NIL
Dallas Wings select UConn star Paige Bueckers with No. 1 pick in 2025 WNBA Draft
NEW YORK — Paige Bueckers, who overcame two serious knee injuries during her career at Connecticut and ultimately led the Huskies to their first national championship in eight years, was selected with the No. 1 overall pick in the 2025 WNBA draft by the Dallas Wings on Monday night. The 23-year-old guard is the sixth UConn […]

NEW YORK — Paige Bueckers, who overcame two serious knee injuries during her career at Connecticut and ultimately led the Huskies to their first national championship in eight years, was selected with the No. 1 overall pick in the 2025 WNBA draft by the Dallas Wings on Monday night.
The 23-year-old guard is the sixth UConn player to be drafted No. 1 overall in the draft’s 30th edition, following Sue Bird (2002, Seattle), Diana Taurasi (2004, Phoenix), Tina Charles (2010, Connecticut), Maya Moore (2011, Minnesota) and Breanna Stewart (2016, Seattle).
Bueckers was emotional when asked about her Huskies teammates.
“They mean everything to me, all they’ve helped me get through, all the ups and downs, the highs and lows, they’ve seen every side of me, and the love there is unconditional, so forever grateful for them,” Bueckers said. “I want to cherish that relationship for the rest of my life, and I wouldn’t be here without them. I just want to show a state of gratitude to them.
Picks, selections and updates from 2025 draft
The latest news and insider insights from USA TODAY Studio IX.
Bueckers, a three-time first-team AP All-American, is not only a walking bucket — she averaged 19.9 points, 4.4 rebounds, and 4.6 assists last season — but she is a walking advertisement with some of the nation’s most recognizable brand names vying for her services.
Since Dallas won the draft lottery last November, the Wings have been preparing for change. Teams are no longer waiting around to develop players. They want to compete for championships now as a future of uncertainty looms as the players have already opted out of the league’s current collective bargaining agreement, which expires Oct. 31, despite a new 11-year media rights deal, worth $2.2 billion, set to commence at the start of the 2026 season.
“Dallas is a sports city, so I’m super excited for the support, the new wave of being there, being in a new city, being with a new team and conquering those challenges as a group,” Bueckers said. “But super excited to be there. We’ve got great pieces, a great ownership, great GMs, great coaches. So the entire organization from up to down, I’m extremely excited for it.”
DiJonai Carrington, Ty Harris, and NaLyssa Smith signed with Dallas during the offseason, adding a much-needed veteran presence to go along with returnees guard Maddy Siegrist and center Teaira McCowan.
“All of us are looking to add dawgs to our locker room,” Miller said. Those “dawgs” will have to start on the defensive end, where the Wings allowed a league-worst 92.1 points per game on nearly 48% shooting.
With Bueckers on the roster for the new-look Wings, the mission might have been accomplished.
NIL
Mark Pope has one rule change he would like to see made in men’s college basketball
The rules in men’s college basketball are far from perfect. The block/charge call, seemingly endless monitor reviews, and late-game fouling issues are just a few of the areas where tweaks could be made to enhance the overall product. The rules we have in place are what make the sport so entertaining and fun to watch, […]

The rules in men’s college basketball are far from perfect.
The block/charge call, seemingly endless monitor reviews, and late-game fouling issues are just a few of the areas where tweaks could be made to enhance the overall product. The rules we have in place are what make the sport so entertaining and fun to watch, but we’d be lying to ourselves if we said there isn’t a need for improvement.
One potential change that’s recently become a topic of discussion is the movement to switch men’s college basketball from halves to quarters. For one, it would bring sport-wide consistency, as MBB is the only visible version of basketball still utilizing halves. But it would also reset team fouls after each quarter, reduce the number of commercials with fewer media timeouts, and eliminate the one-and-one free throws.
Kentucky head coach Mark Pope has already talked several times about wanting to extend the regular season to 40 games. But that’s more of a landscape-changing idea rather than a clean-and-cut rule modification. However, he’s into the idea of swapping out halves for quarters.
“I don’t know if I have a really intelligent answer on that. I do like consolidating it,” Pope recently said on The Sideline with Andy Katz. “(Men’s college basketball is) the only — not even the women — we’re the only remaining basketball entity that has halves.”
But if you ask Pope what rule change he’d like to see the most, his answer might surprise you. It’s one that makes plenty of sense, though.
“The change that I would really like to make, that I’d be super excited about? I’d like to be able to advance the ball out of timeouts,” Pope said. “I know it slows down the game, but it makes the game so much more interesting when, with 2.5 seconds or 1.5 seconds left, if you don’t have to go fullcourt, but you can advance it, you have a chance to get elite-level shots and decision-making.
“It extends the game to where you have two or three or four possessions, where in college you can only really squeeze in one because you can’t advance the ball.”
This is a rule already in place in the NBA and one that is widely loved. As a personal aside, I love the ability to advance the ball in the NBA after timeouts in late-game situations for the exact reasons Pope outlined. It creates additional drama and gives teams more opportunities to produce highlight plays and buzzer-beating outcomes. It’s much easier to craft a play with one second on the clock when the ball is at halfcourt compared to underneath the opposite basket.
Let’s make it happen, Pope.
NIL
Champion Standard Podcast | Chomp Talk with Mossis Madu – The Football Brainiacs
Continuing with our plan this offseason to share some content that a couple members of our community have been creating for close to a year now! I am happy to be able to announce that TFB supports The Champion Standard Podcast! Our guys @soonerbrad and @Birddawg have been pumping out some high-quality podcasts that talk […]

Continuing with our plan this offseason to share some content that a couple members of our community have been creating for close to a year now!
I am happy to be able to announce that TFB supports The Champion Standard Podcast!
Our guys @soonerbrad and @Birddawg have been pumping out some high-quality podcasts that talk about Xs and Os, hot topics, and OU football talk in general. This podcast represents the views and opinions of Rob and Brad and TFB is not part of their operation, but we do endorse it wholeheartedly!
Each time a new podcast drops I will post it here for the community. Give the guys a listen, sub to their YouTube channel, and include their pods on your mobile devices!
Chomp Talk with Mossis Madu
As the Oklahoma Sooners step into the ring for round two in the SEC, few voices can balance nostalgia, realism, and insight like former Sooner running back Moses Madu. In his recent return to the Champion Standard podcast’s “Chomp Talk” segment, Madu joined hosts Rob and Brad to talk about everything from the Sooners’ running back room to the future of college football, NIL chaos, and why expectations in Norman might need tempering.
First Impressions of Jaydn Ott
“He Can Go”
The spotlight early in the conversation landed on Jaydn Ott, the highly-touted transfer from Cal who joins OU’s backfield this season. Madu admitted he didn’t know much about Ott when the news first broke. But after watching film, combing through social media clips, and digging into stats, his view changed dramatically.
“I was like, this kid can go,” Madu said. “He’s the closest thing to a home-run threat we’ve had in a minute—probably since Eric Gray.”
Ott, who led multiple statistical categories, brings speed, shiftiness, and breakaway potential. Madu noted that adding a player of Ott’s caliber deepens a running back room that already includes Xavier Robinson (whom both hosts are high on) and Taylor Tatum, despite the latter’s ball security struggles last season.
But Madu emphasized something else: contrast. Ott provides a different style from the power and burst of guys like Robinson. That contrast, he says, is vital if Oklahoma hopes to compete week in and week out in the brutal SEC.
NIL, the Portal, and the Semi-Pro Future
Madu, now a coach and full-time dad balancing softball games and recruiting trips, didn’t hold back on his views of how the college landscape has changed—and what it means for programs like Oklahoma.
“I really think the college game’s going pro. You’re going to see scouting departments just like the NFL. They’ll have guys watching film 24/7. The portal and NIL changed everything.”
That’s where Jim Nagy’s hiring as a behind-the-scenes football administrator stood out to Madu. The former Senior Bowl director and longtime NFL scout brings the kind of experience OU needs to navigate this new frontier. According to Madu, bringing in someone who’s negotiated with agents and evaluated talent at the pro level is more critical now than ever.
“In today’s game, a guy like Nagy is just as important as your strength coach or OC. Maybe more.”
But while Madu embraces the professionalization of college football, he also lamented what’s been lost—especially for players from his era.
“Back when I played, we had $150 a month after rent. I joke that my booster was my girlfriend’s mom,” he said, laughing. “Now these kids are getting life-changing money—and I’m not mad at it.”
Still, he sees the chaos. Players quitting mid-season, promises not being met, the portal spinning nonstop. He floated ideas like multi-year contracts and transfer windows—mechanisms that could inject structure into the madness.
OU’s 2025 Outlook: Brutal Realism
Perhaps the most sobering moment came when Rob asked Madu for his early prediction for the 2025 season.
“I don’t think we have to be on suicide watch like last year,” Madu joked. “But it’s gonna be tough. I’d be happy with seven wins.”
Seven wins? For a program of OU’s pedigree, that sounds low—but Madu laid it out clearly: it’s about the trenches.
“Skill guys? We’re fine. But we’re not there yet in the trenches. It’s different in the SEC, man. You feel it.”
While Rob and Brad were floating 8-9 wins, Madu’s view was grounded in recent history. Last year’s 6-7 finish exposed glaring holes on both lines, and despite a strong offensive line class and elite interior DL prospects like David Stone, Jaden Jackson, and Da’Jon Terry, Madu believes it’ll take time for the units to raise the bar.
“That’s always the difference—Big 12 vs SEC. It’s the big boys up front.”
Brad countered that OU isn’t that far off—maybe one or two years from being ready—but Madu was firm: three to four years, especially with how everything reset after coaching changes and transfers.
The NIL Tug-of-War: Loyalty vs. Survival
Madu also touched on the deeper ethical tension NIL has introduced—what happens when tradition collides with cold, hard cash.
For kids from disadvantaged backgrounds, NIL is a golden ticket—not just for them, but for their families. But Madu still worries about what’s lost in the process: team loyalty, fan connection, and recruiting for the right reasons.
“We’ve got to find a way to keep the tradition of college football alive. Otherwise it just becomes another league.”
He floated ideas like player contracts, loyalty clauses, and caps—not to hinder players, but to protect the sport’s soul.
The Thunder Surge & J-Dub’s Bounceback
After the deep dive into football, the show shifted gears to basketball, with the Oklahoma City Thunder’s playoff run in full swing. Rob and Brad praised the team’s resilience, especially in their Game 7 win against the Nuggets.
“They went on a 50–25 run to end the half—crazy,” Brad said.
Jalen Williams (J-Dub) finally had a breakout game with 24 points on 10-of-17 shooting, and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (SGA) did what stars do, pouring in 35 effortlessly.
But the hosts were just as hyped about role players like Alex Caruso (+40) and Cason Wallace (+38)—guys whose defensive energy transformed the series.
“Caruso was like a human gnat on Joker,” Rob said.
They previewed the upcoming matchup against Anthony Edwards and the Timberwolves, predicting a bruising, physical series. Still, both hosts believed the Thunder were built for this—fast, deep, and tenacious.
“I called it months ago,” Rob reminded Brad. “This team will win the whole thing.”
Final Word: A Real One Returns
Moses Madu doesn’t sugarcoat it. His blend of affection for the program and realistic assessment is exactly what OU fans need right now. With the transition to the SEC, a brutal 2025 schedule, and uncertainty up front, OU is facing a prove-it year.
But that doesn’t mean it’s doom and gloom.
If Ott delivers, if the trenches develop, and if young pieces gel fast, Oklahoma could surprise some people. And with the sport evolving faster than ever, Madu’s perspective—that of a player, coach, and now Fan—might be the Sooners’ best reality check.
“I’m always rooting for ‘em,” he said. “But you’ve got to keep it real.”
NIL
Miami transfer guard Divine Ugochukwu commits to Michigan State
Miami transfer guard Divine Ugochukwu has committed to Michigan State, he told On3. Ugochukwu, a 6-foot-3 freshman combo guard, took an official visit to East Lansing earlier this week and returned home committed to the Spartans. He averaged 5.3 points, 1.9 rebounds, and 2.3 assists per game for the Hurricanes this season. Ugochukwu has most recently been recruited […]


Miami transfer guard Divine Ugochukwu has committed to Michigan State, he told On3.
Ugochukwu, a 6-foot-3 freshman combo guard, took an official visit to East Lansing earlier this week and returned home committed to the Spartans.
He averaged 5.3 points, 1.9 rebounds, and 2.3 assists per game for the Hurricanes this season.
Ugochukwu has most recently been recruited by schools like Texas Tech and USC.
The native of Sugar Land, Texas becomes Michigan State’s third transfer portal commitment this offseason, joining former Samford guard Trey Fort (14.6 PPG) and former Florida Atlantic forward Kaleb Glenn (12.6 PPG, 4.8 RPG).
Michigan State is also set to bring in a pair of four-star freshmen small forwards — Cam Ward (No. 51 ranked nationally) and Jordan Scott (No. 52 nationally).
Michigan State won the Big Ten regular season and made it to the Elite Eight in the NCAA Tournament this season. The Spartans finished with an overall record of 30-7.
To keep up with the latest players on the move, check out On3’s Transfer Portal wire. The On3 Transfer Portal Instagram account and Twitter account are excellent resources to stay up to date with the latest moves.
NIL
David Pollack critical of reported NIL deal for Jackson Cantwell
Five-Star Plus+ offensive tackle Jackson Cantell, the No. 1 overall recruit in 2026, committed to Miami over Georgia last week after the Hurricanes reportedly offered quite the deal for him in NIL. David Pollack doesn’t know if that number was worth it, though, even if he is the best in his class. Pollack was critical […]


Five-Star Plus+ offensive tackle Jackson Cantell, the No. 1 overall recruit in 2026, committed to Miami over Georgia last week after the Hurricanes reportedly offered quite the deal for him in NIL. David Pollack doesn’t know if that number was worth it, though, even if he is the best in his class.
Pollack was critical of this expense during an episode of ‘See Ball Get Ball’ last week. He knows the value of the offensive line but, at the apparent price point as compared to the rest of the cost of a roster, Pollack isn’t sure if that kind of investment is worth it.
“It ain’t left tackle, homie. Like, it ain’t left tackle. If you want to spend this much money on a quarterback, we can have the conversation. I’m not spending $2 million on an offensive lineman. Like, I’m just not,” Pollack said. “An offensive lineman is obviously going to be in the mix, can be great, can control the game. The likelihood of them getting dinged up and hurt is highly possible. Like, you play a physical position up front like that, you’re going to get – it’s going to happen. Like, it’s just going to happen naturally. Quarterbacks obviously have a chance to stay healthier.
“Obviously, when your line of scrimmage is dominant, it makes life easy for you. I mean, that’s a great thing,” Pollack continued. “So, you know, if Miami has the funds and they can do this? I mean, it’s always at what cost? It’s always, like, where is the next spot that I don’t, that now that I have to fill a void, I have to fill a hole”
Cantwell, a Nixa, Missouri product, is a Five-Star+ prospect at No. 1 in the 2026 cylce per the On3 Industry Ranking, a weighted average that utilizes all four major recruiting media companies. With that, he committed to Miami over Georgia, Oregon, and Ohio State. On3’s Pete Nakos reported Cantwell received an NIL offer in the $2 million range.
Still, Pollack just didn’t know about this fit for Cantwell in Coral Gables. Besides the payment, Pollack also doesn’t know how well Cantwell will develop, considering the program’s recent history with the offensive line under Mario Cristobal.
“Miami, since Cristobal has been there, okay? This is since he’s been there since the 2022 season,” Pollack prefaced. “They have no draft picks in 2022 on the O-line, no draft picks in 2023, a seventh-round pick in 2024, and a fifth-round pick in 2025. So, that’s what you’re telling me that, I’m going to get developed with and I’m going to? It’s not a knock. It’s the numbers. Like, it’s the facts.
“Now, listen. I’m not going to give him all of that because, when you start there, obviously, you’re starting from ground zero, you’re bringing in your own talent. But, because of the transfer portal, you have the opportunity to bring guys in really, really quickly that can play right now that can go and their offensive line has not been,” said Pollack. “Last year, it was pretty solid. Like, it was. They were physical enough to road grade for the run. They protected Cam Ward and Cam Ward made magic. But, you know, those are numbers that are real. Like, those are, Mr. PFF – those are numbers that they have and that they’ve accomplished in his tenure there so far at Miami.”
In the end, all that matters to Miami right now is that Cantwell committed to give the ‘Canes a Top-10 class now for 2026. Still, that price point for that position felt like a lot to Pollack.
“It’s a high investment,” said Pollack. “It’s a high investment in a guy on the offensive line.”
NIL
NIL not the Biggest Factor for Florida Gators Five-Star OL Target Felix Ojo
GAINESVILLE, Fla.– Despite making five-star offensive tackle Felix Ojo’s top eight, the Florida Gators were considered by many to be on the outside looking in. After his official visit in Gainesville, Ojo considers Florida very much in the running. “They sit very high on my list, and they most definitely have a chance in my […]

GAINESVILLE, Fla.– Despite making five-star offensive tackle Felix Ojo’s top eight, the Florida Gators were considered by many to be on the outside looking in. After his official visit in Gainesville, Ojo considers Florida very much in the running.
“They sit very high on my list, and they most definitely have a chance in my recruiting process,” he said after leaving his visit. “If anyone thought they didn’t, they most definitely do now.”
The No. 1 offensive tackle recruit in the country, Ojo plays a position with high NIL demand, as seen by five-star Jackson Cantwell’s commitment to Miami. For Ojo, however, NIL won’t be the largest factor when making his decision, which he hopes to have sometime near the end of the summer.
“NIL is definitely a factor. I’d be lying if I said it wasn’t, but I’ll say, I’m going to college for relationship building more than NIL,” he said, also citing development and potential NFL earnings as more important than “college money.”
Ojo did note that Florida is competitive in that field.
Outside of that, Florida’s investment into developing offensive linemen stands out to Ojo as well under two position coaches in Rob Sale and Jon Decoster, who has primarily recruited Ojo. The two’s experience as position coaches in the NFL play into Ojo’s desires to be properly developed at the collegiate level.
“It was nice, especially with all the NFL experience,” Ojo said. “Just talking ball with them and talking how they run their offense and just seeing how their offense correlates to my skill sets.”
While Florida took a significant step forward in their chances for Ojo, this recruitment is still far from over with the five-star set to visit Ohio State on May 30, Michigan on June 6, Texas on June 13 and Oklahoma on June 20.
Texas is considered the leaders by multiple outlets, but Ojo is still considering all options in front of him. He explained that what current players on each team will also play a big role in his decision.
“Spending time with the players is the main part because the players don’t lie to you,” he said. “Really building a connection with them because that’s who I’m going to be playing with and building a brotherhood with.”
As it stands, Florida has no offensive line commits in its 2026 class, which grew to two pledges on Sunday after a pledge from three-star defensive lineman Jamir Perez. Florida Gators on SI is tracking all of the Gators’ recruiting moves in our 2026 Recruiting Tracker.
NIL
Texas Tech Red Raiders – Official Athletics Website
LUBBOCK, Texas – The No. 12-seeded Red Raiders (48-12) advanced to their first ever NCAA Super Regional after defeating Mississippi State (39-19) 9-6 on Sunday night at Rocky Johnson Field in front of a record crowd. Texas Tech used 14 hits and eight RBI and needed all it to get past the Bulldogs, who did […]

Texas Tech used 14 hits and eight RBI and needed all it to get past the Bulldogs, who did not quit despite going down 5-0 early in the third inning.
Hailey Toney went 3-for-4 with two home runs out of the nine hole and Mihyia Davis also went 3-for-4 from the lead off spot. Toney and Davis combined to score five of the Red Raider’s nine runs and set the tone for the offense.
NiJaree Canady got her 28th win of the season going 5.0 innings, striking out four batters and allowing six runs, three of which were earned. Chloe Riassetto picked up her team-leading third save of the season after throwing a phenomenal 2.0 innings that featured a crucial double play ball to get Tech out of sixth inning jam.
Lauren Allred led the team with eight RBI on the weekend including three in this game thanks to a two-RBI single in the second inning and an RBI double in the sixth inning which gave Tech some insurance.
How it happened:
Tech was the designated visiting team in the game and got a run in the opening after a Davis single and Allred walk got runners at first and second. Bailey Lindemuth came up to bat and after a few early strikes made the adjustment and lined a ball down the left field line to bring home Davis.
The Red Raiders added three more runs in the second inning with an RBI from Alexa Langeliers after Demi Elder, Logan Halleman and Toney loaded the bases on three straight singles which featured some great small ball action by Halleman and Toney. Allred cashed in two more runs with a long single into right center field to give Tech a 4-0 lead.
Canady retired the first six batters she faced as the Red Raiders were in firm control heading into the third inning.
Tech added another run in the third inning after Lindemuth doubled again and came around to score on a Bulldog error.
A pair of errors by Tech allowed Mississippi State to get back in the ball game in the third as they added three runs, all unearned, on three hits but also left two stranded. Toney responded quickly to lead off the next inning as she launched her fifth homer of the season over the left field wall on the first pitch.
Alana Johnson got things started for Tech in the fifth inning after the Bulldogs scoreless fourth. Johnson drew a 17-pitch walk which got the crowd and the team hyped up and she would later score off a sacrifice fly from Elder to make it 7-3, Tech.
The Bulldogs added three more runs in the fifth inning thanks to two doubles and a single and made things interesting heading into the sixth inning with the score at 7-6.
Toney again got Tech back on track as she led off the inning with a solo shot to left followed by an RBI double from Allred to score Davis from first and give Tech some more insurance with a 9-6 lead.
Riassetto came in for the final two innings and was masterful as she got one of the best hitters in the SEC to ground into a double play and allowed just one base runner in the final two innings via a hit by pitch. Tech got the final out on a fly out to right field as the nearly 2,200 fans in attendance cheered on the team’s historic accomplishment.
UP NEXT: Tech will travel to Tallahassee, Florida to take on the No. 5-seeded Florida State Seminoles.
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