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Members of the 1983 NC State men’s basketball team suing the NCAA :: WRALSportsFan.com

The NCAA wants to dismiss a case brought by some members of the 1983 NC State men’s basketball team, who are seeking payment from the NCAA for its continued use of highlights from the team’s title run. Show Transcript CRABTREE COUNTY PARK. WE SHALL SEE. TODAY. MEMBERS OF THE 1983 CARDIAC PACK. WE’RE BACK IN […]

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The NCAA wants to dismiss a case brought by some members of the 1983 NC State men’s basketball team, who are seeking payment from the NCAA for its continued use of highlights from the team’s title run.



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Women’s College World Series: NiJaree Canady, the million-dollar pitcher, flourishing after Texas Tech triumph

When NiJaree Canady enters the circle, it is often goodnight for the opposing lineup. Texas Tech’s star pitcher gave up just five hits during Monday’s 3-2 win over four-time defending national champion Oklahoma as the Red Raiders punched their ticket to the championship series of the Women’s College World Series with Texas. The Stanford transfer […]

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When NiJaree Canady enters the circle, it is often goodnight for the opposing lineup. Texas Tech’s star pitcher gave up just five hits during Monday’s 3-2 win over four-time defending national champion Oklahoma as the Red Raiders punched their ticket to the championship series of the Women’s College World Series with Texas.

The Stanford transfer who twice anchored Cardinal trips to Oklahoma City is the USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year for a reason, and continues to deliver for Texas Tech this season. Canady’s on a record-breaking NIL deal with Texas Tech’s NIL collective, The Matador Club, which she signed last summer for just over $1 million, according to ESPN.

She is college softball’s first member of the million club after the Red Raiders made her a priority in the transfer portal ahead of coach Gerry Glasco’s first season. Oklahoma and Texas, among others, immediately pursued Canady, but Texas Tech pushed out front with the financial help of boosters Tracy and John Sellers, a pair of former Red Raiders athletes.

“We look at it as they deserve it just as much (as male athletes),” Glasco said during an interview with ESPN after Canady’s official visit. “She worked so hard to be the No. 1 pitcher in the country. … I left that meeting and thought, this is who I would love to put a lot of effort into because of who she is.”

Canady and her family met with Stanford’s collective during her standout freshman season to seek a better NIL contract moving forward in her career, but the Cardinal balked at the request, according to The Athletic. And that is what kickstarted the process of looking elsewhere and eventually making herself available in the transfer portal after her sophomore campaign.

According to The Athletic, her NIL deal with the Red Raiders is 10 times more that what many considered the starting price in the negotiation process. 

Canady went 41-10 over her first two seasons at Stanford. This season, she has hit a stratospheric level of dominance. After Monday’s victory over the Sooners, Canady boosted her record to 30-5 with a 0.89 ERA. That includes a perfect record in the postseason for a team on a quest to win its first national championship. 

Texas Tech is the first program in WCWS history to reach the championship series in its debut trip to Oklahoma City since, coincidentally, the Sooners did so in 2000. And ironically, the Red Raiders snapped a 37-game losing streak to Oklahoma to get to this point.

“I feel like people thought I heard the number and just came to Texas Tech, which wasn’t the case at all,” Canady said. “If I didn’t feel like Coach Glasco was an amazing coach and could lead this program to be where we thought it could be, I wouldn’t have come.”





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Saquon Barkley Joins Forces with C4 Sport to Champion Peak Performance

Fueling Greatness with Precision and Power Fresh off another standout season, Saquon Barkley is entering 2025 with renewed focus—and a powerful new partnership to match. The NFL running back has officially teamed up with Nutrabolt’s C4® Sport, one of the most trusted names in pre-workout supplementation, to promote a shared mission: pushing boundaries in pursuit […]

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Saquon Barkley Joins Forces with C4 Sport to Champion Peak Performance

Fueling Greatness with Precision and Power

Fresh off another standout season, Saquon Barkley is entering 2025 with renewed focus—and a powerful new partnership to match. The NFL running back has officially teamed up with Nutrabolt’s C4® Sport, one of the most trusted names in pre-workout supplementation, to promote a shared mission: pushing boundaries in pursuit of peak performance.

This collaboration isn’t just a sponsorship—it’s a union of values. Barkley, widely celebrated for his explosive agility and rigorous attention to recovery, embodies the same grit, discipline, and detail that powers the C4 Sport brand. With a product lineup designed to enhance energy, endurance, and focus, and backed by the gold standard of NSF Certified for Sport® approval, C4 Sport is built for athletes who demand more from their supplements—and from themselves.

Elevating the Standard for Training and Game Day

The partnership arrives at a moment when Barkley’s star is burning brighter than ever. After a 2024 season that saw him dominate as one of the league’s top rushers, the pressure is no longer about rising to greatness—it’s about maintaining it. And for Barkley, that means prioritizing not just what happens on the field, but how he fuels his body off of it.

Known for treating his body with near-religious dedication, Barkley doesn’t cut corners when it comes to what he consumes. He approaches fitness with intention—meticulously vetting every supplement and ingredient. That diligence led him to C4 Sport, a product that not only enhances performance but carries the NSF Certified for Sport® badge—ensuring it’s tested for quality, safety, and banned substances.

This certification has become an industry benchmark, especially for elite athletes who need to trust what they put in their bodies without compromise. For Barkley, it was a dealmaker.

Built for Athletes Who Demand More

C4 Sport isn’t a one-size-fits-all supplement. It’s specifically engineered to meet the needs of competitive athletes, from professionals like Barkley to everyday gym warriors. With a formula packed with clinically studied ingredients, including beta-alanine for muscular endurance, caffeine for clean energy, and essential electrolytes to aid hydration, the product is a complete pre-workout solution.

More importantly, it offers performance without the crash. Athletes aren’t looking for quick bursts of hype—they need fuel that sustains energy and supports sharp focus throughout high-intensity training. That’s where C4 Sport delivers: steady, reliable output that’s designed to work with the body, not against it.

Barkley’s endorsement of the product isn’t just lip service. He’s used C4 for years—long before it became a headline-making partnership. Whether he’s deep into his offseason training program or gearing up for game day, C4 Sport is part of his routine.

A Deeper Look Into the Collaboration

With this new alignment, fans can expect more than just a few co-branded posts. Barkley and C4 are launching an immersive campaign that gives followers access to exclusive content—from behind-the-scenes training footage to curated giveaways and product spotlights.

This partnership offers a unique look into how a top-tier athlete prepares mentally and physically. It’s not about glamorizing the grind—it’s about showing the work. Through Barkley’s own words and workouts, C4 Sport becomes more than a product on a shelf; it becomes part of a larger conversation about preparation, discipline, and self-investment.

From gym sessions to sideline moments, the partnership is structured to inspire and educate athletes at all levels. Whether you’re pushing for a personal best or aiming for a starting position, the message is consistent: greatness starts with how you train, and what you choose to fuel that journey matters.

Shared Values, Sharpened Focus

For Nutrabolt, bringing Barkley into the fold was a natural evolution of the C4 Sport ethos. According to Robert Zajac, the brand’s Chief Marketing Officer, Barkley’s work ethic mirrors the exact qualities C4 aims to support.

“At Nutrabolt, we’re committed to delivering high-performance supplements that elevate athletic potential. Partnering with Saquon is an extension of that mission—he exemplifies everything we value: drive, consistency, and a relentless pursuit of improvement,” Zajac noted.

By aligning with an athlete of Barkley’s caliber, the brand signals a continued commitment to quality and transparency. It also reinforces its place as a go-to source for serious athletes looking for safe, effective, and NSF-certified products that don’t sacrifice taste or performance.

More Than a Brand Deal—A Performance Blueprint

The collaboration between Barkley and C4 Sport is more than just a branding moment—it’s a blueprint for performance. It encourages athletes to consider not only how they train, but how they recover, fuel, and maintain focus. It’s about elevating routines and building a foundation that supports long-term progress—not just highlight-reel moments.

As Barkley gears up for another intense season, his partnership with C4 will give fans a front-row seat to the dedication behind the headlines. It’s a rare chance to see how elite-level performance is built, rep by rep, with the right mindset—and the right supplementation.

For more on C4 Sport’s full product lineup or to explore Saquon Barkley’s training essentials, visit cellucor.com. Whether you’re chasing down goals on the field or in the gym, this partnership is a reminder that with the right fuel and mindset, limits are just the starting line.

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2025 College Football Power Index

Open Extended Reactions ESPN has released its 2025 Football Power Index (FPI) ratings and projections, and our college football reporters are here to break them down. Editor’s Picks 2 Related The ratings, for the uninitiated, include forecasts for every team’s record, its chances of winning a conference title and of course, its probability to make […]

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2025 College Football Power Index

ESPN has released its 2025 Football Power Index (FPI) ratings and projections, and our college football reporters are here to break them down.

The ratings, for the uninitiated, include forecasts for every team’s record, its chances of winning a conference title and of course, its probability to make the expanded 12-team playoff and win the national championship.

The FPI is a power rating that tracks each team’s strength relative to an average FBS squad. Teams are rated on offense, defense and special teams, with the values representing points per game.

You can read Neil Paine’s takeaways here and get our staff’s analysis below.

Which team is FPI undervaluing?

Paolo Uggetti: Even though Kenny Dillingham said at Big 12 spring meetings recently that being considered one of the conference’s favorites after being picked to finish last in 2024 is “less fun,” I still think FPI is slightly undervaluing the Sun Devils at No. 24. Sure, they lost star running back Cam Skattebo to the NFL draft, but they also return a quarterback in Sam Leavitt (2,885 yards and 24 touchdowns last year) who could be a Heisman contender, wide receiver Jordyn Tyson (1,101 yards and 10 touchdowns) and defensive back Xavion Alford, among several other starters and stalwarts of last year’s Cinderella season. Dillingham won’t flinch at now being considered a favorite to win the conference and I imagine he’ll have ASU with plenty of fire and motivation come kickoff. It would not shock me to see them make another playoff run.

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Kenny Dillingham: ASU facing a different type of adversity this year

Arizona State head coach Kenny Dillingham explains the differences his team is facing this season after coming off a Big 12 title last season.

Mark Schlabach: I think you can argue that Clemson is one of the two best teams in the FBS entering the season (along with Penn State), and it’s certainly one of the best 10, so it’s surprising to see them in at No. 11. In our colleague Jordan Reid’s initial 2026 NFL mock draft, he had four Tigers going in the first round, including quarterback Cade Klubnik at No. 1. Three seasons ago, Clemson fans wondered whether Klubnik was the right guy for the job, now he’s considered one of the most polished passers in the sport, after throwing for 3,639 yards with 36 touchdowns and six interceptions last season. The Tigers have the best defensive line in the FBS, and Reid had tackle Peter Woods and edge rusher T.J. Parker going in the top 10, as well. The Tigers open the season against LSU at home and play at South Carolina in the finale, but I can’t see many ACC teams beating them.

Bill Connelly: There are quite a few non-SEC teams we could choose from here, but I’m going to go with No. 39 Iowa. The Hawkeyes have more to replace on defense than usual, but a) I can’t even pretend like they’ll have anything other than a top-10 or top-15 defense until proven otherwise, and b) the offense improved significantly last year (albeit from horrific to merely mediocre) and might have made a lovely QB upgrade by bringing in South Dakota State’s Mark Gronowski. Losing running back Kaleb Johnson hurts, but this very much feels like a top-25-level team to me, one I trust quite a bit more than quite a few of the teams directly ahead of the Hawkeyes in FPI.

Jake Trotter: Indiana did graduate quarterback Kurtis Rourke, who had a fabulous one season for the Hoosiers while propelling them to the playoff and the first 10-win season in school history. Indiana, however, returns several key players from last year’s squad, including All-Big Ten receiver Elijah Sarratt, defensive end Mikail Kamara, linebacker Aiden Fisher and cornerback D’Angelo Ponds. The Hoosiers also added Cal transfer quarterback Fernando Mendoza, who brought plenty of experience (19 career starts) with him to Bloomington. Curt Cignetti has already proved he can coach. And with no Ohio State or Michigan on the schedule, it wouldn’t be completely stunning if Indiana knocks on the door of playoff contention once again.


Which team is FPI overvaluing?

Trotter: So we’re doing this again, huh? Every preseason, Texas A&M gets top-10 hype. Every season, the Aggies fail to deliver on it. Texas A&M has reached double-digit wins just once this century (the Johnny Football year in 2012). And yet, FPI is giving them the benefit of doubt again as the No. 8-ranked team. Mike Elko is a terrific coach and the Aggies, as always, have talent, including intriguing dual-threat sophomore quarterback Marcel Reed. But the Aggies ranked 51st last year in offensive EPA and 47th in defensive EPA. That hardly screams top 10 team. What’s really there to suggest the Aggies will be any different than what they’ve been?

Connelly: We can’t say for sure that FPI is overvaluing Texas because if Arch Manning lives up to his hype, the Longhorns really might be the best team in the country. However, if he’s merely very good instead of great, then holes elsewhere might become problematic. This is, after all, a team that lost four offensive line starters, its top four defensive linemen and two of the best DBs in the country in Jahdae Barron and Andrew Mukuba. Steve Sarkisian has obviously recruited well, the replacements for those lost linemen could be excellent, and Texas will be very good regardless. But they’re only No. 1 if Arch is an All-American. No pressure.

Manning threw for 939 yards with nine touchdowns in the 2024 season. Sam Hodde/Getty ImagesUggetti: I’m having a hard time with Miami all the way up at No. 9. I can see the case for it: They have a solid core of players returning throughout the roster and head coach Mario Cristobal and his staff were transfer portal merchants this offseason, bringing in several offensive weapons such as wideouts CJ Daniels (LSU), Keelan Marion (BYU) and Tony Johnson (Cincinnati) as well as some much needed help in the secondary via cornerback Xavier Lucas (Wisconsin) and safety Zechariah Poyser (Jacksonville State). Of course, the crux of the hype surrounding the Hurricanes hinges on their biggest portal addition, quarterback Carson Beck. After losing Cameron Ward to the draft, Cristobal & Co. are banking on Beck (who is coming off surgery for a torn UCL in his right elbow) to be the guy who was supposed to lead Georgia to a national title. Count me among the skeptics.

Schlabach: Given what transpired at Tennessee in the spring, I’m not sure the Volunteers are a top-25 team heading into the season, let alone one that should be ranked No. 10. I didn’t have the Volunteers ranked in my latest Way-Too-Early Top 25. I could see the Vols going one of two ways after quarterback Nico Iamaleava up and left for UCLA following an NIL dispute: The Vols are going to be better off with quarterback Joey Aguilar and his teammates will rally around him, or Augilar’s leap from Appalachian State to the SEC is too high. The Vols were already facing an uphill climb on offense, in my opinion, after SEC leading rusher Dylan Sampson departed, along with three of the team’s top receivers.


Which power conference team outside the FPI top 25 can make a run?

Trotter: Texas Tech landed the nation’s top transfer portal class, beefing up the trenches on both sides of the ball to a team that went 8-5 last season. With 24 career starts behind him, quarterback Behren Morton should be even better after throwing for 3,335 yards and 27 touchdowns last year. If the portal additions playing up front defensively, combined with the arrival of new defensive coordinator Shiel Wood, can bolster a unit that ranked just 108th in EPA last year, the Red Raiders could threaten for a conference title and playoff berth in what figures to be another wide-open Big 12.

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Connelly: I would say that half the Big 12 is capable of playing at a top-15 or top-20 level and making a conference title (and, therefore, CFP) run, but I’m particularly intrigued by the duo of No. 32 TCU and No. 33 Baylor. They both won six of their last seven to end the season, and they both return stellar quarterbacks in Josh Hoover (TCU) and Sawyer Robertson (Baylor). I feel like I trust TCU’s returning personnel more, but Baylor’s Dave Aranda was extremely active in the transfer portal, too. The Revivalry — hey, it’s a better name than Bluebonnet Battle — is on October 18, and the winner will probably head into November as a serious Big 12 contender.

Uggetti: Washington (No. 27) had a disappointing 6-7 season in its first year in the Big 12 under new coach Jedd Fisch. The Huskies finished ninth in the conference and seem to have quietly stumbled into the shadow of their more successful Pacific Northwest neighbor, Oregon. But Fisch, like he showed at Arizona, can build a successful team over time. Washington brought in a top-25 recruiting class this past year and added some much-needed defensive reinforcements in the portal. Snagging four-star wide receiver Johntay Cook II from Texas will be a boon for expected starting quarterback Demond Williams Jr. who, after showing some flashes last season, could be primed for a breakout.


Which team’s odd ranking will be proven correct by the end of the season?

Schlabach: There’s a smorgasbord of “odd” rankings to select from. I think you can argue that No. 8 Texas A&M, No. 14 Auburn, No. 16 Oklahoma and No. 19 USC are probably ranked too high, and No. 12 LSU, No. 29 BYU, No. 31 Indiana and No. 35 Texas Tech are too low. LSU might have the SEC’s best quarterback in Garrett Nussmeier, and coach Brian Kelly struck gold in the transfer portal, landing defensive ends Patrick Payton (Florida State) and Jack Pyburn (Florida), receivers Nic Anderson (Oklahoma) and Barion Brown (Kentucky), offensive linemen Braelin Moore (Virginia Tech) and Josh Thompson (Northwestern) and cornerback Mansoor Delane (Virginia Tech). But LSU’s schedule is difficult, with road games at Clemson, Ole Miss, Alabama and Oklahoma, and I’m not sure they’ll be better than 9-3, which would put them right about No. 12.

Uggetti: I’ll take one of the teams Mark mentioned and focus on USC. At first glance, I was also surprised that FPI has them all the way up to No. 19 given the Trojans are coming off a disappointing 7-6 debut season in the Big 10. But the Trojans have made several strides this offseason, not just as a program by hiring general manager Chad Bowden from USC, but also as a team to put themselves in position to surprise in 2025. The defense continues to use the portal to add key talent such as defensive tackles Jamaal Jarrett (Georgia) and Keeshawn Silver (Kentucky). The most exciting player on the team, however, may be incoming freshman defensive lineman Jahkeem Stewart, who is likely to make an impact right away. A lot of the Trojans’ hopes this season are riding on quarterback Jayden Maiava and how he fares in his first full season as a starter. He finished with 1,201 yards and 11 touchdowns last season and a second year in Lincoln Riley’s offense should serve him well. USC’s schedule starts off slow, but the true test of the Trojans’ potential will be on the back end when they face a stretch of Illinois, Michigan and Notre Dame before finishing the season with Oregon, Iowa and UCLA.

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Women's College World Series

Getty Images When NiJaree Canady enters the circle, it is often goodnight for the opposing lineup. Texas Tech’s star pitcher gave up just five hits during Monday’s 3-2 win over four-time defending national champion Oklahoma as the Red Raiders punched their ticket to the championship series of the Women’s College World Series with Texas. The […]

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Women's College World Series

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When NiJaree Canady enters the circle, it is often goodnight for the opposing lineup. Texas Tech’s star pitcher gave up just five hits during Monday’s 3-2 win over four-time defending national champion Oklahoma as the Red Raiders punched their ticket to the championship series of the Women’s College World Series with Texas.

The Stanford transfer who twice anchored Cardinal trips to Oklahoma City is the USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year for a reason, and continues to deliver for Texas Tech this season. Canady’s on a record-breaking NIL deal with Texas Tech’s NIL collective, The Matador Club, which she signed last summer for just over $1 million, according to ESPN.

She is college softball’s first member of the million club after the Red Raiders made her a priority in the transfer portal ahead of coach Gerry Glasco’s first season. Oklahoma and Texas, among others, immediately pursued Canady, but Texas Tech pushed out front with the financial help of boosters Tracy and John Sellers, a pair of former Red Raiders athletes.

“We look at it as they deserve it just as much (as male athletes),” Glasco said during an interview with ESPN after Canady’s official visit. “She worked so hard to be the No. 1 pitcher in the country. … I left that meeting and thought, this is who I would love to put a lot of effort into because of who she is.”

Canady and her family met with Stanford’s collective during her standout freshman season to seek a better NIL contract moving forward in her career, but the Cardinal balked at the request, according to The Athletic. And that is what kickstarted the process of looking elsewhere and eventually making herself available in the transfer portal after her sophomore campaign.

According to The Athletic, her NIL deal with the Red Raiders is 10 times more that what many considered the starting price in the negotiation process. 

Canady went 41-10 over her first two seasons at Stanford. This season, she has hit a stratospheric level of dominance. After Monday’s victory over the Sooners, Canady boosted her record to 30-5 with a 0.89 ERA. That includes a perfect record in the postseason for a team on a quest to win its first national championship. 

Texas Tech is the first program in WCWS history to reach the championship series in its debut trip to Oklahoma City since, coincidentally, the Sooners did so in 2000. And ironically, the Red Raiders snapped a 37-game losing streak to Oklahoma to get to this point.

“I feel like people thought I heard the number and just came to Texas Tech, which wasn’t the case at all,” Canady said. “If I didn’t feel like Coach Glasco was an amazing coach and could lead this program to be where we thought it could be, I wouldn’t have come.”

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Naukot, Tait and Baseball Team Named Student-Athletes of the Week

Story Links MORGANTOWN, W.Va. – After qualifying for the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships and the NCAA Super Regionals, freshman Joy Naukot, graduate student Sarah Tait and the baseball team have been named the WVU Student-Athletes of the Week, presented by University Apartments, respectively.   The pair of track […]

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MORGANTOWN, W.Va. – After qualifying for the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships and the NCAA Super Regionals, freshman Joy Naukot, graduate student Sarah Tait and the baseball team have been named the WVU Student-Athletes of the Week, presented by University Apartments, respectively.
 
The pair of track and field athletes punched their tickets to the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships on May 29 and 31, at the NCAA East First Rounds in Jacksonville, Florida.
 
Naukot qualified for the national championship by finishing eighth in the women’s 10,000 meters with a time of 32:51.33. Tait went on to earn her bid to Eugene after winning the third heat of the 3,000-meter steeplechase in 9:42.14, finishing third overall.  
 
The Mountaineers went 3-0 as they swept through the Clemson Regional. WVU defeated Kentucky, 4-3, in game one before defeating host and No. 11-overall seed Clemson, 9-6, to advance to the regional final. In the final, the Mountaineers and Wildcats met once again with West Virginia coming out on top, 13-12.

Sophomore Armani Guzman was named the Regional MVP after going 8-for-12 with six RBI in three games, including the game-winning hit in the eighth inning against Kentucky on Sunday.

It is the second consecutive season the Mountaineers have won a regional after taking the Tucson Regional title in 2024. Next up is the Super Regional round with the Mountaineers either heading to No. 6 LSU or playing at home against Little Rock.

This Week in Baseball: West Virginia will play in its second straight Super Regional this weekend … the opponent, location, and schedule is to be determined … the Mountaineers will either play at No. 6 LSU or at home against Little Rock … the Tigers and Trojans play in a winner-take-all game seven in Baton Rouge, Monday night at 9 p.m.

 

Last Week in Baseball: The Mountaineers went 3-0, winning the NCAA Clemson Regional … the Mountaineers defeated Kentucky, 4-3, in the opener … sophomore Armani Guzman hit a walk-off sacrifice fly in the ninth … redshirt senior Griffin Kirn threw 7.1 innings with seven strikeouts while allowing three runs … in game two against Clemson, the Mountaineers had to rally again, winning 9-6 … senior Brodie Kresser had four hits … Guzman tied the game in the eighth with an RBI double before WVU scored four in the ninth to take the lead, getting the game-winning hit from junior Sam White … in the regional final, the Mountaineers had two six-run innings, including the eighth to win 13-12 … Guzman had four hits, including the game-winner in the eighth, and three RBI … junior Ben Lumsden drove in four runs while freshman Gavin Kelly drove in three … junior Logan Sauve hit a home run and had two RBI.

Notes: The Mountaineers advance to the NCAA Super Regionals for the second time in program history and second consecutive season … Guzman was named the Clemson Regional MVP after going 8-for-12 with six RBI in three games … Sauve, Kresser, and Kirn joined Guzman on the Region All-Tournament Team … the Mountaineers rallied in all three victories, scoring the winning run in the ninth inning in the first two games and the eighth inning on Sunday … Sauve has homered in three straight regionals … WVU extended its program record for wins to 44 with the three victories this weekend … the Mountaineers are looking to make their first trip to the College World Series in program history with two wins next weekend.

 

This week in Track and Field: West Virginia will have the week off before sending freshman Joy Naukot and graduate student Sarah Tait to compete in the women’s 10,000 meters and 3,000-meter steeplechase at the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships on June 11-14, respectively.

 

Last week in Track and Field: The Mountaineers had two athletes qualify for the national championship at the NCAA East First Rounds on May 28-31 in Jacksonville, Florida … Naukot punched her ticket to Eugene, Oregon on May 29, finishing eighth in the 10,000 meters with a time of 32:51.33 … Tait cliched her bid to the national championship by winning the third heat of the steeplechase in 9:42.14, finishing third overall.

 

Notes: Naukot ranks No. 8 nationally in the 10,000 meters, after posting a career best time of 32:21.84 at the Raleigh Relays on March 27 … Tait checks in at No. 7 nationally in the steeplechase after notching a career best of 9:37.62 on April 16 at the Bryan Clay Invitational.



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An NIL framework could be on the way. What does it mean for UF?

The NCAA has been searching for a framework to regulate name, image and likeness, or NIL, since the policy was established in June 2021. Four summers later, a possible foundation is near, but no change will be without implications, especially for top athletic programs like the University of Florida.  These changes have loomed for almost […]

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An NIL framework could be on the way. What does it mean for UF?

The NCAA has been searching for a framework to regulate name, image and likeness, or NIL, since the policy was established in June 2021. Four summers later, a possible foundation is near, but no change will be without implications, especially for top athletic programs like the University of Florida. 

These changes have loomed for almost a year. President Donald Trump publicly considered an executive order May 2 to examine the state of NIL payments. Schools and athletes must heavily consider how these developments will impact their programs.

The prominent NIL discussion surrounds the House settlement. Lawsuits by current and former college athletes are pursuing a settlement of nearly $2.8 billion that will attempt to establish a future framework for NIL agreements. 

Philip Nickerson, a Troutman Pepper Locke law firm associate who represents universities and collectives in NIL matters, said the settlement contains four major parts: allowing schools to pay athletes themselves for use of their NIL with an annual budget of $20.5 million, the potential for roster caps, NIL compliance and enforcement oversight, and backpay for former and current athletes who were unable to profit from their NIL. 

In his personal interpretation, this could mean many of UF’s resources responsible for its success could become less prominent, Nickerson said.

“It puts a limit on how much they can spend, which means that smaller schools that maybe don’t have the same athletic budget or donor base have a chance to compete for the prized recruits and remain competitive,” Nickerson said. “I think it’s going to level the playing field across all college sports.” 

UF would be forced to rely on its coaches and recruiting staff even more to out-recruit other schools for star high school athletes and in the transfer portal. 

Christopher Batts, an attorney at ShuffieldLowman, represents students and institutions navigating NIL deals. 

“I think the real impact is going to be on the school, and then that’s going to trickle down to the athletes,” Batts said. “Trying to divide up $20.5 million amongst a bunch of really good athletic programs is going to be way more difficult than for schools that are known just for basketball or just for football.” 

Title IX compliance will complicate the issue, he said, but it will also prevent schools from putting all of the allotted $20.5 million into their higher-revenue sports like football and men’s basketball.

Even with these changes, Batts said there’s likely more to come. 

“I think it opens just as many new issues as it resolves,” he said. “It doesn’t address Title IX. It doesn’t introduce collective bargaining.” 

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UF Director of NIL Strategy Ben Chase said Florida is more than ready to handle whatever changes head its way.

“Our goal here at Florida is to make sure that we give our athletes the opportunity to compete at a high level across all the sports we have,” Chase said. “There’s a lot of schools out there that are cutting sports, including at the Power Four level, and we don’t plan on doing that.” 

He doesn’t foresee the changes affecting investments from donors and partners who have been a huge part of the success of Gator sports, he said. Instead, Chase sees benefits in the new settlement because it allows the UF Athletic Department to share the revenue with its athletes. 

Chase said he’s excited about the opportunities UF’s athletes will have going forward, including more NIL deals. 

“I think that where we are headed is true corporate NIL partnerships that are with athletes that may have never gotten those deals before,” he said.  

A decision is expected to be made on the settlement in the next few months if executive action isn’t taken sooner. 

Contact Ava DiCecca at adicecca@alligator.org. Follow her on X @avadicecca24.

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