NIL
Transfer portal’s top moves: Nico Iamaleava saga headlines college football’s five biggest spring storylines
The deadline for undergraduate players to enter the transfer portal in the spring window has passed. There are still players wrapping up the process of finding a new home, but the cycle has reached its conclusion for the most part. Coming out of the weekend, every one of the top 250 prospects in the 2024-25 […]

The deadline for undergraduate players to enter the transfer portal in the spring window has passed. There are still players wrapping up the process of finding a new home, but the cycle has reached its conclusion for the most part. Coming out of the weekend, every one of the top 250 prospects in the 2024-25 Transfer Portal Player Rankings at 247Sports has either committed to or enrolled at their new school. So now it’s time to make some declarative statements on the most notable and impactful changes coming from all the player movement.
As has been detailed extensively, the spring portal window produced large numbers of players — but in terms of top portal talent, most of those moves came out of the winter window. Of the top 200 players in the portal across both windows, just 24 of them made their moves in the spring; the rest committed in the winter and most were able to take part in spring practice with their new squad. But having a little bit of a lighter load in terms of top talent does not mean schools checked out of the process. We’ve got notable additions or losses across the board with national title favorites, new coaching hires, and even the most stable programs in the country all engaged in the last weeks of roster construction.
What we have done here is identify some of the most notable or important moves from the spring window, taking into account the players and teams involved and the wider-ranging impact when applicable. That’s certainly the case with our first pick, which is really two moves in one, when the top-rated player in the portal left a College Football Playoff team in the midst of a sign-of-the-times NIL negotiation.
The Tennessee-UCLA Quarterback Swap
Throughout spring, there was little to suggest that quarterback Nico Iamaleava would not be part of Tennessee’s 2025 campaign. While his first season as a starter did not produce overwhelming individual statistics or accolades, the team experienced great success with 10 wins and a first-ever College Football Playoff appearance.
In the final days of spring practice, however, discussions about a re-worked NIL deal broke down, and Iamaleava failed to attend team events with no communication to explain the absence. Coach Josh Heupel “moved on” with an explanation that “no one is bigger” than the Tennessee program, and his hard stance on the issue served as a high-profile rebuttal of what has been a rising tide of player leverage when it comes to negotiations with NIL collectives and coaching staffs.
There might a long-term payoff for Heupel in terms of culture-setting in a locker room that includes other well-compensated Vols; however, the biggest move of the spring window was an SEC power saying goodbye to a consensus five-star coming out of high school who immediately ranked as the No. 1 player in the transfer portal.
College football rankings: Ohio State, Texas, Penn State lead post-spring top 25 ahead of 2025 season
Brandon Marcello

The loss of talent in Knoxville was UCLA’s gain. Coach Deshaun Foster and the Bruins were able to lean on some local advantages and previous relationships to get what is undeniably an upgrade at the position. UCLA’s chances of making a bowl game in Year 2 with Foster at the helm are significantly better with Iamaleava on the roster. If the production comes anywhere close to the projection of what he can be with his talent and tools, then the Bruins have the better quarterback in most of the coin-flip games on their schedule.
But Tennessee is not left with a hole in the depth chart or a sunken outlook for 2025 in the wake of Nico’s absence. That’s because Iamaleava’s arrival at UCLA sparked an exit for Joey Aguilar, a California native who had just transferred after two years as a starter for Appalachian State. After amassing 56 touchdowns and more than 6,700 yards passing in Boone, he’s headed back to a familiar region for a coach who has fielded some of the a top-four SEC offense in each of the last four seasons. Tennessee’s floor might be unchanged thanks the way this program has recruited, developed and built up its roster, but the change at quarterback is going to change the odds of the Vols making it back to the College Football Playoff.
Georgia restocks pass rush after NFL Draft exits
Losing double-digit players to the NFL Draft is nothing new for Kirby Smart and Georgia, but what we saw from the Bulldogs in the spring window was a decision to utilize the transfer portal for some instant-impact help on the defensive side. The defensive front has been loaded with talent for years, but at times the depth has been tested because of injuries. That was again the case during spring practice, with some projected contributors limited or held out while working back to full health.
Among the multiple spring portal additions for the Bulldogs was a player who not only helps depth, but potentially could be a star in the SEC: former Army linebacker Elo Modozie, who had a breakout sophomore season as one of the defensive stars for Jeff Monkey’s AAC-title winning squad. Modozie led the team with 6.5 sacks and added 34 tackles and 8.0 tackles for loss. He has multiple years of eligibility remaining, and while there will be a jump up in competition to playing in the SEC, the 6-foot-3, 245-pound linebacker has the tools to be just as effective in his new league.
No one is expecting Modozie to be exactly like edge rusher Mykel Williams, the 11th overall pick in the 2025 NFL Draft, but he might slot into Williams’ old spot on the depth chart as one of the primary edge rushers. This is a Georgia defense that lost 29.0 of the team total 37.0 sacks from last season because of the NFL Draft and transfer portal, so the production is up for grabs among several talented players. Georgia doesn’t dip into the transfer portal to play a numbers game, so the fact they targeted Modozie suggests there is a plan in place. He’s got the goods to live up to those expectations.
More star power for Texas Tech’s stellar class
When a coach is fired, retires or leaves for another job, the portal opens up that entire roster. The firing of Stanford coach Troy Taylor on March 25 created an opportunity for any players looking to make a move before the official spring window opened on April 16. No player on Stanford’s roster drew as much attention from other top programs as outside linebacker David Bailey. The former 247Sports Freshman All-American continued to back up his blue-chip pedigree with production over the last couple of years in Palo Alto.
Bailey is the highest-rated player of a transfer portal class that ranks No. 2 in the country, according to 247Sports, and includes another dynamic edge rusher in Romello Height from Georgia Tech. With those two in the fold, Texas Tech should see a boost to a defense that finished 10th in the Big 12 and 92nd nationally with just 21.0 sacks on the season.
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Cameron Salerno

But the impact of Bailey’s commitment extends beyond his obvious talent and what it means for the Red Raiders specifically in 2025. Since the portal was not officially open yet, this was a recruitment where one of the top players available this offseason could get all of the attention from any of the top teams looking to add plug-and-play talent at one of the sport’s most coveted positions. It was a battle that included UCLA, a potential “hometown” kind of pick for the native of Irvine, California, but it also included Texas. After decades of playing little brother to the Longhorns, this was a battle that Texas Tech was able to win. Both schools got Bailey on campus, both schools reportedly had NIL offers deemed to be competitive, and the Red Raiders won.
When Texas Tech’s NIL war chest is helping win battles against other Big 12 teams it’s going to come as less of a surprise, but beating out one of the sport’s biggest spenders for one of the top available players in the portal is a win that energizes the base and only heightens the excitement for a big season ahead in 2025.
While coaches might differ on their messaging, we can usually tell when a team is “all-in” on an upcoming season based on their behavior when it comes to roster construction and management in the offseason. With Drew Allar poised to be a top NFL Draft pick in 2026, running backs Nick Singleton and Kaytron Allen back for another year, and the offense actually having some year-over-year continuity with Andy Kotelnicki, the pieces are in place for Penn State to make another run at championships. So when a team like that enters the transfer portal and is willing to do “what it takes” to secure talent at positions of need, it suggests the acknowledgement of an opportunity to do something special.
Former Syracuse wide receiver Trebor Pena entered the transfer portal after spring practice, and his move caught even more attention after Orange coach Fran Brown in an interview pointed to a price tag that he felt was unreasonable for a wide receiver. This, even as Pena was coming off a 2024 season that included 941 yards receiving, the third-most receiving touchdowns (9) in the conference, and second-team All-ACC honors.
Penn State had already added Kyron Hudson from USC and Devonte Ross from Troy in the winter portal window, but when Pena, a New Jersey native, was made available the Nittany Lions were able to meet the moment and make a deal happen with one of the top-rated pass catchers. Penn State could have entered 2025 without Pena on the roster and still had the ceiling of a national champion, but because acquiring and accumulating talent is the name of the game for title contenders, it speaks to the “all-in” approach for a program that came just short in both the Big Ten Championship Game and College Football Playoff Orange Bowl semifinal. This is a program, in 2025, willing to do whatever it takes to take the next step.
Ott adds to Oklahoma’s re-tooled offense
The offensive overhaul in Norman started in chaotic fashion, with in-season changes at quarterback and play-caller in 2024, and then ultimately a revamp of the staff in the offseason. Ben Arbuckle, a 29-year-old rising star in the industry, takes over after two successful years at Washington State (the first of which included mentoring future No. 1 overall pick Cam Ward). He brings with him dynamic dual-threat quarterback John Mateer, who enjoyed a breakout season with Arbuckle at Washington State in 2024 that included 44 total touchdowns (29 passing, 15 rushing) to just seven interceptions in 12 starts.
That ground game got a big boost in the spring window as the Sooners brought former Cal star Jaydn Ott into the fold. Ott has been a dynamic playmaker for some time now, totaling 3,460 all-purpose yards over the last three seasons (third among all FBS returning running backs), and being selected All-Pac-12 First Team in 2023. Ott was part of a massive player exodus in Berkeley in the spring portal window. Because of his talent and position, he was a desirable addition when it comes to plug-and-play impact.
If the Mateer-Ott combo can be one of the best quarterback-running back duos in the entire country, then Oklahoma’s offensive success is likely playing into a much-needed bounce-back season for Brent Venables after a 6-7 finish in 2024. Ott individually won’t reverse course for Venables’ tenure at Oklahoma, but his role in an offensive renaissance can certainly change the outlook for a proud program still looking for its footing in the new-look SEC.
NIL
What the House vs NCAA settlement approval means for Michigan Athletics
The National College Athletic Association (NCAA) has been around since 1906. In its 119-year history, institutions have never directly paid athletes (legally). That has all now changed, as Judge Claudia Wilken approved the House settlement on Friday in the U.S. Northern District of California, 59 months after the initial class-action House vs NCAA suit was […]

The National College Athletic Association (NCAA) has been around since 1906. In its 119-year history, institutions have never directly paid athletes (legally). That has all now changed, as Judge Claudia Wilken approved the House settlement on Friday in the U.S. Northern District of California, 59 months after the initial class-action House vs NCAA suit was filed.
The settlement arose out of three different lawsuits over the issue of compensation for collegiate athletes. More than 390,000 current and former college athletes acted as the plaintiffs in the suit, and the defendants were the NCAA and five athletic conferences.
After more than a year of negotiating, the saga finally comes to a close.
What exactly does the settlement do
Beginning July 1, schools will be able to share $20.5 million with athletes, with football expected to receive 75 percent of the share, followed by men’s basketball (15 percent), women’s basketball (five percent) and the remainder of sports (five percent). The amount shared in revenue will increase annually. This number will act as base pay for the athletes competing in Division I programs, earning money at the school’s discretion of how they want to split up the funds.
The second main thing regards back-pay for athletes who competed in collegiate sports dating back to 2016, but were unable to capitalize on their Name, Image and Likeness (NIL). Instead of facing $20 billion in back damages, “the NCAA and Power Five conferences signed off on a 10-year settlement agreement that includes $2.776 billion in back damages.”
The NCAA is responsible for paying $277 million annually over the next decade. It has been estimated that 60 percent will come from a reduction in distribution to institutions, and the NCAA is expected to come up with the other 40 percent, which will come through reducing operating expenses, according to On3.
The third issue was oversight. The NCAA is a self-disciplined machine. All suspensions, investigations of wrongdoing and eligibility hearings were done in-house. Judge Wilkins wanted to ensure the beast of revenue sharing had enough checks and balances, so she approved of an “NIL clearinghouse.”
Titled “NIL Go” and run through Deloitte, “all third-party NIL deals of $600 or more must be approved by the clearinghouse.” If not approved, the settlement says a new third-party arbiter could deem athletes ineligible or result in fines to the school. This could even the playing field by cutting out the fake deals or forcing college coaches to be more transparent, but it also could be the most controversial if that information is made public.
The final topic heavily debated surrounded roster limits. At the preliminary approval hearing on Oct. 7, 2024, the two sides agreed to increasing the number of scholarships each football team can distribute to 105 by next fall, but it would not allow for any walk-on spots or other non-scholarship players over the 105 limit. It worked similarly for other non-revenue sports increasing the number of scholarships given out, but reducing the overall roster size.
When Wilkens met with the attorneys from both sides to approve the settlement in April, she made them go back to the drawing board, pushing back strongly against roster limits and asking that roster spots be grandfathered in.
Under the new agreement, athletes who had their positions cut will be eligible for reinstatement at schools’ discretion. It also permits athletes who leave or are not kept by their current school to keep their grandfathered status at a new school. Proposed rosters include 105 spots for football, 15 for men’s and women’s basketball, 34 for baseball, 28 for men’s and women’s soccer, 25 for softball and 18 for volleyball. This will is effective at the start of the 2025-26 academic year.
“Despite some compromises, the settlement agreement nevertheless will result in extraordinary relief for members of the settlement classes,” Wilken wrote in her 76-page final opinion. “If approved, it would permit levels and types of student-athlete compensation that have never been permitted in the history of college sports, while also very generously compensating Division I student-athletes who suffered past harms.”
How does this impact Michigan
This is a massive win for University of Michigan athletes, but it is also a difference-maker in staying competitive for years to come. The university already has one of the largest budgets in college athletics and the second-largest alumni network in the country, and it has already generated more than $30 million in NIL funds, putting it in the top tier of college athletics.
Between flipping Bryce Underwood, landing the No. 1 ranked basketball transfer in Yaxel Landeborg, and having banner-hanging seasons in softball, men’s gymnastics and men’s basketball, the Wolverines are already at the top of the college athletics totem pole, and that should not change given the investments already made.
Michigan also has untapped areas of revenue it hopes to cash in this next academic year. Athletic Director Warde Manuel announced last fall that Michigan was looking into putting sponsorships and advertisements in the Big House, something Michigan has never done since Michigan Stadium was built in the 1920s. What was originally a survey has since been put into practice, and fans saw advertisements and videos played throughout the 2025 spring game. This untapped revenue space could generate $15-20 million next year alone, making up for the $20.5 million in revenue sharing the athletic department is expected to dish out.
Manuel also introduced alcohol sales to sporting events in 2024. After the Wolverines’ first full season since the state legalized in-stadium sales in 2023, the university reported a profit of $5 million in alcohol sales, including $4.6 million at football games alone. With such a successful year, you can expect even more of this moving forward.
Finally, Michigan’s Athletic Department has publicly supported revenue sharing for a while, and Manuel has even said they will not be cutting any varsity sports. That may not be the case at every school, and we could see major shake ups across college sports outside of Ann Arbor.
The bottom line is Michigan is prepared and equipped for the settlement. As previously stated, it creates a base pay for athletes in revenue-generating sports, but the NIL collectives will still serve as the sprinkles and whipped cream on top of the sundae for all college athletes. Champion Circle, Hail Impact, and Stadium and Main will not be going away, and neither will Michigan football general manager Sean Magee.
If you thought the introduction of NIL was a big change, just wait. This is the beginning of one of the biggest changes in American sports history, and we are witnessing it in real time.
NIL
Charlie Baker pens letter to NCAA membership after House v. NCAA settlement approval
In wake of Judge Claudia Wilken’s order granting final approval of the House v. NCAA settlement, NCAA president Charlie Baker penned a letter to membership. He walked through the next steps once the agreement goes into place, as well as what the landmark moment means for the future of college athletics. Baker called final approval […]

In wake of Judge Claudia Wilken’s order granting final approval of the House v. NCAA settlement, NCAA president Charlie Baker penned a letter to membership. He walked through the next steps once the agreement goes into place, as well as what the landmark moment means for the future of college athletics.
Baker called final approval a “new beginning” for college sports now that revenue-sharing is on the way, as well as roster limits. Schools will soon be able to directly share up to $20.5 million with athletes in the first year of the settlement agreement, and that figure will go up 4% each year for 10 years.
Judge approves landmark House v. NCAA settlement
While April’s final approval hearing was a date many circled, Baker said Friday will be the moment the “new beginning” for the NCAA. He also noted the trouble enforcing NIL rules and the way the landscape transformed as a result.
“Many looked to April’s hearing about the House settlement as a culmination of sorts, but the court’s final approval of the settlement in fact marks a new beginning for Division I student-athletes and for the NCAA,” Baker wrote. “For several years, Division I members crafted well-intentioned rules and systems to govern financial benefits from schools and name, image and likeness opportunities, but the NCAA could not easily enforce these for several reasons.
“The result was a sense of chaos: instability for schools, confusion for student-athletes and too often litigation. Sometimes member schools even supported that litigation — some of which spurred hastily imposed court orders upending the rules.”
As a result of the settlement’s final approval, the College Sports Commission has been formed. The expectation is Major League Baseball executive Bryan Seeley has been named CEO, and the commission will take on a key role in creating stability following approval.
However, Charlie Baker also noted the NCAA will still have a role in regulation of other areas. Additionally, the NCAA will take the lead on paying back damages as part of the settlement.
“Beyond the rules that will be managed by the defendant conferences, Division I will continue to regulate in key areas (e.g., eligibility, playing seasons, sports betting and minimal recruiting rules) while prioritizing educational success through setting and monitoring academic standards,” Baker wrote. “The NCAA will finance the back damages portion of the settlement. To do that, we are both reducing costs and generating more revenue, all while investing in the student-athlete experience.
“Together the NCAA, the defendant conferences and the Division I membership have identified the existing NCAA rules that must change to reflect the settlement. These include replacing scholarship limits with roster limits — a change that will enable schools to vastly increase the scholarship opportunities student-athletes receive and potentially double the number of athletics scholarships made available to women.”
NIL
Judge approves NCAA House Settlement allowing schools to pay players
The post Judge approves NCAA House Settlement allowing schools to pay players appeared first on ClutchPoints. The landscape of college sports has been in constant change over the last few years, and now a major development has taken place that will ensure it is never the same again. On Friday night, Judge Claudia Wilken approved […]
The post Judge approves NCAA House Settlement allowing schools to pay players appeared first on ClutchPoints.
The landscape of college sports has been in constant change over the last few years, and now a major development has taken place that will ensure it is never the same again. On Friday night, Judge Claudia Wilken approved the House settlement in the House vs. NCAA lawsuit.
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The biggest point in the settlement is that it now allows schools to pay their own athletes, instead of all payment having to go through NIL collectives. This ruling doesn’t end the controversy about whether athletes are considered employees of the universities that they play for, but schools being able to pay them is a massive development in the ongoing debate.
Schools will be able to pay athletes $20.5 million over the course of the year, with a decided split in which sports get how much money, according to Pete Nakos of On3 Sports.
“Beginning July 1, schools will be able to share $20.5 million with athletes, with football expected to receive 75%, followed by men’s basketball (15%), women’s basketball (5%) and the remainder of sports (5%),” Nakos wrote. “The amount shared in revenue will increase annually.”
That means that football programs will have about $15 million, give or take, to spend on their rosters.
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The settlement will also introduce roster limits, which was a big sticking point between the two sides over the course of the last few months. Those roster limits will be grandfathered in, a stipulation that Wilkin required in order to go through with the approval of the settlement.
On Friday night, NCAA president Charlie Baker released a letter titled “A new beginning for Division I student-athletes and the NCAA.”
“Approving the agreement reached by the NCAA, the defendant conferences and student-athletes in the settlement opens a pathway to begin stabilizing college sports,” part of the letter read. “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.”
How this settlement affects the teams on the field and the court in 2025-26 remains to be seen, but there is no question that this massive change will impact the way that college sports work forever.
Related: Former NCAA athletes to be paid $2.8 billion for lost NIL earnings
Related: Former MLB exec to be new head of College Sports Commission
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USC Trojans Shares Plan For Direct Payments, NIL Approval After House Settlement
College Sports are in a new age with the growth of Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) deals. On June 6, Judge Claudia Wilken approved the deal to allow programs to pay their athletes directly. With the approval, schools now can pay athletes up to a certain climate, with an annual cap beginning at roughly $20.5 […]

College Sports are in a new age with the growth of Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) deals. On June 6, Judge Claudia Wilken approved the deal to allow programs to pay their athletes directly.
With the approval, schools now can pay athletes up to a certain climate, with an annual cap beginning at roughly $20.5 million per school in 2025-2026. Not long after the approval, the USC Trojans released a statement detailing the Trojans’ plan to share the maximum allowed with its student-athletes right away.
“Since the preliminary approval of the house settlement in Fall 2024, USC Athletics leadership has worked diligently to develop a road map to ensure we win the new era of college athletics. With today’s final approval of the settlement, we are ready to invest even more in our student-athletes to the maximum allowable levels, and we look forward to what comes next.”
The annual cap will be divided with football receiving 75 percent, men’s basketball receiving 15 percent, women’s basketball receiving 5 percent, and the remainder of sports receiving five percent. There is an expectation that many blueblooded schools will allocate closer to 90 percent to football.
The USC Trojans have been one of the most successful schools with the addition of NIL. When USC coach Lincoln Riley was initially hired, the Trojans were behind and it showed with the lack of recruiting success. Now, the USC Trojans hold the No. 1 ranked recruiting class of 2026 and it is still growing.
MORE: USC Trojans, Lincoln Riley Soar To Top Of Recruiting Rankings: Mark Bowman Commit
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MORE: USC Trojans, Lincoln Riley’s Biggest Recruiting Weapon?
USC took advantage of the delay between the House vs. NCAA settlement, landing big-time recruits. One of the more recent examples is the commitment from five-star tight end Mark Bowman, who is projected to earn $8-10 million over his USC career. USC has embraced the new world of college football and will continue to do so with the new approval.
“I know everybody’s got an opinion on NIL, rev share, and the settlement. I get it. There’s all that stuff. Listen, we just sat through 10 days of Big Ten meetings where that’s all we’re listening to, but despite all that, we still have one of the greatest products in the greatest sport in the world,” Riley said on “Always College Football” with ESPN’s Greg McElroy.
Things will pick up quickly following the approval as on July 6, athletes will begin receiving direct payments. In addition to directly paying athletes, the NCAA will pay nearly $2.8 billion in back damages to athletes who competed at the collegiate level since 2016. This will be done over the next 10 years.
One element of the new agreement that is set to be introduced is roster limits. The proposed rosters include football at 105, men’s and women’s basketball at 25, baseball at 34, men’s and women’s soccer at 28, softball at 25, and volleyball at 18.
“This new framework that enables schools to provide direct financial benefits to student-athletes and establishes clear and specific rules to regular third-party NIL agreements marks a huge step forward for college sports,” NCAA President Charlie Baker said in a letter. “Together, we can use this new beginning to launch college sports into the future.”
NIL
Texas Tech softball pushed NiJaree Canady to ‘limit’ in WCWS finals
Mere hours after reportedly agreeing to a new, historic seven-figure contract to stay at Texas Tech next season, the Red Raiders’ iron arm wore out. “Everybody has a limit,” Texas Tech coach Gerry Glasco told the ESPN broadcast shortly after pulling her during Friday’s Women’s College World Series championship series Game 3. Up until allowing […]

Mere hours after reportedly agreeing to a new, historic seven-figure contract to stay at Texas Tech next season, the Red Raiders’ iron arm wore out.
“Everybody has a limit,” Texas Tech coach Gerry Glasco told the ESPN broadcast shortly after pulling her during Friday’s Women’s College World Series championship series Game 3.
Up until allowing five Texas runs on five hits in the first inning of the Longhorns’ 10-4 trampling of the Red Raiders to claim their first national championship, NiJaree Canady didn’t know limits.
This is the same player who dominated with her riseball at Stanford, leading the Cardinal to two straight World Series appearances and winning the USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year Award, who revolutionized the sport with her $1 million transfer to West Texas. Canady then used a 0.89 earned run average to lead Texas Tech to Oklahoma City for the first time in the program’s history.
If there was ever a player you’d want to pitch every inning of a three-game series it was Canady. And Red Raiders coach Gerry Glasco would pick Canady again every single time.
“On my left, NiJa Canady,” Glasco said motioning toward Canady postgame. “I’ve been around a lot of softball players, I’ve never been around a better teammate and a better person. Straight-A student all year. Goes to every practice. First one to work, last one to leave. Has played through injury. … Gives us everything she’s got.
“I can’t imagine anybody that I’d — if I had a game in two days, that’s who I want beside me to go to war with. She’s an unbelievable talent. I believe she’s the top player in college softball. She’s provided a great role model for any youth softball player in the country. When you know how good she is on the field and how good she is in the classroom and how good of a teammate she is, and her standards of everything is of excellence.”
After tossing 520 pitches in nine days during this WCWS, Canady ran out of steam against a talented Texas lineup that saw her three days in a row. As improbable as it has seemed at times throughout her collegiate career, the face of the sport finally hit a breaking point.
Canady uncharacteristically allowed four singles and a home run after throwing just 25 pitches in the first inning, giving the Longhorns a 5-0 lead, which they never squandered.
Canady isn’t one to make excuses, however. And there was no way she was going to go down without a fight.
“Every college softball player right now is tired,” Canady said. “There’s nothing else I’d rather be doing right now, playing softball and fighting for the three people to my right. We wanted a different result, but I wanted to leave it all out for my teammates and most importantly my seniors.”
Canady added after being asked if she was exhausted in the first inning: “No, I feel fine. Like I said before, I have all summer to rest.”
Watching the disastrous first inning, Glasco, however, knew then Canady had given all she had to offer.
“We pushed it to the very limit,” Glasco said. “The kid gave us everything that she had and the first inning was a result of a great hitting team, a well-coached team, a well-prepared team coming up against somebody they faced three days in a row. All you had to do was look at the velocity the first night compared to the second night and tonight and it was slowly edging away.
“At the same time, you’re dealing with a great competitor, and you can’t let her pitch all year and take the ball away from her. The game got us. The game teaches the game. The game got us right there. What an incredible performance when you look at what she did the whole season carrying our team, especially when you know the extent of the injuries that she fought through.”
Canady’s performance in Game 3 isn’t how she and the Red Raiders wanted this historic season to end. But Canady’s return to Lubbock next season could be even more exhilarating than Year 1.
Canady’s fame and softball’s rise to the national stage leaves unlimited potential for 2026. Games 1 and 2 of the WCWS final set viewership records. Three-time Super Bowl champion Patrick Mahomes flocked to OKC to watch Canady.
While Canady is one of the most dominant forces the sport has ever seen, Glasco knows he needs to acquire and develop more pitching depth behind her next season. He believes if Texas Tech does that, with Canady’s leadership and workhorse mentality, they’ll be back in OKC this time next season.
In fact, minutes after falling short, Glasco has made fleshing out a more complete pitching staff to keep Canady’s innings down for the WCWS his No. 1 goal for this offseason. He’d like to see Canady pitch nearly 100 innings less during the regular season.
Everyone has their limits. Even the sport’s greatest superstars.
“I hated it,” Glasco said of the first inning. “I hated to see her — I almost switched before, and I wish I would have, but it’s 2-0, and you are used to watching her get out of jam after jam after jam throughout the year and come out when somebody makes a threat, she just usually comes out clean. I was hoping that she would do that one more time.
“But, yeah, definitely the amount of innings got to her.”
NIL
NCAA athlete pay: Here’s what’s next
Dan MurphyJun 7, 2025, 09:15 AM ET Close Covers the Big Ten Joined ESPN.com in 2014 Graduate of the University of Notre Dame College sports changed radically Friday night. Schools will begin directly paying their athletes in less than a month, thanks to a legal settlement that was officially approved in federal court Friday. Judge […]

College sports changed radically Friday night.
Schools will begin directly paying their athletes in less than a month, thanks to a legal settlement that was officially approved in federal court Friday. Judge Claudia Wilken said the deal would create “ground-breaking changes in NCAA rules that govern student-athlete compensation.”
The battle to let players share in the spoils of an industry that has long outgrown any amateur roots it ever had started more than 20 years ago. While Friday’s decision was a long-awaited milestone, both players and administrators said they view it as a fresh starting point for the future of college sports, not a finish line.
Sports fans can be forgiven for tuning out of the tedious legal process that led up to this point. Let’s get up to speed on what this means for the immediate future in college sports and what major questions remain unanswered:
New limits
Starting July 1, each school will be allowed (but not required) to spend roughly $20.5 million in new payments to their athletes.
That figure comes from a negotiated formula that caps athlete payments at 22% of the average annual revenue that FBS-level schools get from ticket sales, broadcast rights and a few other items. The cap will grow on a regular basis during the 10-year lifespan of the settlement as the schools’ revenue expands and via scheduled incremental increases. Sports economist Daniel Rascher, a subject matter expert used in the settlement process, wrote that he expects it will grow to more than $30 million per year by the time the deal expires.
Each school’s athletic department can decide how it will divide that money among athletes. Not many major programs have shared their budget plans, but those that have say they will spend the overwhelming majority (up to 90%) of their money on football and men’s basketball players.
Athletes are also still allowed to make money from selling the rights to their name, image and likeness (NIL) to other parties. The settlement creates a new set of rules and a brand-new organization called the College Sports Commission that will try to stop boosters from using NIL deals as additional salary payments, a practice that became commonplace in the past several years.
However, many teams are already working in concert with booster collectives to find creative ways to pad their payrolls with third-party NIL deals that fit within the new rules. Industry experts say football and basketball teams will likely have to find ways to provide several million dollars beyond the salary cap limits if they want to field a team that can compete for championships.
New legal challenges
Friday’s settlement ends a trio of federal antitrust lawsuits that had the potential to financially weaken the NCAA. But the deal does not end the long list of legal problems for the college sport industry’s business model.
The contracts that athletes are now signing with their schools will likely bolster ongoing legal arguments that at least some college players should be considered employees of their schools. The NCAA is fighting more than a dozen lawsuits that challenge rules about how long athletes are allowed to remain in college sports.
Many sports lawyers expect that key parts of the settlement will spur a new barrage of lawsuits — both the negotiated salary cap and the College Sports Commission’s attempts to stifle deals between athletes and third parties could be the target of future antitrust challenges. Schools will also likely have to defend their decision to provide most of the new payments to men’s sports teams against claims that their budgets violate Title IX — a federal law that prohibits gender-based inequity.
The NCAA’s next steps
NCAA president Charlie Baker and many of his colleagues say the only way to solve these remaining legal problems is for Congress to write a new law that blocks athletes from becoming employees and gives the association an antitrust exemption to make rules that would limit players’ earning power.
“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,” Baker wrote in an open letter Friday night.
The NCAA and its schools have been lobbying federal lawmakers for help during the past several years, but they have made little progress toward a new law. They hope that the expensive compromises they made in the settlement will spur some action in the coming year.
The players’ next steps
A growing group of athletes and their advocates say the best way to solve the industry’s remaining legal problems is through collective bargaining.
Professional sports are able to set legal salary caps and restrict player transfers by negotiating for those powers with a player’s union. Because college athletes are not employees, they can’t form unions. Without unions, it’s not clear that any of the limits negotiated in the new settlement can stand up to future antitrust lawsuits.
Sedona Prince, a lead plaintiff in one of the lawsuits that led to the settlement, told ESPN on Friday night that she and her peers hope the settlement is a launching pad to increase players’ power in shaping new rules.
“We just walked into a new world,” said Prince, who wrapped up her college basketball career earlier this year. “It’s a guideline for us to build and add to in the future. We needed this foundation. Now we’re being treated like semipro athletes, but there are a lot of concerns going forward for improvement in player health and player representation in decision making.”
Prince is a member of Athletes.org, one of several groups that is aiming to form players’ associations that could evolve into unions in the future.
Those groups and college administrators are already gearing up for the next tedious stages of a battle that will continue to play out in courtrooms and the halls of Congress for years to come.
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