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No. 24 Owls Sweep Golden Hurricane to End Regular Season

Next Game: vs. American Athletic Conference Tournament 5/9/2025 | 1 p.m. ESPNU May. 09 (Fri) / 1 p.m. vs. American Athletic Conference Tournament History TULSA, Okla. – The No. 24 Florida Atlantic softball team recorded their second straight shutout, concluding the 2025 regular season with a 6-0 victory over […]

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TULSA, Okla. – The No. 24 Florida Atlantic softball team recorded their second straight shutout, concluding the 2025 regular season with a 6-0 victory over Tulsa on Sunday.
 
In their 10th consecutive win, the back-to-back American Athletic Conference regular season champion Owls (44-9, 23-4) recorded their fifth conference series sweep of the 2025 campaign.
 
Junior Autumn Courtney pitched 4.2 innings and earned the win to move a league-best 23-2 on the season after allowing just four hits while striking out six Golden Hurricane (20-32, 8-19) batters. She then made way for the nation’s top closer in senior Ainsley Lambert, who picked up her 11th save.
 

For the ninth straight game, redshirt sophomore outfielder Kylie Hammonds reached base in the Owls’ first at-bat, this time from a single. FAU batters tallied two more hits, culminating in an RBI from junior third baseman Jesiana Mora.
 
After a scoreless second, junior catcher Chloe Yeatts put the Owls on the scoreboard again in the third with a hit to right field to score freshman second baseman Destiny Johns.
 

Mora drove in her second run of the afternoon in the top of the fourth inning for a 3-0 lead.
 
Checking in as a pinch hitter, sophomore Corin Dammeier recorded a walk to load the bases in the top of the fifth, but FAU could not bring home a runner to build on the advantage.
 

With one runner on base and two outs in the bottom of the fifth, Lambert entered to finish the job. Yeatts threw out the attempted steal to retire the side.
 
Johns logged her fourth hit of the day in the top of the sixth. Following a walk by Mora, Yeatts brought home both on the double to left. Sophomore Kiley Shelton then logged an RBI single to improve the score to 6-0. 
 
Lambert retired the final Golden Hurricane batters, not allowing a baserunner in her 2.1 innings of work.
 

 

 

  • Florida Atlantic finished a perfect 12-0 on the road in AAC play.
  • The Owls’ 44 wins in the regular season is the most by the team since 2016. 
  • Florida Atlantic had the most series sweeps among all AAC teams and won eight out of nine series in league play.
  • This marks the Owls’ second 10+ game winning streak of the season.
  • Yeatts’ 3 RBI puts her at 51 this season, most by a Florida Atlantic batter since the program’s first season in 1995.
  • Hammonds has reached base in 22 consecutive games and 49 out of 53 appearances in 2025.
  • Mora’s hitting streak is up to 13 games, most by an Owl this season.
  • Johns went 4-for-5 at the plate to become the third FAU player to tally four hits in 2025.
  • Lambert’s 11 saves leads Division I.
  • The Owls totaled 39 hits over the three games against Tulsa, their most in a three-game series on the season.

 

As the No. 1 seed, the Owls will have a double bye in the upcoming AAC Tournament in Tampa, Florida. They will next take the field in the semifinals on Friday, May 9 at 1 p.m. on ESPNU.
 
The Owls’ 2025 postseason is powered by Demand the Limits Injury Attorneys.
 

For the Owls’ complete schedule, click HERE. To follow the team socially, visit @fausoftball, or for the most up-to-date information, go to www.fausports.com.
 





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IU basketball leans on vast NIL resources in rebuild amidst changed market

To build long-term stability, IU coach Darian DeVries wants to ‘simplify’ the process Indiana basketball coach Darian DeFries describes how he see building long-term stability. BLOOMINGTON — Indiana basketball coach Darian DeVries basically had to start from scratch when putting together his roster for the 2025-26 season. The lone holdover from Mike Woodson’s final year as […]

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BLOOMINGTON — Indiana basketball coach Darian DeVries basically had to start from scratch when putting together his roster for the 2025-26 season.

The lone holdover from Mike Woodson’s final year as coach was a 2025 signee (Trent Sisley) who hadn’t even arrived on campus yet.

DeVries had plenty of experience with the process, having navigated similar rebuilds at Drake and West Virginia. Still, there was a noticeable difference this time around thanks to the House v. NCAA case that was finalized on Friday night.

The settlement in the case will usher in a new era of revenue sharing, along with an NIL clearinghouse that will vet deals. There was a rush to sign players to front-loaded NIL deals that weren’t subject to review before a final approval hearing back in April and that created a much different market than the one DeVries face during those previous rebuilds.

“I think the biggest thing, as everybody found out quickly, was the NIL piece jumped dramatically in terms of what rosters we’re going to take to kind of put together,” DeVries said at a recent booster event. “And thankfully, we’re at a place that was very supportive, and then have some great donors in place and people in place to help facilitate that.”

Those resources helped DeVries lock down 10 transfers, including three players (Tucker DeVries, Lamar Wilkerson and Reed Bailey) ranked in the top 100, per 247 Sports.

“We were able to adjust on the fly as we were putting together a roster,” DeVries said. “And then anytime you’re in the portal, those things can get a little tricky, as you’re trying to put that many guys on a roster at one time.”

It’s nothing new for Indiana — Woodson had a lucrative warchest after the 2023-24 season that helped him land some of the highest-rated players in the country. The school is also expected to be near the top of the conference in how much money from its anticipated $20.5 revenue-sharing budget it dedicates to men’s hoops.

“Just like last year, we’ll be highly competitive,” Indiana athletic director Scott Dolson said back in March. “Not just in our league, but nationally.”

That commitment came at a crucial time with IU facing stiff competition from teams across the country for top talent. Five other teams in the Big Ten (Iowa, Maryland, Minnesota, USC, and Washington) signed eight or more transfers.

Michael Niziolek is the Indiana beat reporter for The Bloomington Herald-Times. You can follow him on X @michaelniziolek and read all his coverage by clicking here.





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Colleges across US can pay athletes directly in landmark NIL agreement

Schools across the United States can now directly pay college athletes under a landmark settlement approved by a federal judge on Friday, June 6. The agreement, valued at $2.8 billion, established a 10-year revenue-sharing model in college sports, enabling athletic departments to distribute approximately $20.5 million in name, image and likeness (NIL) revenue to athletes […]

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Schools across the United States can now directly pay college athletes under a landmark settlement approved by a federal judge on Friday, June 6. The agreement, valued at $2.8 billion, established a 10-year revenue-sharing model in college sports, enabling athletic departments to distribute approximately $20.5 million in name, image and likeness (NIL) revenue to athletes during the 2025-26 season.

Additionally, the NCAA will pay nearly $2.8 billion in damages to Division I athletes who were previously prohibited from signing NIL deals, with compensation dating back to 2016. U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken initially declined to approve the settlement due to concerns over scholarship limits, which would have caused thousands of athletes to lose spots on Division I teams.

After revisions, implementation of these limits may now be delayed for several years, allowing schools more time to adapt. The changes will also allow colleges to offer more full or partial athletic scholarships, reshaping the financial and competitive aspects of college sports.

Participation in the revenue-sharing model is voluntary, and institutions that choose to take part are not required to pay the full $20.5 million. The Ivy League, for example, opted out of the settlement, choosing to continue its longstanding amateurism rules for student athletes. The league recently won an antitrust lawsuit upholding its policy against offering athletic scholarships.

The settlement builds on legal challenges that have reshaped NCAA regulations in recent years. In June 2021, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously ruled against the NCAA in a landmark decision, asserting that college athletics should be treated more as a commercial enterprise than as an education-focused activity. This ruling triggered a wave of lawsuits and scrutiny that have greatly disrupted the collegiate sports landscape.

NCAA President Charlie Baker expressed optimism about the settlement, calling it a pivotal moment for college athletics.

“Approving the agreement reached by the NCAA, the defendant conferences and student-athletes in the settlement opens a pathway to begin stabilizing college sports,” Baker said. “This new framework that enables schools to provide direct financial benefits to student-athletes and establishes clear and specific rules to regulate third-party NIL agreements marks a huge step forward for college sports.”

The agreement signals a transformative shift in the treatment of college athletes, challenging traditional notions of amateurism while advancing their financial rights. By allowing direct payments to athletes, the settlement introduces a new era in which student-athletes are recognized as contributors to a lucrative entertainment industry, with wide-ranging implications for recruitment practices, competitive balance and the prioritization of sports programs at higher education institutions.



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What Does the New NIL Ruling Mean for Syracuse Basketball?

Share Tweet Share Share Email After the new ruling on NIL, college sports will never be the same. In a landmark decision, a federal judge ruled that schools can now pay their athletes directly, bringing an end to a lengthy legal process between the NCAA and the lawyers representing the organization’s athletes. Schools will reportedly […]

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After the new ruling on NIL, college sports will never be the same.

In a landmark decision, a federal judge ruled that schools can now pay their athletes directly, bringing an end to a lengthy legal process between the NCAA and the lawyers representing the organization’s athletes.

Schools will reportedly start paying their athletes as soon as July 1, with the NCAA set to pay nearly $2.8 billion in damages over the next 10 years. Those payments will be for former athletes who competed in college at any time from 2016 to this year.

As for how the changes affect current Syracuse teams and athletes, each school can pay its athletes up to roughly $20.5 million across all sports for the 2025-26 academic year. The payments will be in addition to any scholarships or existing benefits any athletes already have, and the $20.5 million cap will increase every year over the next decade.

On the surface, this is a major win for athlete representation. The NCAA was only delaying the inevitable by trying to fight this, and the new system was always the direction college sports were headed after NIL was introduced.

At the same time, it spells trouble for Syracuse sports, specifically men’s basketball. Last year, the Orange struggled to one of the worst seasons in program history, and it was a step behind the ACC in its NIL spending. As a result, their roster wasn’t good enough to compete in a conference that sent a historically low number of teams to the NCAA Tournament this year.

Syracuse was active in the transfer portal this offseason to address those weaknesses, but next offseason could define how the Orange approach building their roster for years to come.

If it took Syracuse this long to adjust to the NIL system, there’s no reason to believe they won’t have the same struggles in a new system where college athletes are paid directly.

For now, there’s plenty to look forward to for Syracuse basketball fans as the team will be competitive in the ACC next season, especially with the arrival of incoming top prospects like Kiyan Anthony. Looming next offseason, though, could be an offseason that either cements Syracuse as one of the best basketball programs in the country or one that can’t keep up in a new era of college basketball.











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Arizona athletic department primed to reap benefits of recently approved revenue sharing in college sports

When there’s a weather delay in a college game, whether it be baseball, football or soccer, a countdown starts to when play can resume. But each time lightning is spotted within a certain proximity of the outdoor venue, that clock resets. That’s how it had felt for athletic director Desiree Reed-Francois and her staff as […]

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When there’s a weather delay in a college game, whether it be baseball, football or soccer, a countdown starts to when play can resume. But each time lightning is spotted within a certain proximity of the outdoor venue, that clock resets.

That’s how it had felt for athletic director Desiree Reed-Francois and her staff as they sat around waiting for a federal judge to sign off on a landmark settlement that is set to usher in a new era of college athletics.

“We have been preparing for this four months,” Reed-Francois said Saturday while attending Arizona baseball’s Super Regional series at North Carolina. “We’re ready to rock and roll. I’m so excited for that, that we’re actually here.”

Late Friday Judge Claudia Wilken gave formal approval to a settlement negotiated between the NCAA and several parties—House v. NCAA—that, among other things, will allow Division I schools to share up to $20.5 million worth of revenue annually with student-athletes. Those payments can start being issued on July 1. Arizona long ago opted into this settlement and have come up with a formula for how the revenue will be distributed.

Reed-Francois declined to break down the percentage going to each sport, though it’s expected that Arizona (like most schools) will give the vast majority to football with men’s basketball getting the next-highest amount followed by women’s basketball. She said the UA will be one of the few schools including softball in revenue-sharing.

“Whenever you’re implementing something of this magnitude, we know there are going to be bumps along the way, but we are trying to mitigate those risks and those bumps,” she said. “And like we said from the very beginning, we had three priorities when we developed our house implementation strategy: that was to be fair, very competitive and good physical stewards of our resources. So we think our program does that, and we look forward to now all systems are go.”

The settlement also ushers in a set of roster limits for each NCAA sport, along with the ability for schools to fully or partially fund scholarships for every spot. The biggest winner in that respect is baseball, which will go from having only 11.7 scholarships available to as many as 34, but that also means it can’t have more than 34 on the roster after previously having up to 40.

Football goes from 85 scholarships and unlimited walk-ons to a hard cap of 105 players, and men’s and women’s basketball can only have 15 players on the roster. This past season the UA men’s basketball team had 20 players including nine walk-ons.

One issue that had held up the settlement was a proposal to “grandfather” existing student-athletes from roster limits, so as to not have to cut a bunch from certain teams. Schools will have to designate which student-athletes are exempt from roster limits but they’re unlikely to be eligible for revenue sharing.

Additionally, the settlement creates a clearinghouse for all NIL deals separate of revenue sharing, requiring ones worth $600 or more to get approval. That applies to all deals signed as of Saturday, while ones signed before then have to be fully paid out by July 1 or the remaining payments have to get approved.

In theory, this is meant to keep schools from paying a large sum to a player to transfer and dismissing it as an NIL deal. The NIL Go clearinghouse will be administered by the new College Sports Commission, which will also be in charge of any enforcement issues.

“This settlement is progress,” Reed-Francois said. “Is it perfect?”

Reed-Francois believes this will put Arizona on a level playing field with all other D-I schools.

“We are a championship brand,” she said. “We can compete against anyone. We all have the same guidelines. We all have the same cap, $20.5 million, so now let’s take advantage of our natural advantages. Now there are uniform guidelines. That’s why we’re so optimistic. We recognize there’s going to be challenges along the way. This gives us one set standard, and we’ll compete with anyone.”



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Ginnie Graham

Ginnie Graham Teens and preteens shouldn’t be allowed name, image and likeness sports deals because of potential exploitation, harm to small schools, and damage to the spirit of youth and amateur athletics. Then again, NIL deals in Oklahoma high schools are already happening. So instead of trying to reverse course, it’s better just to reform […]

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Ginnie Graham

Teens and preteens shouldn’t be allowed name, image and likeness sports deals because of potential exploitation, harm to small schools, and damage to the spirit of youth and amateur athletics.

Then again, NIL deals in Oklahoma high schools are already happening. So instead of trying to reverse course, it’s better just to reform the system.

That’s the summation of the nation’s first Sports Debate City Championship, which was held Wednesday at the University of Tulsa College of Law and featured teams from Tulsa’s Rogers High School and Charles Page High School in Sand Springs.

At the end, I couldn’t choose a winning team. The students were that closely matched. My inclination remains against NIL for teenagers, with mounting frustration that state officials aren’t doing enough to protect kids.

The National Association for Urban Debate Leagues chose the Tulsa Debate League to be the pilot project for expanding into debates devoted to sports topics.

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There’s nothing wrong with the typical high school debate topics. But, honestly, subjects like government exploration of the Arctic, intellectual property rights and the establishment of a comprehensive bilateral trade agreement with the European Union just aren’t as attention-grabbing as NIL.

“Sports is relevant to debate,” said Rhonda Haynes, executive director of NAUDL. “Unfortunately, not a lot of people know about debate. Sports (topics) could create more access and grow an audience, not just for students but adults, as well.”

The Tulsa Debate League remains one of my favorite youth nonprofits. It was founded in 2013 when the only debate team in Tulsa Public Schools was at Booker T. Washington High School. Mostly only private schools could afford debate.

The nonprofit, led by Executive Director Ross Faith, starts and supports programs in public schools. It has a particular knack for finding professionals who are debate alumni and enlisting them as volunteers and donors. The Tulsa Debate League now assists 29 programs in TPS, including at 13 elementary schools, by providing curriculum and volunteers. It hosted 10 debate tournaments during the past school year.

Through these efforts, public school students who never would have learned debate skills now qualify and win state and national awards. They learn how to research and how to argue both sides of an issue. They experience how to disagree respectfully.

“There’s a connection between sports and debate, and that’s competition,” Faith said. “Law is a common pathway for debaters, and there’s a connection between law and sports. Three of the four major league sports commissioners are lawyers. League offices are full of lawyers. So this is among the many pathways there are for debaters.”

The arguments for and against name, image and likeness rights

The debaters came at the NIL topic with research, anecdotes and personal examples. Student Ethan Josefchuk of Rogers High School had been in debate for only a month when he earned a spot in the championship with fellow student Iliel Hurtado Valle.

Josefchuk argued the position in support of NIL benefits at the high school level, calling for “responsible reform.”

“Eliminating NIL is both unrealistic and unfair,” Josefchuk said. “Instead, we advocate for refining the system to make it more equitable and protective of all students.”

The Rogers team likened NIL deals to student actors getting paid for acting gigs or youth cashing in as social media influencers. Their other points: NIL packages incentivize students to participate in sports, and it teaches skills like marketing and financial literacy. They say it would boost school sports over competitive club leagues.

The team acknowledged that inequities exist among schools and various sports, so the goal should be putting in guardrails to close those gaps.

“This is not about whether NIL is perfect. It’s about whether we can improve opportunities,” Hurtado Valle said. “NIL empowers students to earn and grow and stay involved in schools. Let’s not punish ambition. Let’s protect and guide it.”

OK, decent points. I almost changed my mind, but the Sand Spring team came up with good counterpoints on NIL harms to youth.

Recently graduated senior Gracie Gifford, a three-year wrestler and track and field athlete, said NIL deals would only widen inequities, particularly between male and female sports, and erode critical lessons such as teamwork.

“The pursuit of individual NIL deals often overshadows team achievements, which is what high school athletics is all about — growth, amateurism and a competitive environment that prioritizes team success,” Gifford said.

“NIL deals repetitively exclude female athletes. Very few NIL collectives target female athletes because they are looking for what is worth more financially. Unfortunately, we all know that is primarily masculine. There is a clear difference between female wrestlers and male football players in NIL deals.”

Her debate team partner, Braden Fowler, emphasized possible exploitation of youth. Teenagers who lose interest today can quit with little fallout. That could change if big money is on the line. Parents could force their children to keep playing against their will, or NIL donors could exert their influence in toxic ways.

That’s the convincing argument for me. I’ve seen so much bad parental behavior at just the possibility of a kid playing college sports. That’ll be so much worse with NIL.

NIL deals would benefit larger, richer schools with more businesses able to offer lucrative packages, Fowler argued.

“Elite talent is being concentrated in a handful of schools with large fan bases and NIL collectives, leaving smaller fan bases with little hope of recruiting the star players,” he said.

I wasn’t alone in not identifying a clear winner. Veteran debaters and coaches in attendance were reluctant to name the standout team.

“This was an incredibly well-matched debate,” Faith said.

No winner was named because this was a public showcase of the new program. That’s a little ironic, considering this is about sports.

But judges were present to give feedback: Russell Fisher, associate athletic director for compliance at the University of Tulsa; Brentom Todd, deputy chief of staff for the Tulsa Mayor’s Office; and Rick Horrow, chairman of Florida-based Horrow Sports Ventures and the strategic adviser for the sports debate pilot.

“Sports makes debate cool, and debate makes sports more inclusive,” Horrow said. “I’m excited to be part of this program.”

The prevalence of NIL money in Oklahoma high school football

Tulsa World Sports Columnist Bill Haisten previews his story on how much money is being talked about when it comes to the licensing of name, image and likeness of high school football players. After showing up in college football, the contracts are now being signed by high school athletes.


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Zac Selmon addresses why Mississippi State invests NIL, resources in baseball

Mississippi State Athletic Director Zac Selmon made a splash earlier this month when he poached National Championship winning coach Brian O’Connor from Virginia to replace Chris Lemonis, who was fired mid-season. During O’Connor’s time with the Cavaliers, he led the program to an 885-370-2 (362-234-1) overall record. In that time, he was named ACC Coach […]

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Mississippi State Athletic Director Zac Selmon made a splash earlier this month when he poached National Championship winning coach Brian O’Connor from Virginia to replace Chris Lemonis, who was fired mid-season.

During O’Connor’s time with the Cavaliers, he led the program to an 885-370-2 (362-234-1) overall record. In that time, he was named ACC Coach of the Year five times, helped the Cavaliers to two ACC titles, made seven total trips to the Men’s College World Series and won a National Championship in 2015.

After winning the National Championship in 2021, Mississippi State posted just a 129-102 (50-70) record over the next four seasons. In that span, the Bulldogs made two NCAA Tournaments but failed to advance to a Super Regional.

Selmon explained why this was unacceptable and why they’ve spent the resources to completely rebuild the Mississippi State baseball program (from the players to the staff) this offseason. Simply put, they want to get back to Omaha.

Selmon wants to dog-pile in Omaha

“It’s important because of the players we’ve had here,” Selmon said. “Throughout this process, I’ve heard from so many great players. It’s household names that you grew up listening to or knowing who they were. I’m blessed to have coach [Ron] Polk here everyday. To get to be around people like that, you start to know what the expectation is. You can’t do anything now unless you put resources behind it. So much of our business has changed and we’ve had some unbelievable supporters that have stepped up throughout this entire year and specifically throughout this week because they want to be a part of it.”

Dudy Noble Field, which opened in 1967, is often regarded as one of the best stadiums in all of college baseball. It set its record attendance of 16,423 fans back in 2023, showing how massive fan support for baseball is at the university.

“Our job is to make sure we put our programs in a position to be successful, and we can’t do it in this era without a lot of support,” Selmon said. “For us, we’re committed to making sure we put our coaching staff in a position to where we fast forward 20 years from now, we see letter-winners come back and say ‘man, do you remember that time we dog-piled in Omaha?”

“It starts with the investment we made today, and clearly it’s something we know it’s going to be so good for not only our athletics department, but our entire institution and the state of Mississippi. That’s something we’re really excited about.”



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