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College sports needs to clean up the mess it has made for itself. The White House apparently is prepared to supply the mop and the bucket.

Via Ross Dellenger of Yahoo Sports, President Trump plans to create a presidential commission on college athletics.

The forthcoming group, per the report, is expected to include “college sports stakeholders, prominent businesspeople with deep connections to college football and, perhaps, even a former coach and administrator.”

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Hopefully, the players whose earning potential is on the line will have a voice, too.

Still, executive action won’t cure the lingering antitrust issues inherent to the longstanding efforts by a large number of independent businesses to gather under the umbrella of the NCAA and artificially cap their labor costs. The group could, at most, work with Congress to create legislation that, if passed, would create a limited antitrust exemption to allow rules regarding transfer rights and/or compensation.

The broader question becomes whether college sports deserves what would amount to a very specific type of governmental bailout, especially if it unfairly impacts the players. Instead of giving the various universities money, Congress would be providing a license to restrict the freedoms of the players. Freedoms that have been earned through the judicial branch’s consistent application of the antitrust laws in a way that has created flexibility for players to make as much money as the market will bear for their efforts.

While the members of the commission aren’t yet known, our guess is that former Alabama coach Nick Saban will end up smack dab in the middle of it. He’s been whining about NIL from the get-go, mainly because he knew the Crimson Tide would be drowning in red ink if/when it had to compete with schools having far more cash at their disposal.

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If Saban is involved, the inevitable conclusion is that the players will be financially kneecapped.

Attorney Steve Berman, co-lead counsel in the massive pending class action that has targeted years of antitrust violations, recently took aim at Saban’s longstanding efforts to pick the pockets of the players.

“While he was a coach, Saban initially opposed NIL payments to athletes, pushing to add restrictions and red-tape through national legislation to add ‘some sort of control,'” Berman said. “During his time scrutinizing the athlete pay structure, he made tens of millions of dollars and was previously the highest-paid coach in college football.

“Coach Saban and Trump’s eleventh-hour talks of executive orders and other meddling are just more unneeded self-involvement. College athletes are spearheading historic changes and benefitting massively from NIL deals. They don’t need this unmerited interference from a coach only seeking to protect the system that made him tens of millions.”

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Saban’s current role at ESPN creates a similar incentive. When it comes to televising college football, ESPN dominates the landscape. ESPN surely prefers parity and competition, with as many teams as possible in contention for a championship. With fewer and fewer elite teams, college football season becomes more and more predictable and boring — and the viewership for plenty of games will be much lower than it could be if there was balance in the distribution of talent.

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At a time when many Americans are making unrestrained millions without efforts by the government to restrict their earnings, the overriding goal of the presidential commission could be to put a phony cap on what players are able to finagle for themselves, all in the name of saving college sports from the problems the colleges created and maintained until the judicial reckoning arrived, and the colleges were left to scramble for a solution the antitrust laws won’t allow. (Unless and until they create a nationwide union.)

Here’s the best way to prove that prediction wrong. Put someone like Berman or Jeffrey Kessler (or both) on the commission, so that all stakeholders will be heard and involved in the process of finding a solution that works not only for the colleges but also for the college athletes.

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Pitt volleyball among four elite programs set for 2026 Opening Spike Classic

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Three Golden Knights Named AVCA All-Americans

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LEXINGTON, Ky. – The American Volleyball Coaches Association today released its 2025 AVCA All-Americans. Included in the list are three Gannon players – Bengisu Arslan (Ankara, Turkey/Private Çankaya Doga Anatolian), Lauren Atwell (Mars, Pa./Mars Area), and Sydney Wake (Massillon, Ohio/Jackson). It comes after Gannon had four honorable mention All-Americans a year ago, although all graduated.

The Golden Knights are currently in Sioux Falls, SD preparing for the NCAA Division II Elite Eight. Head coach Matt Darling‘s squad won its second straight Atlantic Regional to advance to the Elite Eight. Gannon is the number seven seed and will face No. 2 seed Concordia-St. Paul, the Central Region champion, at 2:30 p.m. on Thursday.

Makenna Nold of Concordia-St. Paul was named the AVCA Division II Player of the Year.

Arslan is now a two-time AVCA Honorable Mention All-American after previously earning the honor in 2022. The native of Ankara, Turkey was earlier named to the AVCA All-Atlantic Region team for the second time and is also a D2CCA All-Atlantic Region selection.

Gannon’s setter was chosen the PSAC West Athlete of the Year and is now a three-time All-PSAC West selection. She was a first team choice in 2022 and 2025 and was named to the second team in 2024. In addition, she was the 2022 PSAC West Freshman of the Year.

Arslan enters the Elite Eight with has 1,3759 assists, the second-highest season total. In fact, she now owns three of the top nine season assists totals, in the process boosting her career total to 4,481 assists. That is also good for second all-time. She leads the PSAC in assists per set (11.18), good for 10th in Division II.

She also stands second on the team in service aces (46) and third in digs with 298. She now has 1,140 career digs. She is tied for seventh in career service aces (175), along with seventh in sets played (457) and tied for eighth in matches played (128).  

Atwell and Wake are first-time AVCA All-Americans, with Atwell the force at the net and Wake emerging as Gannon’s top hitter. Both were previously named first team AVCA All-Atlantic Region performers and second team D2CCA All-Atlantic Region selections. They were both also named to the All-PSAC West first team.

A 6-foot-3 middle blocker, Atwell leads the Golden Knights with 105 blocks, with team highs of 28 solo blocks and 77 block assists, while tied for in kills with 260. She ranks ninth in the PSAC in blocks per set. The junior also leads the team in hitting percentage at .333, good for fourth in the PSAC. She has moved up to fourth in career blocks with 365.

 

Wake entered her junior season with 82 career kills but the 5-foot-11 middle blocker has exploded for a team-high 347 kills and is second in hitting percentage at .298. She is also third in total blocks with 66 and fifth in digs with 133.

All three players were named to the Atlantic Regional All-Tournament Team last weekend. 


 



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Becker, Marusak and Stow Earn All-American Accolades

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CANYON, Texas – West Texas A&M’s Emma Becker, Currie Marusak and Taytum Stow earned the highest honor a Division II volleyball student-athlete can receive on Wednesday as the trip of Lady Buffs were tabbed All-Americans.
 
Stow was named a Second Team honoree by the American Volleyball Coaches Association with Becker and Marusak claiming Honorable Mention accolades. Stow was also named to the D2CCA Third Team All-American squad.
 
Becker earned her third straight AVCA All-American honors as the Liberty Hill, Texas product registered 348 kills with a .212 attack percentage to go along with 17 assists, 10 service aces, 266 digs and 65 total blocks for a total of 396.5 points to average 3.51 per set. Becker was a First Team All-Lone Star Conference selection.
 
Marusak becomes the 33rd All-American in WT Volleyball history as she led the way offensively for the Lady Buffs during her senior campaign in 2025. The Amarillo High School alum had a team-best 410 kills on 1,008 swings for an attack percentage of .254 to go along with 14 aces, 282 digs and 49.0 blocks for a team-leading 452.0 points to average 4.00 per set as she was named to the All-Lone Star Conference First Team as well as the LSC Championship All-Tournament Team.
 
Stow, the three-time Lone Star Conference Defensive Player of the Year, became one of the top players in Division II Volleyball during her storied career. The Hereford, Texas product is now a four-time All-American as she set new school all-time marks in total blocks and solo blocks this season while leading the Lady Buffs to the program’s 32nd NCAA Tournament. Stow tallied 290 kills with an attack percentage of .396 to go along with 19 service aces, 72 digs and an incredible 155 total blocks to average 1.37 per set.



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Hensley is NCCAA AVCA Player of the Year

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NCCAA VOLLEYBALL AWARDS
 
CEDARVILLE, Ohio – Madelyn Hensley has been named the 2025 NCCAA AVCA National Player of the Year.
 
She heads up the seven-player All-America First Team which includes Kaley Matney while Haley Koch earned a spot on the second team.
 
Hensley, a 6-foot-2 junior outside hitter from Dover, Delaware, joins CU Hall of Fame setter Kelsey Jones (2004) as the only Lady Jackets to be the NCCAA Player of the Year.
 
Hensley led Cedarville to a 24-6 record and the G-MAC South Division title with a 14-1 mark.
 
She was first in the NCCAA at 3.84 kills per set and ranked second in points (4.33).
 
Matney, a 5-9 senior setter from Fort Wayne, Indiana, topped the NCCAA at 11.10 assists per set.
 
Koch, a six-foot senior middle hitter from Oconomowoc, Wisconsin, rated sixth in the NCCAA in hitting percentage (.375) and seventh in blocks (1.08).
 
Additionally, Koch, Matney, Paige Hale, Sydney Low, and Cassi Shields were recognized as NCCAA Scholar-Athletes which includes juniors, seniors, and graduate students who maintain a minimum 3.40 cumulative grade point average.

Kaley Matney, Haley Koch - 2025 NCCAA VB All-Americans

 



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Recruits from Indiana, Reese Dunkle

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Updated Dec. 10, 2025, 3:48 p.m. ET





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2026 Men’s Volleyball Single Game Tickets on Sale Now!

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SANTA BARBARA, Calif. – Single game tickets are now available for the 2026 Men’s Volleyball season! 

The Gauchos will play 14 home matches this season, beginning with the annual ASICS Invitational from Jan. 8-10. UC Santa Barbara will host seven top 10 teams, including No. 1 Long Beach State and No. 2 UCLA. 

General admission tickets are available for all 13 matches at $12 each. Additionally, group pricing for parties of 10 or more is available for all matches, with tickets costing $7 per person. Tickets are also available for six neutral site matches during the ASICS Invitational. 

Click here or call the UC Santa Barbara Ticket Office at (805) 893-UCSB (8272) to purchase group tickets.



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