NIL
Baseball to Host NCAA Regional for Second Time in Three Years
By Jim Fenton BRIDGEWATER, Mass. — For the second time in three years, Bridgewater State University will be hosting the start of the NCAA Division III baseball tournament. The Bears, winners of the Massachusetts State Collegiate Athletic Conference championship for a fourth straight season, will entertain a four-team regional this week at Alumni Park. Fourth-seeded BSU […]

By Jim Fenton
BRIDGEWATER, Mass. — For the second time in three years, Bridgewater State University will be hosting the start of the NCAA Division III baseball tournament.
The Bears, winners of the Massachusetts State Collegiate Athletic Conference championship for a fourth straight season, will entertain a four-team regional this week at Alumni Park.
Fourth-seeded BSU (30-13) will open against nationally-ranked and top-seeded Endicott College (38-4), the same matchup the Bears had to begin the 2023 regional.
The game will take place Friday at 10 a.m. to open the three-day tourney.
The other game in the double-elimination tournament pits nationally-ranked Concordia University of Texas (33-11) against Oswego State of New York (27-13) on Friday at 1:30 p.m.
There will be three games on Saturday starting at 8:30 a.m., noon and 3:30 p.m. with the championship round Sunday starting at 11 a.m.
There are 64 teams in the NCAAs, including 41 automatic qualifiers and 23 at-large selections.
BSU received a berth after coming out of the loser’s bracket to win three straight games and earn the MASCAC championship Sunday.
The team gathered in a conference room at the Tinsley Center Monday afternoon to learn who it would be facing in the NCAAs.
It will be the Bears’ 18th appearance in the NCAAs dating back to 1989 and fourth under coach Greg Zackrison.
BSU defeated Endicott, 4-2, in the 2023 tourney opener behind the pitching of Matt Josselyn, then lost to Johnson & Wales and were eliminated in a rematch with Endicott, 6-0.
The Gulls are ranked No. 3 in the D3baseball.com national poll and No. 4 in the American Baseball Coaches Association poll.
Endicott went 132-23 with two trips to the Division III College World Series the past three seasons before losing just four of 42 games this spring.
The Gulls are the top scoring team nationally in Division III with 486 runs and have seven starters batting at least .343.
Senior Joey Frammartino (North Reading, Mass.) leads the way at .394 with junior AJ Hamm (Shrewsbury, Mass.) at .390.
Graduate student John Mulready (Peabody, Mass.) is batting .372, just ahead of sophomore Cade Bernardo (Glenmont, N.Y.) at .370.
Senior Danny MacDougall (Taunton, Mass.) is at .365 with senior Zach Stephenson (Mansfield, Mass.) hitting .357 and graduate student Kyle Grabowski (Westfield, Mass.) at .343.
The Gulls are batting .351 with with 63 home runs, led by senior Robbie Wladkowski (Norwood, Mass.) with nine and MacDougall and Stephenson with eight each.
The pitching staff is led by sophomore Charlie Hale (Brookline, N.Y.), wkho is 11-1 with a 2.13 earned run average, and junior Evan Scully (Maynard, Mass.), who is 9-0 with a 2.17 ERA.
The Bears are led offensively by senior second baseman Scott Emerson (Peabody, Mass.), the program’s all-time hits leader with 243 who is batting .395 with 10 doubles, three triples and five home runs.
Junior Ryan Flaherty (Duxbury, Mass.) broke the BSU single-season record for home runs with 17 and RBI with 64 and is hitting .299.
Freshman Jamie Luna (Warwick, R.I.) is hitting .390 and senior Kevin Lindsay (East Bridgewater, Mass.) is batting .356.
Senior Philip Messina (Dunkirk, N.Y.) has seven homers and is hitting .331 while senior Brendan Flaven (Taunton, Mass.) has a .329 average and is a transfer from Endicott.
Junior Trey Yesu (Monson, Mass.) and senior Cameron Breault (Buzzards Bay, Mass.) are the top winners with five victories apiece on the mound.
Concordia will arrive in Massachusetts from Texas ranked 19th in the ABCA national poll and 20th in the D3baseball.com polls.
The Tornadoes went 24-6 in the Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference and lost to No. 1 ranked Trinity, 2-1, in the conference championship game, receiving an at-large bid to the NCAAs.
Oswego State went 14-4 in the State University of New York Athletic Conference and 1-2 in the conference tournament.
Oswego also received an at-large bid.
The winner of the regional hosted by Bridgewater State plays in a Super Regional against the winner of the Wisconsin-Lacrosse May 23-24.
NIL
Dooley’s Back Nine: Florida Football’s Big Get On Recruiting Trail
The Back Nine comes at you after a weekend of decadence that didn’t include much time in the Midday Sun. Only mad dogs and Englishmen, you know. 10. So, the biggest story of the last week is one that I’d like to explain to you. But I really can’t. I spent a good hour […]

The Back Nine comes at you after a weekend of decadence that didn’t include much time in the Midday Sun. Only mad dogs and Englishmen, you know.
10. So, the biggest story of the last week is one that I’d like to explain to you. But I really can’t. I spent a good hour reading all of the implications of the House Settlement, which is the main reason Florida’s NIL budget doubled for this season (as did most schools not named Ohio State). It was so convoluted and there are going to be so many lawsuits to follow, I got a headache and started to smell toast burning. All I know for sure is that it’s a good time to be a college football player. They need to be buying ME lunch.
11. Meanwhile, coach Billy Napier continues to do well in recruiting. Wide receiver Justin Williams from Buchholz was a big get and the momentum continues to move in the right direction. You have to go back and realize what he inherited in terms of structure (like the head coach leaving his phone with a staffer to text with recruits because he couldn’t be bothered). I have no real idea where this season is going to go, but I do know that if it goes south the next coach is going to inherit an amazing infrastructure. Hopefully, Napier will be around for it.
12. I thought I would abandon college baseball after the Gators were unceremoniously dumped from the tournament, but I was all in for the Supers. Sunday had to be one of the greatest negative rooting days in a long time as FSU, Miami and Tennessee were all eliminated. All we have left to root against is LSU. Dang, the Tigers are going to take over Omaha again, although I would think Arkansas will travel like crazy. I’m going to go ahead and pick the Hoggies to win the whole thing.
13. At least the SEC got two teams in after a record 13 teams started this thing. The ACC was all braggy when Super Regionals began, but it needs Duke to win tonight or only one team will make it. And that team beat another ACC team to get to Omaha. If Murray State wins tonight, there will be seven conferences vying for the title of most weak $5 shots consumed at Rocco’s. Hey, my money is on Louisville.
14. Which takes me back to the Women’s College World Series and a sobering stat. With Teas winning, the SEC has now won five national titles this academic year, with baseball and track still to come. Of the five, three have been won by Texas or Oklahoma. I told everybody that the impact of those programs would be felt more in the spring than the fall.
15. Time to pick the winner of the U.S. Open and anyone who reads The Back Nine knows I have been pretty good with the majors. Rory McIlroy missed the cut by 12 strokes last week so I’m staying away from him, and I don’t want to pick the No. 1 player in the world again. It’s as boring as watching Scottie Scheffler play. I’m going to pick Ludvig Aberg because I think his time has come.
16. I did want to address what Jack Nicklaus said after Scottie won the Memorial, about how Scheffler is in a league of his own in part because so many great players are on the LIV Tour. I would take it further to say that those LIV stars are not sharpening their games on that Tour. That’s my take and I’m sticking to it. I just know we need to get Mom and Dad back together.
17. I wish I had thought of this line first and maybe Adam Schefter stole it, but when he said that there is white smoke coming from the chimney because Aaron Rodgers finally said yes (when is the gender reveal?) I laughed out loud. It’s a real dilemma though because I like the Steelers but not Rodgers. I have my reasons. Amazingly, the Sports Books didn’t move much with this news. Maybe the bettors have no confidence in a 41-year-old quarterback.
18. Now that baseball is over, I have Jeff back in the studio onThe Tailgate and as good as that is, I wish the Gators’ season was not over. Anyway, the latest playlist:
WRUF.com sports columnist Pat Dooley can be heard on “The Tailgate” along with Jeff Cardozo from 4-6 p.m. Monday-Friday on 98.1-FM/AM-850 WRUF.
NIL
Mississippi State Bulldogs ready for revenue sharing era of college sports
A seismic shift is on the way for college athletics, as long-awaited news is now official. The House v. NCAA settlement has been approved, and now for the first time ever, revenue sharing will be introduced to college sports. Starting July 1, universities are permitted to directly share up to $20.5 million with student athletes […]

A seismic shift is on the way for college athletics, as long-awaited news is now official. The House v. NCAA settlement has been approved, and now for the first time ever, revenue sharing will be introduced to college sports. Starting July 1, universities are permitted to directly share up to $20.5 million with student athletes across all sports.
NEW: Judge Claudia Wilken has approved the landmark House v. NCAA settlement, which will usher in revenue sharing and roster limits to college sports.https://t.co/UQdwaVC8ji pic.twitter.com/LDVJl4bwgb
— On3 (@On3sports) June 7, 2025
Though revenue sharing isn’t technically a requirement and schools that do participate could chose to share less than $20.5 million, you can expect every serious college athletics department to be sharing that full amount. And while there are no requirements to how that revenue is distributed, you can expect football to see the overwhelming majority of that funding followed by men’s basketball.
Also new with the settlement is greater restrictions on NIL deals, as moving forward, any third-party NIL deals valuing at least $600 must be approved by a newly formed clearinghouse called “NIL Go.” Simply put, measures are being enacted to assure schools don’t simply use their NIL collectives as a means to get past the $20.5 million revenue sharing cap. Furthermore, new roster limits will be put in place for sports, and now schools are permitted to fully fund scholarships for each player on the roster.
So what does this mean for Mississippi State?
Mississippi State Bulldogs ready to move forward into revenue sharing era
While the news of revenue sharing is just now official, Mississippi State has been preparing for it for quite some time. Last fall, MSU unveiled the “State Excellence Fund,” which is committed to providing resources and benefits to student athletes on campus. The “State Excellence Fund’s” founding was MSU laying the groundwork for revenue sharing with student athletes once that ruling passed.
The time has now come for that, and according to athletic director Zac Selmon, the “news allows us to move ahead in our pursuit of new heights.”
— Zac Selmon (@zacselmon) June 7, 2025
Though nothing is specified, Selmon’s statement implies is that Mississippi State is fully-embracing revenue sharing going forward. Given the recent fundraising we’ve seen under Zac Selmon, it’s fair to expect State to share the full $20.5 million allotment with student athletes. Like every major athletics program, football and men’s basketball are going to see the bulk of that.
But MSU will likely dole out more for baseball than the majority of athletic departments. The school’s investment into baseball was key towards attracting a coach the caliber of Brian O’Connor. State is going to spend at a high level when it comes to the Diamond Dawg program, and making sure they’re allocating enough to build and maintain an elite roster is a high priority moving forward. Add in that State will likely be fully funding scholarships in baseball, and you see how these changes could be a major benefit to Bulldog baseball.
NIL
Weekend Wrap, sponsored by Crystal Creek Partners
Weekend Wrap, sponsored by Crystal Creek Partners Owned by two Texas Aggie lettermen, Crystal Creek Partners specializes in commercial and residential real estate properties in the College Station area. Their properties are all custom newer construction in prime locations, including homes in The Estates of College Station and Commercial Spaces in South College Station’s Tower […]

Weekend Wrap, sponsored by Crystal Creek Partners
Owned by two Texas Aggie lettermen, Crystal Creek Partners specializes in commercial and residential real estate properties in the College Station area. Their properties are all custom newer construction in prime locations, including homes in The Estates of College Station and Commercial Spaces in South College Station’s Tower Point and Tower Center. If you’re looking for a single-family home for 4 students or flexible space for your growing business, reach out to Crystal Creek Partners to learn more.Crystal Creek Partners is looking to expand their property portfolio in the College Station area to include additional student rentals and VRBO properties. If you are interested in selling a property, we’d love to talk .
Doug Brown, an owner in Crystal Creek Partners, is also an acclaimed real estate agent with Compass Realty specializing in The Woodlands, Tomball, Magnolia, and Montgomery markets. He is also well versed in the Bryan/College Station market if you are looking to find the perfect game day second home or investment property.For more information, Email doug@tammyhendricksteam.com
You can also check out their newest vacation property in College Station here.
House v. NCAA settlement reached
Several weeks after an anticipated settlement was expected to be reached, the now-infamous House v. NCAA case was concluded Friday night. For the first time, players can now be paid directly by universities for their athletic endeavors.
The settlement allows NCAA member schools to directly compensate student-athletes for their NIL, up to a capped amount of approximately 22% of specified revenue (for instance, media rights, ticket sales and sponsorships). The cap for the 2025-26 athletic year is estimated at approximately $20.5 million.
NIL deals are still within the rules, likely pushing the total significantly higher for players. The vast majority of the revenue dispersed by universities will go to football and basketball.
A new independent body, the College Sports Commission, will be responsible for implementing the settlement terms governing revenue sharing, NIL and roster limits. There will also be a clearinghouse to oversee and approve any NIL deals greater than $600.
Football scholarship limits will eventually be set at 105, with baseball moving to 34 full scholarships and basketball going from 13 scholarships to 15. Texas A&M had already announced that it would fully fund all those scholarships.
““The approval of the House settlement agreement represents a significant milestone for the meaningful support of our student-athletes and a pivotal step toward establishing long-term sustainability for college sports, two of the Southeastern Conference’s top priorities. As the journey to modernize collegiate sports continues, we remain focused on identifying and implementing innovative opportunities for our student-athletes across all sports while maintaining the core values that make collegiate athletics uniquely meaningful,” SEC commissioner Greg Sankey said.
Aggie commits shut down their recruitment after weekend official visits
Two of A&M’s top offensive recruits for the 2026 recruiting class took one look at Aggieland this weekend and shut down their recruitments entirely. Four-star wideout Aaron Gregory and 4-star running back Jonathan Hatton Jr. both re-affirmed their commitments this weekend.
“I don’t feel the need to (take other visits). Respect to all the other programs that are still showing interest and support, but A&M checks every box for me and my family,” Gregory told AggieYell.com.
Aggies raid the Owls nest for two players
Texas A&M’s baseball program has picked up its first two transfers of the offseason, and both come courtesy of Florida Atlantic.
The first, pitcher MJ Bollinger, committed Friday. Serving as FAU’s closer, Bollinger made 28 appearances, third-most on the team, and had a 3-3 record with a 2.01 ERA and 11 saves. He struck out 39 in 44 2/3 innings, walked just 13 and had a WHIP of 1.12.
Outfielder Jake Duer joined Bollinger on the commit list Sunday. Duer started 34 games before a hip injury ended his season prematurely, but he was outstanding when healthy. He hit .428 with 11 doubles, 2 home runs and 27 RBI for an OPS of 1.048. In 138 at-bats, Duer struck out just 10 times.
With Duer likely filling the void in left field with Terrence Kiel II in center and Caden Sorrell in right, A&M utility player Jamal George entered the transfer portal Sunday morning.
NIL
NCAA colleges can pay athletes after US$2.8bn NIL settlement approved
US$2.8bn settlement resolves three antitrust cases against governing college sports body Division I athletes from 2016 onwards to be financially compensated by NCAA and power conferences Power conferences form regulatory body to oversee payments The National Collegiate Athletic Association’s (NCAA) US$2.8 billion settlement for three antitrust lawsuits has received final approval from a federal judge, […]


- US$2.8bn settlement resolves three antitrust cases against governing college sports body
- Division I athletes from 2016 onwards to be financially compensated by NCAA and power conferences
- Power conferences form regulatory body to oversee payments
The National Collegiate Athletic Association’s (NCAA) US$2.8 billion settlement for three antitrust lawsuits has received final approval from a federal judge, paving the way for member schools to directly pay student athletes.
First announced last year, the settlement resolves three cases that claimed the governing college sports body illegally restricted college athletes from earning money through name, image and likeness (NIL) endorsements.
The settlement will also establish a new revenue-sharing model in college sports, with schools able to pay their athletes roughly US$20.5 million in NIL revenue over the 2025/26 campaign. The annual cap is expected to rise annually over ten years and will take effect beginning on 1st July.
The NCAA, alongside its five power conferences, will also pay nearly US$2.8 billion in damages to Division I athletes who competed in college from 2016 onwards. The payments will be made over ten years.
Final approval was granted by Judge Claudia Wilken after changes were made with regards to roster limits, satisfying objections made to the settlement.
“This result is a fantastic win for hundreds of thousands of college athletes,” said Steve Berman, one of the lead attorneys for the plaintiffs. “We look forward to overseeing this process and watching the revenue-sharing benefits unfold for college athletes over the next 10 years.”
“Approving the agreement reached by the NCAA, the defendant conferences and student-athletes in the settlement opens a pathway to begin stabilising college sports,” wrote Charlie Baker, NCAA president, in a public letter. “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 settlement is the culmination of a multi-year process.
In June 2021, the US Supreme Court unanimously ruled against the NCAA in a case, stipulating that the governing college sports body could not stop schools from paying athletes in education-related benefits. The comprehensive defeat left the organisation vulnerable to fresh legal challenges to its rules limiting compensation.
Since then, student-athletes have been able to earn money from third parties and companies through NIL deals. There has also been an increase in the involvement of boosters, which are payments made by collectives using NIL deals to recruit athletes to their favoured school.
Now, schools will be responsible for NIL spending. Last year, a federal judge issued an injunction preventing the NCAA from enforcing rules to stop schools from making NIL payments when recruiting athletes.
To regulate payments from schools and boosters, the power conferences have launched a new regulatory body called the College Sports Commission. It has hired Bryan Seeley, the executive vice president of legal and operations at Major League Baseball (MLB), as its chief executive.
In a statement, the commission said Seeley and his team would ‘build out the organisation’s investigative and enforcement teams and oversee all of its ongoing operations and stakeholder relationships’.
‘Seeley and his team will also be responsible for enforcement of the new rules around revenue sharing, student-athlete third-party name image and likeness (NIL) deals, and roster limits,’ the commission said.
‘The commission will investigate potential rules violations, make factual determinations, issue penalties where appropriate, and participate in the neutral arbitration process set forth in the settlement as necessary.’
NIL
Two Sons Of Hall Of Famers Officially Sign With WWE – TJR Wrestling
WWE has announced its latest class of NIL athletes. As first reported by USA Today, WWE has announced its fifth NIL class, and three names have already caught the eye. The latest class includes the sons of Scott Steiner, Mark Henry, and Titus O’Neil. You can find the full class below. Jacob Henry – Oklahoma, […]

WWE has announced its latest class of NIL athletes.
As first reported by USA Today, WWE has announced its fifth NIL class, and three names have already caught the eye. The latest class includes the sons of Scott Steiner, Mark Henry, and Titus O’Neil.
You can find the full class below.
- Jacob Henry – Oklahoma, Football & Wrestling
- Brock Rechsteiner – Jacksonville State, Football
- TJ Bullard – Central Florida, Football
- Meghan Walker – Nebraska, Track and Field
- Fatima Katembo – LSU Shreveport, Basketball
- Madison Kaiser – Minnesota, Hockey
- Kerrigan Huynh – University of Central Oklahoma, Track and Field
- Gina Adams – Lynn University, Basketball
- Bianca Pizano – Michigan State, Field Hockey
- Zuriel Jimenez – Columbia University, Track and Field
- Hidetora Hanada – Colorado State, Football
The company’s NIL program was launched in late 2021 and allows college athletes to make money from their name, image, and likeness.
Life In WWE Is The Family Business
Mark Henry enjoyed a long association with the sports entertainment giant after signing with the company following the 1996 Olympic Games. After leaving the company in 2021, Henry signed with AEW and stayed with the Tony Khan-led company for three years.
Meanwhile, Scott Steiner has had a much more tumultuous relationship with WWE and has repeatedly and openly criticised Triple H in the past. However, in more recent years, the star confirmed the pair have “buried the hatchet.”
Back in January, Scott Steiner confirmed WWE was planning to offer his son a NIL contract.
Steiner’s nephew, Bron Breakker, is widely considered one of the most impressive rising stars in WWE today, with fans and observers across the industry tipping him to be a main event player for years to come. Following two runs with the NXT Championship and two runs with the Intercontinental Championship, Breakker joined forces with Seth Rollins in the days after WrestleMania 41.
Breakker’s most recent appearance came at Money In The Bank, where he helped Seth Rollins win the men’s Money In The Bank Ladder Match.
NIL
4-star recruit reaffirms all-in, Illinois football “over everybody”
It is hard to recruit in today’s landscape, but the Illinois football program has managed to knock recruiting out of the park. Landing big-time recruits has not been a specialty for the Illini over the years. But the 2026 class seems different. We have multiple four-star commitments and a national recruiting ranking of No. 14 […]

It is hard to recruit in today’s landscape, but the Illinois football program has managed to knock recruiting out of the park.
Landing big-time recruits has not been a specialty for the Illini over the years. But the 2026 class seems different. We have multiple four-star commitments and a national recruiting ranking of No. 14 in the country.
While commitments are great, holding on to those recruits is the key. Early National Signing Day is still a half-year away, and there is an entire season before that. But on Sunday, Illinois had one of its biggest recruits reaffirm his pledge to the Orange and Blue.
Linebacker Cam Thomas took to social media to let the Illinois fanbase know that he had completed his official visit and it is, “#Illini over everybody!”
Thomas, a four-star linebacker who ranks as the No. 333 player in the class of 2026, could have gone nearly anywhere. The Ohio product had offers from teams like Michigan, Louisville, and Oregon, among the 28 total scholarships he has been offered.
Illinois football still has to make Cam Thomas a priority and play well in the fall
The reaffirmation from Thomas is always nice. He is an elite recruit, and Illinois needed to show out this weekend. That looks to be the case.
Bret Bielema and the Illinois coaching staff can’t coast on those words by Thomas, though. We still have to make him a top priority and keep checking in with him throughout the coming months.
This fall is going to be key, too. Illinois needs to continue winning. We are projected to be a contender for the College Football Playoff, and if we lay an egg, that would be bad.
Lastly, while I am pumped and excited to have Thomas join the Illini, there are a few big hitters out there that have yet to swing for this kid. My eyes are on Ohio State, Notre Dame, and Alabama. If any of those three teams come in with an offer, Illinois’ mission to hold on to Thomas would be a little bit harder. It is great that Thomas is locked in with the Orange and Blue, but we can’t let up. It has to be pedal to the metal with this recruitment for the Illini.
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