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Niners Gear Up for American Conference Tournament Quarterfinals Match-Up With In-State Rival

Story Links TAMPA, Fla. – After a successful regular season, Charlotte Softball opens postseason play down in Tampa, Fla. for the 2025 American Conference Tournament. The Niners are the third seed and will play in-state rival East Carolina in the second game of the quarterfinals on Thursday afternoon.  Game One (Quarterfinals) 🆚  (6) East Carolina […]

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TAMPA, Fla. – After a successful regular season, Charlotte Softball opens postseason play down in Tampa, Fla. for the 2025 American Conference Tournament. The Niners are the third seed and will play in-state rival East Carolina in the second game of the quarterfinals on Thursday afternoon. 

Game One (Quarterfinals)

🆚  (6) East Carolina

🗓️  Thursday, May 8

📍  Tampa, Fla.

⏰  2:30 p.m. EDT

📺  ESPN+

📊  Live Stats Link

Game Two (Semifinals)*

🆚  (2) South Florida

🗓️  Friday, May 9

📍 Tampa, Fla.

⏰  3:30 p.m. EDT

📺  ESPN+

📊  Live Stats Link

Game Three (Finals)*

🆚  (1) FAU or (4) North Texas or (5) Wichita State 

🗓️  Saturday, May 10

📍  Tampa, Fla.

⏰  12:00 p.m. EDT

📺  ESPN2

📊  Live Stats Link

*Will be played if Charlotte advances

CONFERENCE RECAP

Charlotte finished conference play with a 17-10 record and finished third overall only behind South Florida and Florida Atlantic, after being selected preseason number eight. 

In Courtney Breault’s first year, the Niners won six of nine conference series, including sweeping three. By finishing third, Charlotte locked down the third seed in the conference tournament and will receive a bye to the quarterfinals. 

AWARDS SEASON

Charlotte managed to rack up six postseason conference awards including Player and Freshman of the Year. 

Jenna Lord – Player of the Year, All-Conference First Team

After one of the most historic seasons in Charlotte Softball history, Jenna Lord was named to the All-Conference First Team as the 2025 American Athletic Conference Softball Player of The Year. Lord is the first Niner to earn the nod following Charlotte’s transition to the AAC, and the first Charlotte Softball player to win conference player of the year since Bailey Vannoy was named Conference-USA Player of the Year in 2022, the same year in which she was named an All-American. 

Lord led the AAC’s regular-season leaderboard in slugging (.868), OPS (1.340), runs scored (57), hits (71), runs driven in (62), and home runs (21). 

Lord led the 49ers in every offensive category, etching her name in Charlotte’s record books in multiple areas. Lord batted .408  in 174 at-bats, which currently ranks third all-time for a single season, and her 71 hits are tied for second all-time. Her single-season RBI mark (62) is a single-season high after also topping the rankings for single-season slugging percentage (.868). 

Not only has Lord made a splash at Charlotte and in the American Conference, and she also ranks top 10 in the nation in home runs and total bases. Lord has 21 home runs on the season which ranks ninth in the nation. It also places her third in Charlotte Softball single-season history behind only Arianna Rodi (22, 2024) and Bailey Vannoy (24, 2022). 

Rodi and Vannoy earned All-American honors in those two seasons. Lord also ranks fourth in the nation in total bases with 151, second all-time for Charlotte. 

Alongside her stellar offensive performance, Lord also proved to be a strong defensive presence. She was ranked the third-best third baseman in the NCAA this season by D1Softball and the seventh-best by Softball America. 

Jaylah Jarrell – Freshman of the Year, All-Freshman Team, All-Conference Second Team

Jaylah Jarrell was named AAC Freshman of the Year alongside Wichita State’s Ryley Nihart. 

Jarrell, who started the year on the bench, made her debut as a starter for the Niners midway through the season at Radford on March 18. 

Through 34 games (27 starts), Jarrell batted .341 in 82 at-bats and racked up 28 hits, three of which were homers. She added a strong presence to the bottom half of the Charlotte lineup and proved clutch, racking up 23 RBI while backing it up with a strong glove at second base. 

Jarrell was also named to the All-Freshman team and All-Conference Second Team. 

Kari Shedrick – All-Conference Second Team 

Kari Shedrick earned All-Conference Second Team honors as a designated player (DP) after a strong season at the plate. 

Shedrick hit .357 in 157 at-bats, racking up 56 hits. She ended the regular season slugging over .500 and hit seven home runs, two of which came in the final series of the year. She ranked second amongst the Niners in on-base percentage (.449). 

Throughout the season she accumulated 11 multi-hit games including two four-hit games, the only Niner to do so this season.

LOVING THE LONG BALL

Charlotte has a total of 60 home runs on the season which currently ranks third in Charlotte program history. Jenna Lord has 21 of the Niners’ 55 while Teagan Ritchie sits not too far behind with 17. 

Kari Shedrick (7), Savanna Nguyen (5), London Dirks (4), Jaylah Jarrell (3), Olivia Williams (2), and Emma Shoemaker (1), have at least one homer on the season as well. 

DON’T MESS WITH BROOKE AND TEXAS

Redshirt Junior Brooke Bowling leads the team in wins with 14. Bowling has also pitched six complete games this season and leads the team in strikeouts with 98. With her third strike out against NC State on March 26 Bowling earned her 100th career K, all of which have come at Charlotte. Bowling also leads the team in innings pitched with 140.2. 

Aubrey Yarnall leads the team in appearances. The redshirt freshman out of Montgomery, Texas has pitched in 39 games, starting in eight, and has pitched 112.1 innings with 33 strikeouts. Yarnall has now pitched three complete games on the season with the most recent occurring in game two against Wichita State in the Niners’ last regular season road series. 

SCOUTING THE OPPONENT

ECU finished the regular season at 29-25 overall and 14-13 in American play finishing sixth in the conference standings. The Pirates ended the season on a three-game winning streak after sweeping North Texas in the final series of the regular season. 

Kanisha Anderson leads the Pirates in average at .391 with 70 hits on the season. Emma Jackson leads the team inslugging at .673 with 18 homers in the regular season. In the circle, Taylor Apple has been the ace earning a 12-8 record and leading the team in ERA at 3.07. 

SERIES HISTORY

The Niners and the Pirates have faced a total of 53 times in the past dating back to 1982. Most recently, the two matched up in Charlotte earlier in the season which saw the Niners take the series 2-1. 

UP NEXT

Depending on the result tomorrow afternoon, the Niners will have a match-up with the South Florida Bulls in the semifinals on Friday afternoon at 3:30 p.m. EDT. 

FOLLOW THE TEAM

Stay up to date with everything Charlotte Softball by following the team on X (Formerly Twitter) @CharlotteSB and Instagram and Facebook @CharlotteSoftball. 



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The NCAA’s NIL ‘clearinghouse’ is a joke, would get laughed out of court

The portion of the House vs. NCAA settlement that is getting the most attention is the $20.5 million that universities can spend themselves on NIL payments for their athletes. However, there is a part of the settlement that you will be hearing much more about if you have not already. There is a stipulation in […]

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The portion of the House vs. NCAA settlement that is getting the most attention is the $20.5 million that universities can spend themselves on NIL payments for their athletes. However, there is a part of the settlement that you will be hearing much more about if you have not already.

There is a stipulation in the agreement that states any third-party NIL deals (e.g. anything that does not come directly from the university) worth $600 or more must be approved by a “clearinghouse” called “NIL Go.” The clearinghouse would be managed by an accounting firm called Deloitte and they would seemingly have the power of rejecting deals that they deemed were above market value and/or did not serve any actual business purpose.

Sounds good, right?

Well, there is absolutely zero chance that any NIL deal rejected by Deloitte would hold up in a court of law. Apparently, whoever added this ridiculous stipulation in the recent House settlement – and the parties that agreed to it – were not aware that the nation’s highest court has already spoken on this matter. Perhaps not directly, but the Supreme Court’s ruling in the 2021 NCAA vs. Alston case spoke volumes and set a strict precedent. In short, good luck getting a court to agree that an athlete’s NIL deal is “above market value” and therefore voided. There is not one judge in the country that would do that after NCAA vs. Alston. The Supreme Court ruled unanimously that the “NCAA attempting to restrict athletes from collecting benefits beyond full-ride scholarships violated antitrust law.” That is precisely what this clearinghouse would be doing.

Furthermore, how is Deloitte going to determine what is “above market value?” Here’s the thing in a capitalist society: Your market value is whatever someone is willing to pay you. We have what I would consider above-average college quarterbacks who will be making $4 million this season. Like it or not, that is literally their market value.

And get this, at a recent conference, Deloitte stated that “70 percent” of previous NIL deals across college athletics would have been denied by them (per Yahoo’s Ross Dellinger). Oh, that’s rich.  Seventy percent, eh? Well, 100 percent of those cases would have been thrown out in court. Imagine the first time a local car dealer gives a kid seven figures and the agreement is voided by Deloitte. That kid would eventually get every penny because the NCAA — even using a third party — cannot restrict athletes from collecting benefits beyond full-ride scholarships. There is no gray area here. NIL — which really should be called PTP (pay to play) — gives athletes benefits beyond scholarships and therefore cannot be restricted. This is what makes the “NIL Go clearinghouse” one of the most absurd things I’ve ever seen. How could anyone think preventing an athlete from making a certain amount of money would hold up in court, after the country’s highest court already ruled unanimously on this issue?

Justin Williams from The Athletic quoted college football coaches and administrators who are convinced “the bagman” will return in full force because of this settlement. They also believe athletes won’t even use the NIL Go system to declare what they are making through their various NIL deals. Here is an excerpt from his piece:

In candid conversations, coaches and staffers have serious doubts that athletes will declare those deals, or do so accurately. Some have suggested that players are being encouraged not to declare deals at all, but to simply take the money and keep quiet rather than risk the clearinghouse flagging it. And if that’s the case, where do we suspect that money might be coming from?

 “I guess it would just be the same as the way things used to work,” lamented an athletic director, frustrated by those already angling to undermine the settlement. “We’d be right back where we started.”

Before NIL, “bag men” were the not-so-invisible hands of big-time college sports, boosters who secretly funneled cash to top players and recruits. It was cheating in the same way that driving over the speed limit is a crime: If it wasn’t flagrant or egregious, you probably weren’t getting caught.

Keep it locked to Bucknuts for full coverage of all things Ohio State football. Athletic director Ross Bjork will meet with the media on Thursday to discuss the changing NIL landscape.



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Texas Tech Red Raiders – Official Athletics Website

LUBBOCK, Texas – Following its historic run in the Women’s College World Series, Texas Tech softball came in at No. 2 in the final polls of the 2025 NCAA Softball season. The Red Raiders finished the season with a 54-14 record and were national runners-up in the programs first trip to the WCWS. D1Softball, Softball America, […]

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LUBBOCK, Texas – Following its historic run in the Women’s College World Series, Texas Tech softball came in at No. 2 in the final polls of the 2025 NCAA Softball season. The Red Raiders finished the season with a 54-14 record and were national runners-up in the programs first trip to the WCWS.

D1Softball, Softball America, NFCA and USA Softball polls all tabbed the Red Raiders as the No. 2 team to close out the season. This is Tech’s highest ever ranking and adds to a long list of historic accomplishments by the 2025 roster.

The Red Raiders won their first Big 12 regular season and tournament titles, hosted their first NCAA Regional, advanced to their first NCAA Super Regional and eventually made it to the promise land of college softball in Oklahoma City for the WCWS.

 



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In NCAA’s renewed Congressional push, bipartisan NIL legislation introduced

The push from the NCAA and Power Five conferences to enact federal legislation around college sports is intensifying. U.S. Representatives Lisa McClain (R-Mich.)and Janelle Bynum (D-Ore.) introduced the “College Student-Athlete Protections and Opportunities through Rights, Transparency and Safety Act” on Tuesday morning, dubbed the College SPORTS Act. The bipartisan legislation includes many of the provisions […]

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The push from the NCAA and Power Five conferences to enact federal legislation around college sports is intensifying. U.S. Representatives Lisa McClain (R-Mich.)and Janelle Bynum (D-Ore.) introduced the “College Student-Athlete Protections and Opportunities through Rights, Transparency and Safety Act” on Tuesday morning, dubbed the College SPORTS Act.

The bipartisan legislation includes many of the provisions the NCAA has repeatedly requested, such as federal preemption of state laws and codification that college athletes are not employees. The bill would also allow athletes to use their scholarships to complete a degree within 10 years, even if they leave school early, and establish agent registration and disclosure requirements.

“I don’t think this is about drawing lines between Democrats and Republicans or the House and Senate,” SEC commissioner Greg Sankey told reporters on Monday. “I think this is an opportunity for our governmental leaders, our political leaders, to come together around solutions to support our Olympic development program, to support college football and every one of our sports that flows off of that, including those that are labeled as non-revenue sports, to provide additional support for women’s sports.”

Meanwhile, a discussion draft has been circulating college athletics. The proposal under the House of Representatives’ Committee on Energy and Commerce would also codify much of what the NCAA has pushed lawmakers to enact in recent years. The House subcommittee is scheduled to discuss the draft at a legislative hearing on Thursday.

“This discussion draft comes at a time of historic transition for college athletics,” the ACC, Big 12, Big Ten, Pac-12 and SEC said in a joint statement on Tuesday morning. “In the absence of federal standards, student-athletes and schools have been forced to navigate a fractured regulatory framework for too long. Following the historic House settlement, this draft legislation represents a very encouraging step toward delivering the national clarity and accountability that college athletics desperately needs. We urge lawmakers to build on this momentum and deliver the national solution that athletes, coaches, and schools deserve.”

The renewed push for federal legislation comes days after the House v. NCAA settlement was approved. Since the NCAA was founded in 1906, institutions have never directly paid athletes. That will now change with the settlement ushering in the revenue-sharing era of college sports.

For the new College Sports Commission entity to be successful in enforcing the settlement, many around college sports believe it needs federal backing. The commission appointed Major League Baseball executive Bryan Seeley as CEO on Friday night.

“For too long, college athletes have generated enormous value for their schools and athletic programs without being allowed to share in the success they help create,” McClain said in a release announcing the College SPORTS Act. “We’re protecting the values that make college athletics great while modernizing the system to reflect today’s reality. This bill preserves the student-athlete model while offering real protections, real opportunity, and real fairness. I appreciate Congresswoman Bynum for partnering with me to get this bipartisan legislation moving forward.”



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Mid-Major Softball Coaches Call Out What’s Happening in the Sport

In the shadows of the NCAA Women’s College World Series, where powerhouse programs grab headlines and trophies, a deeper issue is unfolding. One that’s quietly unraveling the foundation of mid-major programs across the country. Coaches are speaking out and they are not whispering. Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) was meant to empower athletes. And in […]

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In the shadows of the NCAA Women’s College World Series, where powerhouse programs grab headlines and trophies, a deeper issue is unfolding.

One that’s quietly unraveling the foundation of mid-major programs across the country.

Coaches are speaking out and they are not whispering.

Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) was meant to empower athletes. And in many ways, it has. Just like anything that involves money and ego, it’s gotten messy—fast. What we’re seeing now isn’t just athletes cashing in on their brands. We’re seeing tampering. Flat-out poaching. And mid-major coaches have had enough.

These are programs that build players from the ground up. They don’t always have the flashiest facilities or the deepest pockets, but they’ve got grit, heart, and a culture of development. Yet now, with one standout season, these athletes are getting calls. Not from agents. From other coaches.

Let’s call it what it is, tampering.

While it might be happening behind the scenes, it’s becoming bolder by the day. Mid-major athletes are being lured with the promise of NIL deals, bigger stages, and exposure they “deserve.” But at what cost?

Ashley Waters of Boston University recently stated in a tweet:

It’s a harsh reality, and it’s reshaping recruiting. Development isn’t just about cultivating talent anymore, it’s reall about protecting it.

Let’s not forget the mental toll this takes on athletes. They’re 18–22 years old, getting offers that would make most adults question their loyalties. When money enters the equation, relationships change. Trust gets murky. And team dynamics? They suffer.

So where do we go from here?

There has to be accountability. Guidelines. Enforcement. While NIL isn’t going anywhere, the wild west of unregulated backdoor deals is tearing at the fabric of the sport.

The transfer portal combined with NIL power plays is no longer just about player mobility, it’s about power imbalance. Until we address tampering with real consequences, mid-major programs will keep bleeding talent while pretending everything’s fine.

But it’s not fine.

This isn’t about being anti-NIL. It’s about being pro-integrity. Because without it, the very spirit of college softball, the development, the loyalty, the grind…starts to fade.

And that’s a loss no amount of money can fix.

MORE NEWS: Top Youth Softball Camps in Indiana This Summer

MORE NEWS: How to Get Recruited for College Softball: Real Talk for High School Athletes

MORE NEWS: Gatorade Announces State Softball Player of the Year Winners





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College basketball winners, losers from House settlement decision

The historic House settlement decision came down last week, setting the tone for a new era of college sports. Athletic departments across the country now have a new set of rules to play by, from revenue sharing to roster limits, but it will not impact everyone the same way. From sport to sport, the reaction […]

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The historic House settlement decision came down last week, setting the tone for a new era of college sports. Athletic departments across the country now have a new set of rules to play by, from revenue sharing to roster limits, but it will not impact everyone the same way.

From sport to sport, the reaction will be different. In college basketball, there is widespread concern over how it could impact teams from the Power Four to the mid-major level. Clear answers might not emerge for several years as the adjustment it made, but the initial indicators point to clear winners and losers.

Here is a breakdown of which conferences and programs fit into each category moving forward.

Winners

St. John's HC Rick Pitino
Eric Canha | Imagn Images

Big East

The Big East conference enters the new era of college athletics with a unique position, bringing a group of programs which prioritize basketball over football into a world which artificially caps the ability of schools to invest in both. While the conversation surrounding the benefit could be outsized, it provides each coach with an easier view of the change.

Where the conversation on benefit moves past reality comes with the $20.5 million number. While that is the maximum, it is based on the incoming revenue. In the case of the Big East, the current TV deal disperses about $7 million to each school per year which is significantly less than the multi-sport conferences. This is not the full budget available, but is the largest sum of guaranteed money each school can count on.

Early projections for elite Power Four schools, which would have the full – or close to the full – sum, sit somewhere between $10-15 million to run football. The gap would then exist from many college basketball teams, but not all. Of course, there are many other programs on campus which need a slice of both pies.

Gonzaga

No program in the country positioned themselves better to benefit from the House settlement decision than Gonzaga. The long-time WCC powerhouse, which moved from mid-major darling to a blue-blood debate over the past 20-plus years, is set to join the new Pac-12.

In addition to added TV deal revenue and access to better competition, which would come with the conference move regardless of the changing landscape, there is a new leg up on the competition. Since the Bulldogs bring a basketball team and no football team to the conference, the ratio of revenue they are allowed to allocate under the salary cap will seem outsized.

Where many WCC teams will be on an even playing field under these rules, they hold an advantage over the existing Pac-12 teams and incoming Mountain West programs. Even when the revenue allocated is cut down based on the lack of football, the salary cap limits the opportunity of their rivals to keep up.

Lawyers

The House settlement was a large step forward for college athletics, finally hitting reset on a set of enforceable rules. However, from the clearing house designed to accept or reject NIL deals outside the $20.5 million paid by schools to the ongoing NCAA eligibility questions, there is plenty left to challenge.

Ultimately, without a collectively bargained agreement or congressional intervention, there are plenty lawsuits left to try. Even the future interaction between the NCAA and the new governing body remains a question which could require additional legal input to unpack.

Losers

Memphis' head coach Penny Hardaway hangs his head during the game between the University of Charlotte and the University of Memphis at FedExForum - © Chris Day/The Commercial Appeal / USA TODAY NETWORK
Memphis’ head coach Penny Hardaway hangs his head during the game between the University of Charlotte and the University of Memphis at FedExForum – © Chris Day/The Commercial Appeal / USA TODAY NETWORK

Football powerhouses

No matter how much revenue a school makes, the cap is currently set at $20.5 million, with ambiguity on the ability to sign traditional NIL deals outside that. Given some projections that it will take close to $15 million to compete at the highest level in football, there is only a small slice left for men’s basketball, women’s basketball, baseball, softball and Olympic sports to share.

For those teams expected to compete in the College Football Playoff every season, the basketball staff will have to accept less money than their competition in the NCAA Tournament. It is a give-and-take which has existed on a different scale for years, with facility upgrades and staffing decisions being prioritized for one program over the others but takes on a new life here.

These schools still have plenty to offer, with new Texas basketball coach Sean Miller addressing the pros and cons of his move this offseason. Based on their commitment to making it happen, and standing in the sport, many of these teams will kind a way to maximize their opportunity and invest in success.

Traditional mid-major

Perhaps the biggest loser in the House settlement decision is the traditional mid-major program, which continues to move further away from relevance as the power conferences leave them behind financially.

The AAC, Conference USA, MAC, Mountain West and Sun Belt were all viewed as challengers who challengers who could at least provide a fun storyline at one time. They are now further reduced to feeder schools in this model, given the lack of TV deal money and revenue share to spend.

Where the Big East can counter the money gap with a commitment to one sport, these conferences compete across all sports. That leaves them with less money than the competition across the board, allowing specialized schools to pass them with no recourse outside of program-slashing decisions.

Rule-following

Unfortunately, one of the consequences of a return to concrete rules is the inevitable desire to bend them. With the gray area of outside NIL deals already a potential sticking point, there is no question that the governing bodies of college sports will ramp up the number of investigations once again.

While no one particularly likes living in the “Wild West” era of college sports, a return to rules will not reduce the number of outlaws – especially when they are all publicly aware of the treasure chest the current model allowed them to access.



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Texas Tech Red Raiders – Official Athletics Website

LUBBOCK, Texas – The Collegiate Women Sports Awards (CWSA) announced the winner of the 2025 Honda Sport Award for Softball on Tuesday. Texas Tech’s NiJaree Canady was named the winner for the second consecutive season following another historic season by the junior pitcher. “Winning the Honda Award is an incredible honor that not only represents me, […]

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LUBBOCK, Texas – The Collegiate Women Sports Awards (CWSA) announced the winner of the 2025 Honda Sport Award for Softball on Tuesday. Texas Tech’s NiJaree Canady was named the winner for the second consecutive season following another historic season by the junior pitcher.

“Winning the Honda Award is an incredible honor that not only represents me, but also my teammates, coaches and family,” said Canady. “I am so grateful to represent this sport!”

A Topeka, Kansas native, Canady was named a consensus First Team All-American by the NFCA, D1Softball and Softball America. Canady was also named the Big 12 Pitcher of the Year, Big 12 Tournament Most Outstanding Player and a member of the 2025 WCWS All-Tournament Team.

Canady led the nation in wins (34), ranked second nationally in ERA (1.11) and strikeouts (319), third in hits allowed (3.88), and was fourth in strikes-to-walk ratio (6.62) in route to being named the NFCA Pitcher of the Year and a top three finalist for USA Softball Player of the Year.

About the award:

The Honda Sport Award has been presented annually by the CWSA for the past 49 years to the top women athletes in 12 NCAA-sanctioned sports, signifying “the best of the best in collegiate athletics.” The recipient of the sport award becomes a finalist for the Collegiate Woman Athlete of the Year and the prestigious 2025 Honda Cup, which will be presented during a live telecast on CBS Sports Network on June 30, at 7 pm ET, in New York City



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