NIL
Peoria native finds new NCAA basketball home out west
Adam Miller has found his new and final college basketball home. The Peoria native announced on social media he’ll use his final year of eligibility at Gonzaga. Miller, a 6-foot-3 guard, played one season at Illinois, another at LSU and the last two seasons at Arizona State. “Zags,” he captioned the post, using the heart […]


Adam Miller has found his new and final college basketball home.
The Peoria native announced on social media he’ll use his final year of eligibility at Gonzaga. Miller, a 6-foot-3 guard, played one season at Illinois, another at LSU and the last two seasons at Arizona State.
“Zags,” he captioned the post, using the heart hands emoji. “One more run”
The former Manual basketball player has one season of eligibility remaining because his freshman season with the Fighting Illini was affected by the COVID pandemic.
During this past season for ASU, Miller, 23, averaged 9.8 points, 2.3 rebounds and 1.9 assists for the Sun Devils, who finished 13-20 and lost in the opening round of the inaugural College Basketball Crown tournament. He did shoot 42.9% (57-for-133) from behind the arc.
This was Miller’s fourth time entering his name into the NCAA transfer portal. He removed his named and returned to LSU in 2022.
NIL
New MSU AD J Batt says he’s leading a top-10 department in college sports
EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) — J Batt said Michigan State has a top-10 athletic department in the country. The school’s next athletic director made it clear that the football program must lead the way to make his statement ring true. The Spartans have been shaky in recent years in the sport that pays the bills […]

EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) — J Batt said Michigan State has a top-10 athletic department in the country.
The school’s next athletic director made it clear that the football program must lead the way to make his statement ring true.
The Spartans have been shaky in recent years in the sport that pays the bills in college athletics, losing seven games last year in coach Jonathan Smith’s debut season.
“It comes down to resources and across the board, we will provide him and his staff with resources,” Batt said Wednesday when he was formally introduced.
Batt left Georgia Tech, where he was its athletic director since the fall of 2022, to take on the challenge of raising money and turning around a football program in the highly competitive Big Ten.
The university’s Board of Trustees, which approved the selection, is scheduled to vote on Batt’s hiring on June 13 and his first day on the job is June 16. Batt replaces Alan Haller, whose last day was May 11.
Batt helped Georgia Tech bounce back in football.
He hired coach Brent Key, who led the program to consecutive bowl games for the first time in a decade and earned a spot in The Associated Press Top 25 for the first time in nine years.
In Batt’s first season at Georgia Tech, 14 of 17 teams were in a postseason tournament.
Before leading Georgia Tech’s athletic department, he was executive deputy athletic director at Alabama and served as chief operating officer and chief revenue officer in the athletic department.
Basketball Hall of Fame coach Tom Izzo reached out to his friend, former Alabama and Michigan State coach Nick Saban, as part of the school’s search.
“Nick had great comments about him,” Izzo said.
Batt recalled Saban speaking so fondly about Michigan State.
“He’s always been so positive about this place,” Batt said.
Batt also worked in athletics at East Carolina, Maryland, James Madison, William & Mary and North Carolina, where he played on the 2011 national championship soccer team.
Batt is regarded as a strong fundraiser, an asset for any athletic department in this era of college athletics.
At Michigan State, his top priorities will be to raise money and help the football program win.
Universities will be allowed to share up to $20.5 million in revenue with athletes next year. Direct payments will be in addition to third-party name, image and likeness deals facilitated by school-affiliated collectives.
“We’re going to be extremely successful and competitive in that space,” Batt said.
NIL
NIL package for No. 1 TE Mark Bowman explains why he chose USC over Georgia
Just last week, Georgia football missed on the No. 1 tight end in the country. That player is Mark Bowman, and he made his commitment to USC official over the Bulldogs and many other elite programs. This news shocked the college football world because many believed Georgia was the team to beat in his recruitment. […]

Just last week, Georgia football missed on the No. 1 tight end in the country. That player is Mark Bowman, and he made his commitment to USC official over the Bulldogs and many other elite programs.
This news shocked the college football world because many believed Georgia was the team to beat in his recruitment. Experts also didn’t even think USC was in second place in Bowman’s recruitment either. But experts sometimes get it wrong, and that appears to be the case here.
So what led Bowman to spurn Georgia and pick USC? Sure Bowman is from California, so staying home to play for a program like the Trojans is pretty enticing. But On3’s Scott Schrader detailed the large NIL package USC offered Bowman that likely played a huge role in his decision as well.
“We are told the NIL opportunity could provide Bowman an opportunity to earn $8-10 million in a three-year deal at USC.”
Mark Bowman choosing USC over Georgia makes a lot more sense now
The NIL news surrounding Bowman’s recruitment to USC didn’t stop there as later in this video it was reported that Bowman will receive his first NIL payment at the end of June before receiving another payment if he signs with USC on signing day. And it is rumored that these two payments total more than the average college football player makes during their four-year career.
This is an amount of money that Kirby Smart would never offer to any recruit in the country, especially at a position like tight end. Smart has explained in great detail how he believes players out of high school shouldn’t make more money than the veteran guys on the team, so Georgia’s offer to Bowman likely was nowhere near this amount.
This loss for Georgia at the end of the day isn’t so bad because they do have four-star tight end Lincoln Keyes already in their class. They also appear to be the leader for five-star tight end Kaiden Prothro as well, so if Georgia can finish this cycle with those two tight ends, then no one will remember missing on Bowman.
NIL
Texas Tech’s historic win, path to finals
We gather here today to say goodbye to the Oklahoma softball dynasty, and hello to the NIL era. Because if Texas Tech just proved anything, it’s that you can buy a championship. Last summer, the school spent a million dollars and change to lure the best player in softball to Lubbock, Texas, in hopes of […]

We gather here today to say goodbye to the Oklahoma softball dynasty, and hello to the NIL era.
Because if Texas Tech just proved anything, it’s that you can buy a championship. Last summer, the school spent a million dollars and change to lure the best player in softball to Lubbock, Texas, in hopes of making it to its first-ever Women’s College World Series.
Naturally, NiJaree Canady upped the ante.
The junior transfer from Stanford headlined a 3-2 defeat of No. 2 Oklahoma in the Women’s College World Series semifinal on Monday, ending Oklahoma’s pursuit of a fifth straight national championship. Instead, the Red Raiders will attempt to win their first, starting with Game 1 of the championship series against Texas on Wednesday at 8 p.m. ET. Game 2 follows Thursday at 8 p.m. ET, and Game 3, if necessary, is slotted for Friday at 8 p.m. ET.
GO FURTHER
Texas Tech topples ‘historic, legendary’ Oklahoma dynasty to reach WCWS finals
NIL
Julian Lewis discusses Colorado QB battle, NIL and freshman transition
Julian Lewis has been doing everything the right way since he committed to CU last November. He hasn’t complained about Deion Sanders and the Buffs bringing in veteran quarterback Kaidon Salter from the transfer portal or about practice reps during spring practice. The 18-year-old signal caller has put his head down and gotten to work. […]

Julian Lewis has been doing everything the right way since he committed to CU last November.
He hasn’t complained about Deion Sanders and the Buffs bringing in veteran quarterback Kaidon Salter from the transfer portal or about practice reps during spring practice. The 18-year-old signal caller has put his head down and gotten to work.
Lewis has every chance to be the Buffaloes’ starting quarterback when the season opens on Aug. 29 against Georgia Tech, but until then, he has been in Boulder getting his work in every day.
Recently, the Colorado star freshman conducted an email interview with USA TODAY Sports, discussing his adjustment to living in Boulder and college, while also delving into his NIL endeavors.
Here is everything Julian Lewis said in his latest interview, courtesy of USA TODAY Sports and Brent Schrotenboer, broken down by topic:
On the Colorado quarterback battle
“Coach Prime runs this like an NFL team,” Lewis said. “Plus, every program in college football is always going to try and get better and have depth at every position. You can’t even prepare for the season without enough QBs on the roster.”
“CU is about development and competition,” Lewis said. “The only thing I was looking for as a recruit was to be coached by great coaches and have an opportunity to compete as a freshman. I’ve been competing for QB jobs since I was 7. I joined a team at 10 that already had a QB. I competed every day against the guy who was there, and we ended up winning the Battle Youth National Championship that season, and I threw 70 touchdown passes.”
On a possible quarterback rotation
“Coach Prime and Coach (Pat) Shurmur are going to put me in the best position to develop and our team in the best position to win. I have total faith in that. And I’ve got a lot of work to do in a little bit of time, so I’m ready when my coaches say I’m ready.”
On adjusting to the physicality of college football
“I’ve gained 15lbs since January,” Lewis wrote to USA TODAY Sports. “I’ll probably put on whatever I can add before we get into pads, and that will be what it is for this season.”
On NIL as a high-profile recruit
“I’m blessed to be a part of this era in college and high school sports,” Lewis replied. “There are thousands of great athletes who came before us who didn’t have the opportunities today. NIL has nothing to do with my college career; football and NIL are two very separate things. Football is my priority. I have a responsibility to myself, my teammates, and my university to become the best player that I can be. NIL is going well, I’m thankful for the opportunities that I have. My dad and my team have done a really good job creating opportunities for me.”
On balancing football with NIL
“No it wasn’t,” Lewis said when asked whether NIL was part of his decision to attend Colorado. “It really came down to where I wanted to live and the opportunity to follow Shedeur who everyone knew was leaving for the NFL.”
“That’s [NIL] the last thing I’m worried about,” Lewis said on if money would make a difference if he stayed at Colorado. “I’m a Buff.”
NIL
In the debate for the College Football Playoff’s future, the tail is wagging the dog
We finally got an answer as to how and why the Big Ten came up with its cockamamie “4+4+2+2+1” proposal for the upcoming College Football Playoff format, to begin with the 2026 season. As reported by The Athletic‘s Scott Dochterman, the Big Ten has developed a healthy distrust that the selection committee will properly evaluate […]

We finally got an answer as to how and why the Big Ten came up with its cockamamie “4+4+2+2+1” proposal for the upcoming College Football Playoff format, to begin with the 2026 season. As reported by The Athletic‘s Scott Dochterman, the Big Ten has developed a healthy distrust that the selection committee will properly evaluate strength of schedules and instead get starry-eyed at the prospect of putting as many SEC teams in a 14- or 16-team field as the bracket will hold. This fear is not unfounded.
In 2017, the committee put in an 11-1 Alabama team that didn’t even win the SEC West over an 11-2 Big Ten champion Ohio State with three wins better than Alabama’s best regular-season victory. (One of Ohio State’s losses that season was at home to eventual Big 12 champion Oklahoma, the type of game all involved want to protect.) In 2018, 9-3 LSU and 9-3 Florida were selected for New Year’s Six bowls over 9-3 Penn State, despite Penn State playing tougher non-conference games and owning more defensible losses than the Tigers and Gators. In 2024 and beyond, those aren’t bowl trips up for grabs, they’re playoff bids.
The Big Ten’s data shows it would actually have gotten more teams in over the past four seasons with a 5+11 (auto-bids for only the five highest-ranked conference champions, at-larges for everyone else) model than the 4+ model, and yet that league prefers the objectivity of four guaranteed bids because, in its opinion, the Big Ten does not reap the rewards it should for playing nine conference games to the SEC and ACC’s eight.
And yet, the SEC is making the exact same complaint about the selection committee. The conference closed its annual spring meetings by distributing a PowerPoint deck that argued, in short, its eight games were more difficult than the Big Ten’s nine and it was the SEC who has been victimized by the committee.
The SEC has shared this packet on its football analytics to consider as College Football Playoff format dominates conversations. (Thread below) pic.twitter.com/UBkEjcvyVh
— Brandon Marcello (@bmarcello) May 29, 2025
Greg Sankey has made not-so-veiled threats to burn the entire system down if an 11-1 Indiana gets in over a 9-3 Alabama again. “It’s clear that not losing becomes in many ways more important than beating the University of Georgia, which two of our teams that were left out did,” he said last week. Sankey was also reportedly bothered that Nebraska canceled a planned 2026-27 home-and-home with Tennessee and has encouraged his schools to continue pursuing those sorts of matchups, but that could change if he and the rest of the SEC believe that getting to 11-1 or 10-2 by any means necessary is a pre-requisite for competing for a national championship.
The SEC has not formally endorsed a playoff proposal, but the general feeling from those on the ground in Destin last week was that the SEC entered the week open to the 4+ model, but left it in favor of 5+11. (Lane Kiffin endorsed the 0+16 model, with no automatic bids for anyone.)
Where are the Big 12 and ACC in all this? Sensing the ground shifting beneath his feet, Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark strongly campaigned for a 5+11 format last week. Yormark did so knowing that arrangement may ultimately cost his conference bids from year to year. “We want to earn it on the field, and that was the direction of the key stakeholder group — the ADs and the coaches — and I feel very comfortable with that. And I feel the same way, and I’ve been very outspoken about it,” he said.
ACC commissioner Jim Phillips declined to endorse a specific model when asked earlier last month.
Why is the Big 12 supporting a format that might cost itself bids in the long run? In short, the 4+ model is un-American. I mean that literally and figuratively. The only comparable model that reserves championship access for a fourth-place team is the Champions League of European soccer. The NFL guarantees bids for its eight division champions, but nothing to a second- or third-place finisher. Similarly, every other NCAA tournament reserves a bid for conference champions only.
“The 5+11 might not be ideal for the conference, but it’s good for college football and it’s what’s fair,” he said.
Is the solution actually staring us in the face here? The Big Ten is campaigning to radically change the CFP format because of a mistrust in the committee’s ability to properly evaluate the rigor of its schedule. The SEC is making not-so-veiled threats to radically change the way it builds its regular season schedule, for the exact same issue. The two superpowers are talking past each other, when the solution is clear:
You don’t need to change the Playoff. You need to change how Playoff teams are evaluated and selected.
It’s long been argued that the Tuesday night ranking shows do more harm than good to the committee’s credibility. (You try explaining your personal Top 25, in a sport with as few data points as college football, in a logically consistent way from week to week and year to year.) The weekly rankings should have been eliminated by a full decade ago. The NCAA basketball committee releases periodic rankings throughout the season, which is a move that could be adopted if necessary. The NCAA also publishes its own metric (NET) by which the selection committee follows. College football leaders would be wise to consider something similar.
Before you come back with a rebuttal, I’m one step ahead of you. We tried that from 1998 to 2013, and people hated that, too.
What if we compiled a diverse set of opinions from around the country and combined them with a set of handpicked computer rankings? People will love it! https://t.co/F0dRIRDhrg
— Zach Barnett (@zach_barnett) May 27, 2025
A rebuttal to my own rebuttal: Frustration with the BCS was largely a square peg/round hole problem. There was simply no possible way to put more three or four deserving teams into a single championship game. The public is more accepting of computerized rankings in 2025 than it was in 1998, and especially so when used to break ties between 10-2 and 9-3 teams than the impossible task of selecting the No. 1 and No. 2-ranked teams in the nation.
Of course, the devil lives fully within the details here. I’m personally skeptical of any arguments, all of which seemingly originate out of SEC country, where “best” seems to be code for “Let’s just let recruiting rankings and hypothetical Vegas lines decide everything.” The portal and NIL have leveled the playing field, evidenced by the Big Ten’s back-to-back national championships and its 5-1 record vs. the SEC in the 2024-25 postseason.
A BCS-like system wouldn’t have to serve as a be-all, end-all, either. No one’s suggesting we turn the keys of a billion-dollar enterprise governing dozens of multi-billion dollar universities over to a souped-up version of Google Sheets without a set of checks and balances. Commissioners should select a set of rankings to serve as a tiebreaker to a more robust set of instructions that is less open to interpretation of the various individuals cycling in and out of the Gaylord Texan boardroom. Give the selection committee a detailed blueprint of how to build the house, and make them stick to it. It’s not perfect, but it’s better than pre-awarding a spot in a championship tournament to your fourth-place team, or shying away from playing marquee games out of a misguided desire to get to 11-1, no matter how.
When the College Football Playoff killed the BCS after the 2013 season, I never imagined arguing for dusting off its zombie-fied corpse a decade later. But, somehow, it seems more sane and less destructive to the fabric of college football than the alternatives.
NIL
A College Sports Dynasty is Officially OVER | Jessica Benson Show
Jess and Roser talk about the Women’s College Softball World Series Semifinals between Texas Tech and Oklahoma. It was one of the best games of the year, and the Oklahoma Sooners softball dynasty is officially OVER.They also talk about the crazy NIL deal NiJaree Canady earned from Texas Tech and how it represents the NIL […]

Jess and Roser talk about the Women’s College Softball World Series Semifinals between Texas Tech and Oklahoma. It was one of the best games of the year, and the Oklahoma Sooners softball dynasty is officially OVER.
They also talk about the crazy NIL deal NiJaree Canady earned from Texas Tech and how it represents the NIL era of college sports.
#jessicabensonshow
#collegesoftball
#softball
#texastech
#oklahomasooners
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