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As College Athletics Grow, NIL Collectives Are Fighting Back Against Buyouts

How would you feel if, after donating a good amount of money towards an NIL collective for a particular player, that athlete then decided to take the money and transfer without playing a down? Now, imagine you’re running an NIL collective where the sole purpose was to make sure the team you represent was paying […]

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As College Athletics Grow, NIL Collectives Are Fighting Back Against Buyouts


How would you feel if, after donating a good amount of money towards an NIL collective for a particular player, that athlete then decided to take the money and transfer without playing a down? Now, imagine you’re running an NIL collective where the sole purpose was to make sure the team you represent was paying enough to attain some of the top talent in college sports. 

As the college athletics world continues to change, with revenue-sharing on the way, and NIL contracts are being front-loaded so that they can stay off the books when the House settlement is approved, we are starting to see a small shift in how collectives could be going about their business. 

Right now, the most intriguing story centers around the Iamaleava family. One brother (Nico) left Tennessee as spring practice was ending, while the other brother (Madden) decided that he was ‘homesick’, so he followed his family to UCLA. So, you now have two different players in the SEC that signed NIL agreements with collectives, with money still on the table. 

What would you do in this situation? Let it slide, not go after the money that has already been paid for services still to be rendered, or go after the financial sum that’s still left on a contract signed by all parties? In this current era of NIL and upcoming contracts that are negotiated with each school, we are at a crossroads when it comes to holding athletes accountable for the money that’s been spent, or scheduled to be paid. 

Mind you, all of this comes with the job of being a college athlete. These are no longer just ‘kids’ on a scholarship, who used to be paid under the cover of darkness. It’s time that schools stop acting like these men and women are student athletes, which I understand is hard to do without them being labeled ‘employees’. 

NIL Is A Business, Not A Charity. Parking Lot Deals Are In The Past

The days of getting the $500 handshakes or bags left at the high school field-house are over. Whether they want to say the important part out loud is up to the schools, but these athletes are now professionals, and it’s time they started being treated that way. If you’re being paid a few million per year to play for a school, while also doing your part to live up to the contract by appearing at events to sign autographs or getting out into the community to complete your ‘obligations’. This is a professional marketing deal, whether you like it or not. 

What we witnessed earlier this week from Arkansas athletic director Hunter Yurachek with his social media post about supporting the Razorbacks collective in their fight to recoup money from certain athletes was a test for public opinion. Yurachek knew that the ‘Edge’ collective was going after Madden Iamaleava for NIL money that had already been paid, along with what the company thought they could make off his name, image and likeness during his contract period. 

And, judging by the reaction on social media, it looks as though the school will have plenty of support in their quest to recoup some of that money. But, the reason why so many schools have not gone after players for breaking an agreement is based off the reaction they could receive from future recruits or transfer portal prospects. 

“If we put our marketing budget together, after already paying an athlete a few hundred-thousand dollars, and the athlete decides to leave after not even playing a snap, wouldn’t you try to recoup some of that money?” one NIL collective representative told OutKick. “Think about all the money we’ve spent on merchandise, events, their apartment, vehicle and monthly salary.”

Does every school have buyout language in their contracts? No. But there are plenty of collectives in college sports that have included this type of writing in case a player decides to bolt after cashing a few checks and heading off into the abyss, also known as the transfer portal. If these schools are going to spend massive amounts of money on a player, only to then see them leave four or five months later, it’s reasonable to think that they would like to get some of the money back. 

This is a business, and return on investment is a gamble many are willing to take in hopes of a player reaching their full potential. Does it always work out? Absolutely not. But again, that’s the risk you take by agreeing to pay players an exorbitant amount of money to play for the school you represent. 

Do These NIL Collectives Have A Case When Trying To Recoup Money?

All the chatter around players being held to their contracts, or having to pay a buyout if they plan on leaving one school for another is a part of this chapter that comes down to language. 

Sure, there are plenty of NIL collectives that include buyout language in the deals they present to potential clients. But, there are also counter-offers that would force the collective to either agree to the terms or move on to the next player. 

The problem with these contracts is that there is a gray area about what’s actually enforceable. Obviously, these athletes are being paid to play sports, as the marketing aspect of this is just a small equation in the entire situation. Sure, players are asked to appear at events, show up for fundraisers, shake hands and smile at the boosters that are helping finance these contracts. 

But, how else are the collectives supposed to actually make enough money to prove that it was worth the negotiated amount that the player was paid?

“We cannot just keep taking it on the chin because the public might have a differing opinion. I’m sorry, but I am running a business, and I have boosters who want a return on investment, in the form of wins,” another NIL collective rep told OutKick. So, when that person who donates a lot of money on a yearly basis then sees a player enter the portal without contributing much on the field, if any, I can’t just tell them that we struck out. Sure, it’s a gamble. 

“But we have to start holding them to their signature, and if it doesn’t legally hold up, then we did a poor job putting the contract together. I’m not implying everyone has this type of language with a buyout included.”

Do you think showing up once every two months for a Boys & Girls club appearance is enough? A majority of the time, these athletes show up for an hour, sign a few autographs and go on their way. Obviously, this is just one example, but I think you understand where I’m going here. 

If the two sides agree to a deal, and one side doesn’t live up to their promises, it’s pretty easy to understand why these companies would go after potential future financial losses. 

If a player decides after being on campus for a few months that they want to explore their options, after already being paid a decent amount of money, it’s not an easy pill for these NIL collectives to swallow. 

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NCAA approves multiple major rule changes in men’s college basketball

The NCAA Playing Rules Oversight Panel approved proposed changes that are expected to enhance the flow of men’s college basketball beginning in the 2025-26 season, according to a release Tuesday. Those changes include allowing coach’s challenges to review out-of-bounds calls and goaltending or basket interference, as well as modifications to the rule on continuous motion […]

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The NCAA Playing Rules Oversight Panel approved proposed changes that are expected to enhance the flow of men’s college basketball beginning in the 2025-26 season, according to a release Tuesday. Those changes include allowing coach’s challenges to review out-of-bounds calls and goaltending or basket interference, as well as modifications to the rule on continuous motion on shot attempts.

Regarding the proposed coach’s challenge, much like in college football, teams must have a timeout to request an instant replay review. If the challenge review is successful, teams will be granted an additional video review challenge for the remainder of the game, including overtime. If unsuccessful, the team loses the ability to challenge any other calls in the game.

Coach challenges will not impact an officials’ use of instant replay for timing mistakes, scoring errors, shot clock violations, 2-point vs. 3-point field goal attempts, flagrant fouls, etc.

Officials can initiate video reviews on basketbat interference/goaltending and restricted arc plays in the final two minutes of regulation and in overtime. The NCAA revealed recent data showed these sort of reviews caused “minimal game interruptions,” and the Men’s Basketball Rules Committee members beliee the coach’s challenge “will have a significant impact on the flow of the game.” NCAA officials aren’t allowed to conduct video review on out-of-bounds calls unless first prompted by a coach’s challenge.

Other enhancements approved Tuesday include new points of emphasis for officials to address delay-of-game tactics, limiting time at the review monitor, improving game efficiency and reducing physicality.

With regard to the changes to the continuous motion rule, an offensive player who ends his dribble going toward the basket and takes contact from a defensive player is now permitted to pivot or complete the step and finish the field goal attempt. Currently, players are awarded the basket/field goal only when they’re are fouled in the process of shooting the ball.

Last month, the NCAA Men’s Basketball Rules Committee also recommended the creation of a joint working group to gather feedback from conferences on potentially moving from halves to quarters, though any potential changes to the game’s format won’t come until the next rules change year.

“In considering the decisions last month, the NCAA Men’s Basketball Committee had conversations about ways to continue this direction in the upcoming years, which includes positive momentum for moving the men’s game from halves to quarters,” the NCAA release said Tuesday. “The committee realizes there are hurdles to implementing the quarter format to the game, including the structuring of media timeouts to accommodate commercial inventory. The committee recommended NCAA Division I conferences create a joint working group to provide feedback on the potential change from halves to quarters.”

Officials will now the the option to call a Flagrant 1 foul whenever a player makes contact with another player’s groin area. Previously officials could only call a common foul or a Flagrant 2, leading to an ejection for the offending player.

Other rules changes included involve a player using the rim to gain an advantage will be now called basket interference, and if one shot clock becomes inoperable, the other shot clock can be utilized. Previously, if one shot clock wasn’t working, both had to be turned off.



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Texas signee Hannah Wells named Gatorade National Softball Player of the Year

There are plenty of good vibes in Austin after Texas won its first Women’s College World Series championship earlier this month. The reinforcements are already on their way. Hannah Wells, the 54th-ranked prospect of the Softball America 2025 Class, was named the Gatorade National Softball Player of the Year on Tuesday. From the Gatorade Press […]

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There are plenty of good vibes in Austin after Texas won its first Women’s College World Series championship earlier this month. The reinforcements are already on their way. Hannah Wells, the 54th-ranked prospect of the Softball America 2025 Class, was named the Gatorade National Softball Player of the Year on Tuesday.

From the Gatorade Press Release

The 6-foot senior right-handed pitcher led Coahoma (35-1) to the 3A Division II state championship this past season, the program’s third straight state title. Wells compiled a record of 22-1 in the circle with a 0.44 earned run average and struck out 258 batters in 127.2 innings pitched, recording 67 percent of her outs by way of the K. She recorded 15 shutouts in 23 starts, including a no-hitter and two perfect games. Wells also batted .602 with 75 RBI and a state single-season record 31 home runs, bringing her career total to a state-record 86 long balls. She mashed 48 extra-base hits in 108 at-bats, slugging 1.639 to post an OPS of 2.287 and an isolated power percentage of 1.037.

More than a trophy, Gatorade Player of the Year has a 40-year legacy recognizing and celebrating the next generation unlike anyone else, from one-on-one connections to their favorite pros to first access to Gatorade Drops and participation in community initiatives. From CEOs and coaches to elite professional athletes, Gatorade Player of the Year Winners showcase the power of sport, touting an impressive group of softball alumni that includes Cat Osterman (2000-01, Cypress Springs High School, Texas), Rachel Garcia (2014-15 & 2012-13, Highland High School, Calif.), Ava Brown (2022-23, Lake Creek High School, Texas) and Addisen Fisher (2023-24, Bend High School, Oregon).   

“Hannah’s remarkable talents and character on the field, in the classroom and in her community made her a clear choice for Gatorade National Softball Player of the Year,” said Gatorade Chief Brand Officer Anuj Bhasin. “The award shows the world who the athletes are on and off the field, and she couldn’t be more deserving of this top honor.” 

Each State’s Gatorade Softball Player of the Year

Player State Class Position College Commitment
Victoria Moten Alabama 2025 P Alabama
Sela Rodriguez Alaska 2026 P/UTL N/A
Lilly Goose Goodwin Arizona 2026 P Northwestern
Lillie-Faye McWhorter Arkansas 2025 P Arkansas
Ayla Tuua California 2026 P/OF LSU
Meredith Barnhart Colorado 2025 MIF Tennessee
Camryn Fisher Connecticut 2025 P Appalachian State
Ava Calciano Delaware 2025 MIF UConn
Yasmin Burrell District of Columbia 2025 MIF Coppin State
Hannah DeMarcus Florida 2027 P N/A
Jada Savage Georgia 2026 P Ole Miss
Sienna Yamashita Hawaii 2026 MIF Arizona State
Delaney Wright Idaho 2025 P Utah Tech
Bella Dimitrijevic Illinois 2025 P Florida State
Brynley Erb Indiana 2026 MIF Kentucky
Mariah Myers Iowa 2025 CIF Iowa
Sophie Stockam Kansas 2025 P/UTL UNLV
McLaine Hudson Kentucky 2026 MIF Kentucky
Kynzee Anderson Louisiana 2026 P Georgia
Addison DeRoche Maine 2027 P/UTL N/A
Taylor Smith Maryland 2025 P Virginia
Alyx Rossi Massachusetts 2025 P Boston College
Kaitlyn Pallozzi Michigan 2025 P/UTL Alabama
Mya Tautges Minnesota 2025 P/UTL St. Thomas
Hannah Jo Sullivan Mississippi 2026 C Mississippi State
Abby Carr Missouri 2025 P/UTL Missouri
Faith Howard Montana 2025 P/UTL Montana State
Alexis Jensen Nebraska 2025 P Nebraska
Taylor Johns Nevada 2026 MIF Georgia
Elisabeth Kearney New Hampshire 2026 P Stonehill
Gabriella Shadek New Jersey 2025 C Duke
Malie Moogie Satete New Mexico 2028 P/UTL N/A
Kaili Witherall New York 2025 P Texas State
Anna Hinde North Carolina 2025 UTL Florida State
Jocelyn Berg North Dakota 2027 P/UTL N/A
Hayley Griggs Ohio 2025 MIF Florida State
Allyssa Parker Oklahoma 2025 P/UTL Oklahoma
Myleigh Cooper Oregon 2025 P Cal Poly SLO
Lexie Hames Pennsylvania 2025 P/UTL Clemson
Phoenyx Silva Rhode Island 2025 CIF Iowa
Aspen Boulware South Carolina 2027 MIF N/A
Madelyn Mescher South Dakota 2027 P/UTL N/A
Avary Stockwell Tennessee 2025 UTL Tennessee
Hannah Wells Texas 2025 P Texas
Rita Tavita Utah 2025 P/UTL BYU
Anastase Bourgeois Vermont 2025 P/UTL West Virginia State
Kaylee Hodges Virginia 2027 P/1B N/A
Maddie Milhorn Washington 2025 P Oregon
Audrea Watts West Virginia 2025 P N/A
Karly Meredith Wisconsin 2025 P/UTL Virginia
Rylee Stephenson Wyoming 2025 P Wyoming

More from Softball America:

Show Me The Money Notebook
Teagan Kavan’s historic WCWS performance leads Texas to first national championship
Softball America Top 100 Players of the 2025 season



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Ranking Michigan Basketball’s best additions during transfer portal era

The transfer portal as a database was launched in Oct. 2018. Despite a slow start, the portal now rules the college world when it comes to roster management. Since its inception, Michigan has taken in 19 transfers. Today we’re going to take a stab at ranking each of them. 19. Brandon Wade (Duquesne) Wade was […]

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The transfer portal as a database was launched in Oct. 2018. Despite a slow start, the portal now rules the college world when it comes to roster management. Since its inception, Michigan has taken in 19 transfers.

Today we’re going to take a stab at ranking each of them.

19. Brandon Wade (Duquesne)

Wade was just the second player to transfer to Michigan via the transfer portal and was simply a part of the bench mob.

18. Jaron Faulds (Columbia)

Faulds, also a part of the bench mob for a few years, was a Michigan native who opted for a Michigan degree rather than an Ivy League degree. His impact on the court was minimal.

17. Tray Jackson (Seton Hall)

The first transfer on our list who came to Ann Arbor with a legitimate shot at playing time, Jackson was a bit of a disappointment in his one year at Michigan. He appeared in 28 games but scored just five points per game.

16. Sam Walters (Alabama)

Fans had high hopes for Walters as a lethal sharpshooter, but injuries prevented him from playing much in his one year at Michigan.

15. Jaelin Llewellyn (Princeton)

Like Walters, Michigan was hoping to rely on him before an injury shut him down for the year. In Llewellyn’s case, it was an ACL tear. However, even prior to the injury, he had been slightly disappointing as an up-transfer from the Ivy League.

14. Aday Mara (UCLA)

Here’s where the list starts to get complicated. Mara has yet to suit up for the Wolverines, but the 7-foot-3 big man should play a big part in the rotation next year. Mara could be much higher on this list by season’s end.

13. DeVante’ Jones (Coastal Carolina)

Jones got off to a rough start in a disappointing 2021-22 season. However, he picked up steam as the season went on, including a memorable performance against Ohio State. He was certainly a serviceable Big Ten point guard.

12. Rubin Jones (North Texas)

Jones played just one year in Ann Arbor. While not a stat stuffer by any means, he was a defensive pest who made key plays at key times. I’ll always remember him for his put-back slam at home in the upset win over Purdue.

11. Morez Johnson (Illinois)

Like Mara, it’s tough to project what this year’s incoming transfers will look like without seeing them in action just yet. However, Johnson is expected to be the starting center this year and should play a crucial role moving forward.

10. Roddy Gayle Jr. (Ohio State)

Year 1 at Michigan was full of ups and downs. His three-point shooting wasn’t stellar, but his superb free-throw shooting came up clutch. Gayle should be a major contributor to the 2025-26 team.

9. Elliot Cadeau (North Carolina)

Cadeau is an excellent playmaker and distributor who needs to get better at not turning the ball over. With Michigan projected to be a top-five team in the country this year, it’s hard not to include their presumed starting point guard in the top-10 incoming transfer rankings.

8. Olivier Nkamhoua (Tennessee)

Nkamhoua tends to get overlooked because of how poorly his lone season in Ann Arbor went for the team. However, the team’s failure was hardly his fault. He played 33.4 minutes per game and had 14.8 points and 7.1 rebounds per game. He also battled a few nagging injuries. I firmly believe had the team around him been better, Nkamhoua would be remembered much more fondly.

7. Nimari Burnett (Alabama)

Burnett never quite lived up to his five-star recruiting profile, but that doesn’t make him a bad player by any means. He has been an excellent three-and-D defender at Michigan, and he will be one of the leaders of the team once again this season.

6. Mike Smith (Columbia)

The 2020 transfer portal haul of Mike Smith and Chaundee Brown was the first true taste of the portal for Michigan fans. Despite being undersized, Smith was lightning-quick in the backcourt. In his lone season at Michigan, he averaged nine points, 5.3 assists and 2.8 rebounds per game. While not the most talented player to ever transfer in, his impact was unparalleled, as he led Michigan to a Big Ten championship and an Elite Eight appearance.

5. Chaundee Brown (Wake Forest)

Like Smith, Brown may not have been the most talented transfer portal addition for the Wolverines, but his skillset was exactly what they needed. Brown averaged eight points, 3.1 rebounds and 0.6 assists per game off the bench. He was a wing who was not ball-dominant, which helped space the floor when the Wolverines desperately needed it.

4. Tre Donaldson (Auburn)

Admittedly, Donaldson was the player I had the toughest time placing on this list. He had an up and down season, but it ended emphatically on an up. He poured in 11.3 points, 4.1 assists and 3.5 rebounds per game last season, and was the catalyst to a Michigan offense that lacked playmaking at times. His game-winner against Maryland in the Big Ten Tournament will likely live in Michigan lore for some time.

3. Vlad Goldin (Florida Atlantic)

Goldin came to Michigan as a fairly polished big man. His back-to-the-basket game and touch around the basket were exquisite. At Michigan, he dominated throughout most of a grueling Big Ten schedule and helped the Wolverines make the Sweet Sixteen. He averaged 16.6 points, seven rebounds, 1.4 blocks and 1.1 assists per game.

2. Danny Wolf (Yale)

Goldin’s counterpart in Area 50-1 slots in just higher than him. In his one season in Ann Arbor, Wolf tallied 13.2 points, 9.7 rebounds, 3.6 assists and 1.4 blocks per game. His ball-handling ability at 7-foot was second to none in college basketball. He will likely be drafted as high as the late lottery in the upcoming NBA Draft.

1. Yaxel Lendeborg (UAB)

Lendeborg has to be No. 1 on this list, as he was the top rated player in the portal this offseason. Having fended off the NBA for his services, Michigan will likely rely heavily on his talent across the board. He averaged a double-double at UAB last year with 17.7 points and 11.4 rebounds per game. He is also the type of player who should have no trouble up-transferring due to his physical brand of basketball.



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2025 College World Series: Murray State baseball’s improbable journey to Omaha sets stage for wild finish

The 2025 College World Series field is set. Eight teams are on their way to Omaha, Nebraska to compete for the national championship, and the bracket includes a multitude of surprises after the regional and super regional rounds reshaped the sport’s power dynamics.  Murray State is the biggest shocker of them all as it defeated […]

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The 2025 College World Series field is set. Eight teams are on their way to Omaha, Nebraska to compete for the national championship, and the bracket includes a multitude of surprises after the regional and super regional rounds reshaped the sport’s power dynamics. 

Murray State is the biggest shocker of them all as it defeated Duke to punch its ticket to the CWS for the first time in program history, but the Racers — at +3500 to win the title per FanDuel Sportsbook — are not alone in generating storylines that will define the race to college baseball glory.

Winners of the last five national titles, the SEC boasts more CWS participants than any other conference. But the margin by which the sport’s premier league stands atop the rest is much slimmer than most would have anticipated heading into the tournament. With just two teams remaining, the SEC saw 11 of its record 13 postseason squads fall out of contention over the last two weekends. In turn, six conferences are represented in the bracket, and Oregon State stands alone as an independent.

Parity across conference lines is a step away from the trends that defined the last handful of tournaments when the SEC and ACC separated themselves from the pack. Still, the former features the perceived frontrunner as Arkansas embarks on a potential run to its first national title.

With the College World Series set to begin Friday, here are five key storylines that define the 2025 tournament.

Murray State’s Cinderella run continues

Murray State plays its home games at an 800-seat stadium that until 2014 did not even have grandstand seating. Coach Dan Skirka does the groundskeeping. Reagan Field did not even have a padded outfield wall until less than a decade ago. Yet here are the Racers, as few as five wins from a national championship. The program is the most improbable story in college baseball this postseason, and it is not particularly close.

Jonathan Hogart smashed a pair of home runs in the decisive game of the Durham Super Regional to spearhead the Racers’ 5-4 victory, which sent them to Omaha. He stands in a tie for first place in program history with 22 round-trippers on the year, and the outfielder was instrumental in the entirety of this miraculous tournament run with hits in every postseason game and at least two knocks in every contest but one. He has six homers in tournament play.

With that triumph over Duke, Murray State became just the fourth regional No. 4 seed to punch a ticket to the CWS since the tournament expanded in 1999. The Racers joined Oral Roberts (2023), Stony Brook (2012) and Fresno State (2008) in that rare company. Oral Roberts went 1-2 in Omaha, Stony Brook lost both of its contests and Fresno State stands alone as the only No. 4 seed to win the national championship.

Murray State trades in its 800-seat home stadium for the grand stage in Omaha at the College World Series.
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Six conferences represented, plus an independent

Last year’s CWS was the most consolidated across conference lines in NCAA Tournament history; the SEC and ACC were the lone representatives with four teams apiece. Just one season after those leagues tied the record for the most participants from a single conference, the 2025 field could not be much more different. The SEC still leads the way with its two squads (Arkansas and LSU), but six other conferences have a flag-bearer in Omaha and Oregon State made its way back as an independent.

If not for last offseason’s landscape-altering wave of realignment, though, the Pac-12 would be front and center. Arizona represents the Big 12, UCLA hails from the Big Ten and Oregon State, as mentioned, is the lone program to operate this year as an independent. Those perennial West Coast powers long dominated the Pac-12, but the conference did not sponsor baseball this season with just two members under its umbrella.

“There’s so many good coaches and good players on the West,” UCLA coach John Savage said after the Bruins swept the Los Angeles Super Regional. “We beat each other up. This is for the West.”

No repeat participants

For the first time since 1957, none of the eight teams in the CWS are returners from the previous year. It is not as though the participants are no-names, though. LSU and Oregon State are the definitions of blue-bloods as the only programs with three national titles this century, and each of Coastal Carolina, Arizona and UCLA climbed to the mountaintop since 2012.

What the fresh faces represent, though, is that college baseball still has a sizable upper class that goes well beyond the SEC and ACC, despite recent seasons indicating that those conferences are a cut above the rest. Other sports saw a flattening at the top as the transfer portal and NIL eras progressed, and this could be a sign that the same is underway in baseball.

Lone top-five seed Arkansas enters as betting favorite

Regionals and super regionals were unkind to national seeds, but Arkansas was immune to the upset epidemic that sent each of the other top five seeds packing. That the Razorbacks, the No. 3 team in the tournament, are one of just five national seeds remaining is a welcome development for a program that underperformed each of the last two years, failing in both instances to advance out of its home regional.

Dave Van Horn’s squad is the narrow favorite to hoist the trophy at the end of the tournament, and it holds +200 odds to win the national championship at FanDuel. LSU is not far behind at +230, but the Razorbacks and Tigers open CWS play against each other and only one can advance out of Bracket 2 to reach the championship series.

Oregon State (+650) and Coastal Carolina (+650) have equal odds to win the tournament. UCLA (+850) is the largest underdog of the five remaining national seeds. Arizona (+1400), Louisville (+1600) and Murray State round out the field as relative long shots.

Kevin Schnall defends Coastal Carolina’s College World Series return: ‘This is no Cinderella’

Cody Nagel

Kevin Schnall defends Coastal Carolina's College World Series return: 'This is no Cinderella'

Coastal Carolina rides 23-game winning streak

Coastal Carolina is a mid-major program, but do not get it twisted; the Chanticleers are not an underdog story. First-year coach Kevin Schnall has his program on the hottest streak in the nation with 23 consecutive wins. That is the longest streak any team has carried into the CWS since 1999. The Sun Belt powerhouse is back in Omaha for the first time since it won the national title in 2016.

“This is no Cinderella,” Schnall said after the Chanticleers swept Auburn in the super regional round. “I wanna make sure that’s known. This is no Cinderella. Coastal Carolina the past century, only eight teams have made the regionals more than us. During that same period we have the sixth-best win percentage and the ninth-most wins. This is not a Cinderella story. We’re one of the most premier, most successful college baseball programs in the entire country.”

The Chanticleers are the first and only team to 50 wins this season with their sparkling 53-11 record. The perfect run through the postseason thus far moved them into the No. 4 spot in the RPI rankings, and Arkansas is the only active team ahead of them.





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Corn for cowboy hat, former Husker Vickers joins Tarleton State Softball for 2026

Story Links STEPHENVILLE, Texas – Following a run to the WAC Tournament title game in the Texans’ first season of postseason eligibility, head coach Mark Cumpian announced the signing of Macie Vickers on Wednesday.   Vickers comes to Stephenville after a single season with the Nebraska Cornhuskers. She will look to fill […]

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STEPHENVILLE, Texas – Following a run to the WAC Tournament title game in the Texans’ first season of postseason eligibility, head coach Mark Cumpian announced the signing of Macie Vickers on Wednesday.
 
Vickers comes to Stephenville after a single season with the Nebraska Cornhuskers. She will look to fill a role that was previously held the past two seasons by Kalyn Hill, who recently wrapped up her playing career after transferring in from WAC foe Seattle U.
 
The Escalon, California, native, appeared in three games for the Huskers in 2025. In all three contests, Nebraska scored at least 15 runs with 20-1, 16-3 and 15-0 victories. She was perfect in the field as well.
 
Before she headed east to the cornfields, she spent her high school career at Escalon High School. During her time there she not only competed on the diamond but also put in work on the hardwood competing in basketball (four years) and volleyball (two years). Vickers was on varsity for all four years of her high school softball days and was a team captain for two seasons. With her efforts on the field, she was named an All-League Selection three times, was named Escalon Offensive Player of the Year twice and earned the Trans Valley League Offensive Player of the Year award her junior year. She was also selected for the 2023 PGF Futures All-American Game Watch List as well.
 
Each season the bat just kept getting hotter for Vickers as she hit .451 her freshman season and by her senior campaign, she hit north of .600. Across her four years, she hit over 20 doubles, five triples and hits 10 homers.
 
On the hardwood, she was the captain for the volleyball team and an All-League Selection. On the hoops side of things she was also named captain and was an All-District selection as she average over 14 points and six rebounds per game throughout her four-year career.
 
For the latest news on the Texans, follow Tarleton Softball on Facebook, Instagram and X @tarletonsoftball.
 





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$2.8B Deal Approved By Federal Judge To Ensure Current And Former Athletes Are Paid …

A federal judge approved a multi-billion-dollar legal settlement on Friday, June 6, permitting college athletes to receive compensation from their schools, ESPN reports. College athletes who completed their college education from 2016 to present day will receive damages from the NCAA as part of the $2.8 billion settlement, Judge Claudia Wilken ruled. Per the ruling, […]

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$2.8B Deal Approved By Federal Judge To Ensure Current And Former Athletes Are Paid ...

A federal judge approved a multi-billion-dollar legal settlement on Friday, June 6, permitting college athletes to receive compensation from their schools, ESPN reports.

College athletes who completed their college education from 2016 to present day will receive damages from the NCAA as part of the $2.8 billion settlement, Judge Claudia Wilken ruled.

Per the ruling, schools will now be able to start paying their athletes as early as July, according to the Associated Press.

The exact terms will involve schools sharing up to $20.5 million (a 22.5% cap) per year with current players.

The ruling follows a 2020 lawsuit by Arizona State swimmer Grant House against the NCAA and its five major conferences: the Pac-12 Conference, the Big Ten Conference, the Big 12 Conference, the Southeastern Conference, and the Atlantic Coast Conference. In total, there had been three separate antitrust lawsuits related to the restrictions in pay.

“It’s historic,” former college basketball star Sedona Prince, a co-lead plaintiff in one of the lawsuits, told ESPN. “It seemed like this crazy, outlandish idea at the time of what college athletics could and should be like. It was a difficult process at times … but it’s going to change millions of lives for the better.”

As AFROTECH™ previously reported, NCAA college athletes can benefit, including earning compensation, from their name, image, and likeness (NIL) after governance bodies across all three NCAA divisions ended NIL restrictions for current and incoming student-athletes in all sports in 2021. Now, following the recent order from the judge, athletes can be paid directly by athletic departments.

“In the weeks ahead, we will work to show Congress why the settlement is both a massive win for student-athletes and a road map to legislative reform,” NCAA President Charlie Baker penned in a letter.

Baker acknowledges that this significant change will be a challenging adjustment for everyone involved, especially the defendant conferences, as they navigate new rules and enforcement.

He added, “We have accomplished a lot over the last several months, from new health and wellness and academic requirements to a stronger financial footing. Together, we can use this new beginning to launch college sports into the future, too.”

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