especially the “non-revenue sports,” those excluding football and basketball. In the latest Equity in Athletics Disclosure Act report, more than 70% of Duke’s athletic department revenues came from football and men’s basketball in the 2023-24 season.

New enforcement agency: The College Sports Commission

In a significant change, the NCAA will no longer have enforcement power on the rules of the settlement. A new College Sports Commission (CSC) will be the final arbitrator to enforce the salary cap-esque structure from revenue sharing to ensure that schools don’t exceed their allocated budgets to directly pay players. They will help LBi Software, a New York technology company, to ensure compliance with revenue sharing cap and also have the power to “impose such fines, penalties or other sanctions as appropriate” on schools who break the rules. 

The CSC will be headed by a CEO chosen by power conference commissioners. MLB executive Bryan Seeley was hired Friday night for the position due to his investigative and legal experience. Power conference commissions will make up a board that Seeley will report to. The NCAA will still address issues surrounding academics and eligibility, but the CEO will largely handle the terms of the settlement. 

Ed Tiryakian, a lecturing fellow of markets and management studies at Duke and a former agent of Blue Devil men’s basketball legend Christian Laettner, believes that the new enforcement mechanism is “great on paper” but “tough in person.” That said, fresh, business-oriented leadership could be a positive step in the innovation of college sports.

“I think the sea change that I hope happens [is] that the commission says business first, framework second,” Tiryakian said. “I think a commission says, ‘Let’s have a business development person on our commission … How do we monetize [college sports], but let’s put the rules in place that makes everyone happy.’”

Roster limits

The biggest point of contention between Wilken and approving the settlement on the final hearing date in April was roster limits. The settlement removes scholarship limits to give the NCAA more antitrust protection and pave the way for revenue sharing. The replacement is roster limits, so big schools can’t theoretically hoard talent with immense NIL and revenue sharing sums. Schools can give as many or as few scholarships as they want, but they can’t hold more than a certain amount on a roster (105 for football, 15 for basketball, 34 for baseball, 25 for softball). This link includes the full list of roster limits. 

However, Wilken was concerned about current student-athletes who might have their spots removed with roster limits. She proposed “grandfathering in” the roster limits to protect current athletes. The conferences and attorneys took her suggestion and came back with a revised settlement proposal, which says that athletes who were on a 2024-25 roster and high school recruits committed for the 2025-26 season do not count towards a school’s roster limits through their eligibility expiration. 

As part of the compromise, schools are not forced to retain these players they already cut in anticipation of the settlement, but these athletes can transfer, maintain eligibility and not count towards a roster spot on any team. 

NIL deals, Deloitte and collectives

Another part of the settlement is regulation on NIL deals. Some NIL deals — like Cooper Flagg’s with Gatorade — are direct sponsorship deals with companies. Others are with the school’s collectives, the booster-funded independent organizations that raise money from fans and alumni, and they connect student-athletes with NIL opportunities. The collectives typically partner with local businesses to facilitate player event appearances and social media posts. 

Duke’s main collective is the Durham Devils Club, providing NIL deals for a vast array of Blue Devil athletes. Absent from this list is basketball, which earns funding from the “One Vision Futures Fund,” a low-profile non-profit started by Duke alums Jeff Fox, Dan Levitan and Steve Duncker.

NIL deals will still occur and will not be capped, unlike revenue sharing. But in hopes for further transparency, the settlement requires any NIL deal past $600 to be fully disclosed. 

Accounting firm Deloitte and the College Sports Commission CEO will operate “NIL Go,” a clearinghouse to ensure NIL deals over $600 are of “market value,” so they don’t extend beyond what the player actually brings to the team. Although the process is not entirely finalized, Deloitte will look at a database of comparable past NIL deals to define what is market value. They will also make sure the payor has a valid business purpose for the deal. 

These will mostly affect player deals with boosters and collectives. If Deloitte rejects a deal, players have a chance to resubmit it with the suggested modifications. If a deal is rejected a second time, the CSC, CEO and a court process will assess the deal’s validity. 

It’s important to note that no NIL deal is supposed to be “pay for play,” meaning there should be some scope of work for the athlete outside of playing — whether it be social media posts, community service, event appearances or speaking engagements. 

Josh Cox, director of operations for the Durham Devils Club, says this new regulation model is a positive step, but worries about its application due to the sheer number of deals coming in and because market value is tough to define for any individual athlete.

“In theory, I love it. In practicality, I think it’s going to be virtually impossible to do it properly,” Cox said. “I do believe that it’s beneficial. I do believe that it is a way to curb a little bit of this inflation that’s been going on for the last two years.”

Where do things go from here? 

The terms of the settlement begin July 1, and with the approval, college athletes will receive money for the 2025-26 season. A completely new dimension to college sports is on the horizon. Schools have a choice whether to opt in or opt out to the settlement, and many smaller conference teams may choose to not use revenue sharing. 

There will likely be further litigation on both revenue sharing and the legality of the Deloitte NIL clearinghouse. Additionally, there are increasing questions about the role revenue sharing plays within Title IX, a 1972 law preventing sex-based discrimination in education programs. 

The settlement approval doesn’t provide any guidance on how schools should distribute revenue sharing funds in accordance with Title IX, arguing this is an antitrust suit. It states that there is nothing in the settlement to “prevent or prohibit schools from distributing benefits and compensation … in a manner that complies with Title IX,” but also that “class members will have the right to file lawsuits arising out of those violations.”

Even with the question marks, the approval provides a welcome sense of direction for athletic departments in a field that is often ever-changing and unclear. 

“There’s always time for people to be bad actors, but I’ll say 99.9% of the people are trying to do everything right,” Smith said. “We just need to know, or would like to know, what the rules are, and then we’ll play within those rules.”

At the same time, while well-resourced schools may be positioned to take on this nascent world, small conference teams still could feel left behind. Tiryakian framed it as a “major vs. minor league future,” with the power conferences maintaining the majority of high-quality talent and being able to lure in the rest via the transfer portal, leaving minor conferences akin to minor league baseball teams. 

“I think we’ve entered a brave new world that’s a bit concerning for college athletics,” Tiryakian said. “I think you’re going to see a big segregation in terms of the haves and have-nots, and that’s what is worrisome to me about where we’re at in terms of the arms race. There’s just gonna be a lot of people who drop out of the arms race.”

Whatever may be coming, Smith is bullish about the future of Duke in the NIL and revenue sharing space, especially with the infrastructure already put into place. 

“I really think that Duke, we always find a way when we get in the space, to make sure this is better than what anyone else is doing,” Smith said.  And I think once we know the guidelines, we’ll find a way to make it the best for our student-athletes.”

Another key development is a binding agreement to the settlement that power conferences have reportedly urged their members to sign. This would force teams in each conference to comply with the settlement terms and waive their rights to sue the CSC. This would help settle any discrepancy between state NIL law and the settlement. If teams have disputes with the CSC, they would use a third-party arbitration process rather than taking the commission to court. This comes after Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee signed a bill in May protecting state schools from enforcement penalties in the settlement. 

There is also talk of the need for federal intervention. In April, a host of college administrators, conference commissioners, coaches and players traveled to Capitol Hill to lobby elected officials for greater regulation on NIL. Specifically, they lobbied for standardization of NIL regulation, antitrust protection for them and the NCAA to prevent future lawsuits. A bipartisan group of U.S. senators have discussed legislation on compensation in college sports, but nothing has come to fruition. 

President Donald Trump reportedly was planning to create a college sports commission, but the White House announced its pause May 22. Details of its role and scope were limited, but it planned to study the regulation of collectives, the transfer portal, the various NIL rules across states and the implications of Title IX within the new revenue sharing framework. The hope is that a growing push for legislation will help bring more clarity in college sports. 

Abby DiSalvo contributed reporting. 


Ranjan Jindal profile
Ranjan Jindal
| Audience Engagement Director

Ranjan Jindal is a Trinity senior and audience engagement director of The Chronicle’s 121st volume. He was previously sports editor for Volume 120.





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MLB executive Bryan Seeley named College Sports Commission CEO after NCAA settlement approval

The newly formed agency in charge of policing rules in the remade college sports system picked Major League Baseball executive Bryan Seeley as its new CEO. The College Sports Commission announced Seeley as its new leader Friday, shortly after U.S. Judge Claudia Wilken granted final approval of the $2.8 billion House v. NCAA settlement. The […]

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The newly formed agency in charge of policing rules in the remade college sports system picked Major League Baseball executive Bryan Seeley as its new CEO.

The College Sports Commission announced Seeley as its new leader Friday, shortly after U.S. Judge Claudia Wilken granted final approval of the $2.8 billion House v. NCAA settlement.

The settlement allows schools to directly pay players for using their name, image and likeness in endorsement deals. It also allows players to receive NIL payments from third parties.

The new commission will be in charge of making sure schools adhere to the rules, which call for a $20.5 million cap on all payments. It is also setting up a clearinghouse to evaluate third-party deals worth $600 or more.

”I look forward to implementing a system that prioritizes fairness, integrity, and opportunity, while preserving the values that make college sports unique,” Seeley said in a statement announcing his appointment. ”I am energized by the work ahead and excited to begin building out our team.”

As executive vice president of legal and operations, Seeley oversaw MLB investigations, compliance, state government relations, sports betting and other areas. He played a key role in MLB’s sign-stealing investigation into the Houston Astros in 2020.

The CSC will begin operation on July 1 when the settlement officially takes effect.



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Here’s what is coming to college sports – The Daily Hoosier

College sports will never be the same. A California judge on Friday evening approved the NCAA’s landmark settlement of three antitrust cases collectively known as the “House settlement,”, ushering in a new era. “We look forward to implementing this historic settlement designed to bring stability, integrity and competitive balance to college athletics while increasing both […]

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College sports will never be the same.

A California judge on Friday evening approved the NCAA’s landmark settlement of three antitrust cases collectively known as the “House settlement,”, ushering in a new era.

“We look forward to implementing this historic settlement designed to bring stability, integrity and competitive balance to college athletics while increasing both scholarship and revenue opportunities for student-athletes in all sports,” said Tony Petitti, Commissioner of the Big Ten Conference.

The key components of the settlement have been well understood for months, and schools like Indiana have been preparing for this day.

Here are the underpinnings of the settlement:

— Athletes will be paid directly by the schools.  Each school is permitted but not required to share up to a defined amount of revenue annually with their athletes. Per the settlement agreement, the cap is computed by taking 22% of the average of certain defined power school revenues, including ticket sales, television money and sponsorships.

In year one of the settlement — July 2025 through June 2026 — the cap amount is projected to be $20.5 million.  That amount will increase in subsequent years.  Schools can allocate those funds across specific sports and athletes as they desire.  Most schools are planning to allocate the vast majority to the top revenue-producing sports — football and men’s basketball.

Athletes can still get NIL deals with third-parties above and beyond this school-funded revenue sharing.

— A new enforcement entity, the College Sports Commission, will be operated mostly by the power conferences, and immediately takes effect.  Any new contract between an athlete and a third-party entity, such as a business, booster or collective, is now subject to a new Deloitte-run NIL clearinghouse.

The clearinghouse, called “NIL Go,” will evaluate NIL deals between athletes and third parties to determine if they are legitimate arms-length arrangements.  Contracts signed before the settlement approval and paid out before July 1 were not subject to the clearinghouse.

— All sports will have roster limits rather than scholarship limits.  Football’s roster limit will be 105 players.  Men’s and women’s basketball will be 15.  While most schools exceed those limits now when including walk-ons, current athletes are grandfathered in.

Under this new model, schools will have the option to offer partial or full scholarships to every student-athlete on a team’s roster, as long as the total number of student athletes stays within the sport’s specific roster limit.  If schools choose to create new scholarships beyond the historic scholarship limits, that cost is expected to count against the revenue-sharing cap, at least in the short-term.

— The House settlement will pay thousands of former athletes (who played from 2016-2024) $2.8 billion in backpay from lost name, image and likeness (NIL) compensation.

The Daily Hoosier –“Where Indiana fans assemble when they’re not at Assembly”



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UofL wins NCAA super regional game

Louisville baseball coach, players on super regional win vs. Miami Louisville baseball beat Miami 8-1 in the NCAA Super Regional Friday. The Cardinals are one win away from going to the College World Series in Omaha. Louisville baseball and head coach Dan McDonnell are now just one win away from their sixth trip to Omaha, […]

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  • Louisville baseball and head coach Dan McDonnell are now just one win away from their sixth trip to Omaha, Nebraska, for the College World Series and first since 2019.
  • Louisville starting pitcher Patrick Forbes threw 107 pitches, including 63 strikes (good enough for nine strikeouts).
  • The Louisville Cardinals will face the Hurricanes again Saturday at 11 a.m. in what could be a series-deciding game.

The Louisville Cardinals (39-21) defeated the Miami Hurricanes (34-26), 8-1, in Game 1 of the NCAA baseball super regional series Friday evening at Jim Patterson Stadium.

U of L and head coach Dan McDonnell are now just one win away from their sixth trip to the College World Series and first since 2019. It’s a huge improvement on last year’s campaign, which ended with a loss to Clemson in the ACC Tournament.

The Cards will face the Hurricanes back at home again Saturday at 11 a.m. in what could be a series-deciding game.

McDonnell was asked about what his message to the team will be Saturday morning before first pitch.

Nine innings to Omaha, perhaps?

“I won’t say that word,” McDonnell answered. “I think this group has done a phenomenal job of just really enjoying the journey.

“… What they saw tonight, and what they get a chance to be a part of tomorrow, they don’t need to worry about anything else, man. Just enjoy Jim Patterson Stadium, and we get a chance to play a really good ACC conference opponent in Miami.”

Here are a couple takeaways from Louisville’s Game 1 win over Miami:

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Louisville baseball’s Dan McDonnell on pitcher Patrick Forbes’ talent

Louisville baseball coach Dan McDonnell explains what makes pitcher Patrick Forbes a great athlete and Forbes’ future at the professional level.

Louisville’s starting pitcher was incredibly clutch on Friday.

Miami loaded the bases with just one out twice: first in the second inning and then in the third. In both instances, walks and Hurricanes hit by pitches landed the Cards in a high-pressure situation.

But rather than letting that pressure rattle him, right-handed pitcher Patrick Forbes threw perfectly timed strikeouts each time to helped U of L avoid an early deficit. He pitched two in a row to end the second inning and one to put the third away after left fielder Zion Rose snagged the previous batter’s fly ball.

“It’s not, I would say, an easy atmosphere to pitch (in) from excitement,” McDonnell said. “He’s already got electric stuff, so controlling electric stuff (is) not necessarily the easiest when you’re that juiced up and adrenalized. Buddy did a phenomenal job of getting through that tough inning, that bases-loaded inning. And that really gave us the juice and energy to run off the field with that momentum.”

Forbes left in the sixth inning to a standing ovation from Louisville fans. He threw 107 pitches, including 63 strikes (good for nine strikeouts). Forbes also allowed four hits, one run and walked four batters. He was replaced by right-handed pitcher Brennyn Cutts, who threw 34 pitches (including 25 strikes for two Ks), allowed one hit and walked one batter in 1 and 1/3 innings. Lefty Justin West (one strikeout, one hit) relieved Cutts at the top of the eighth.

By the game’s end, Miami had left 12 batters on base.

After a more-than-modest start, which included back-to-back out-of-the-park homers in the second inning from Garret Pike and Jake Munroe, U of L’s offense exploded in the third.

Five different batters scored to stretch Louisville’s lead from 2-1 to 7-1. Munroe hit a three-RBI homer in his second at bat to help Pike and Eddie King Jr. score. It marked Munroe’s first multi-homer game of the season.

The junior later flied out to right field in the fourth inning, but even that at bat allowed Matt Klein to score. Munroe ended the game with a team-high five RBIs.

“This guy, to my right (Munroe), man, he was locked in and swinging it,” McDonnell said. “You could put this guy in the six-hole. Woof. As he said, with Matt Klein being back in the lineup, we’re really stretched out. We’ve got some some options. Jake’s hit third, fourth, even sixth. We’re just kind of splitting up the righties and the lefties, and it’s a good game for us all the way around.”

Louisville announced that all session tickets had sold out Wednesday morning. And despite a weather delay that pushed Game 1’s start time back from 3 p.m. to 3:36 p.m., Cards fans showed out for the first NCAA super regional at Jim Patterson Stadium since 2019.

U of L baseball played in front of an announced crowd of 5,776. The fans made themselves heard at key moments. They stood for almost every final pitch of a Forbes or Cutts strikeout and chanted “C-A-R-D-S” after pivotal plays to keep momentum on Louisville’s side.

Forbes called the crowd “huge for the momentum,” and Munroe said “we (players) 100% feed off of it.”

That is, until a weather delay in the bottom of the eighth inning forced spectators out. During warmups, Louisville’s dugout started its own “C-A-R-D-S” chant and even tried to get a wave going as both teams prepared to wrap Game 1 up in a nearly empty stadium.

Looking to buy Louisville baseball tickets? We’ve got you covered.

Buy Louisville baseball tickets

Reach college sports enterprise reporter Payton Titus at ptitus@gannett.com, and follow her on X @petitus25.



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Canady inks seven-figure NIL deal to return for senior year | Sports

Texas Tech pitcher NiJaree Canady inked another seven-figure NIL contract with the Matador Club, Tech’s NIL collective, Friday morning to return as the Red Raiders’ ace in 2026. Canady’s manager, Derrick Shelby of Prestige Management, told ESPN that the junior pitcher, who became the first $1 million softball player in July, has full intention of […]

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Texas Tech pitcher NiJaree Canady inked another seven-figure NIL contract with the Matador Club, Tech’s NIL collective, Friday morning to return as the Red Raiders’ ace in 2026.

Canady’s manager, Derrick Shelby of Prestige Management, told ESPN that the junior pitcher, who became the first $1 million softball player in July, has full intention of remaining with Tech head coach Gerry Glasco.

“The decision to stay at Tech was not difficult,” Shelby told ESPN in an article published on Friday. “This program has taken care of her. They have showed how much she is appreciated. The entire staff, her teammates, the school in general have been great.”

Her commitment to the Red Raiders comes on the day of the Women’s College World Series championship-deciding game, which Canady will pitch in against the University of Texas at 7 p.m.

At Tech, Canady has tied the Red Raider record for most wins in a season as a pitcher and led Tech to its first Big 12 Championship and World Series appearance, according to Tech Athletics.

“Everything she wants from this game she can get here at Texas Tech,” Shelby told ESPN in the article.



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