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Oregon Ducks Softball Receives No. 16 Seed, Hosts NCAA Regional in Eugene

After the always stressful NCAA selection process, the Oregon Ducks softball team finally could get a sigh of relief, even if their seed was much too low at No.16 for what coach Melyssa Lombardi’s group actually deserved. Oregon softball will be hosting the Eugene Regional at Jane Sanders Stadium from May 16-18. The Ducks will […]

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After the always stressful NCAA selection process, the Oregon Ducks softball team finally could get a sigh of relief, even if their seed was much too low at No.16 for what coach Melyssa Lombardi’s group actually deserved.

Oregon softball will be hosting the Eugene Regional at Jane Sanders Stadium from May 16-18. The Ducks will open their chase at the regionals on Friday, May 16 on ESPN+ at 4:30 p.m. PT against the Weber State Wildcats of the Big Sky Conference. The Binghamton Bearcats will be going up against an old foe from the Pac-12 Conference, the Stanford Cardinals at 5 p.m. on ESPN+.

Oregon coach Melyssa Lombardi, center, cheers her team during the first inning against Michigan at Jane Sanders Stadium.

Oregon coach Melyssa Lombardi, center, cheers her team during the first inning against Michigan at Jane Sanders Stadium. / Chris Pietsch/The Register-Guard / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Here is how the rest of the bracket in the Pacific Northwest will play out:

Friday, May 16
Game 2: Binghamton vs. Stanford, 5 p.m., ESPN+
Game 3: Winner Game 1 vs. Winner Game 2
Game 4: Loser Game 1 vs. Loser Game 2
Game 5: Winner Game 4 vs. Loser Game 3

Saturday, May 17
Game 3: Winner Game 1 vs. Winner Game 2
Game 4: Loser Game 1 vs. Loser Game 2
Game 5: Winner Game 4 vs. Loser Game 3

Sunday, May 18
Game 6: Winner Game 3 vs. Winner Game 5
Game 7 (if necessary): Rematch Game 6

The other top seeds in the 64-team field consist of the four top programs in the Southeastern Conference with No. 1 Texas A&M Aggies, No. 2 Oklahoma Sooners, No. 3 Florida Gators, and No. 4 Arkansas Razorbacks.

After that, it goes the Atlantic Coast Conference’s Florida State Seminoles at No. 5 just to go right back to the SEC with the No. 6 Texas Longhorns, No. 7 Tennessee Volunteers, No. 8 South Carolina Gamecocks.

No. 9 Big Ten’s UCLA Bruins were named the Big Ten Conference champions over the Michigan Wolverines.

UCLA Bruins infielder Kaniya Bragg (33) throws the ball

UCLA Bruins infielder Kaniya Bragg (33) throws the ball Saturday, May 10, 2025, during the Big Ten softball tournament championship game against the Michigan Wolverines at Purdue University’s Bittinger Stadium in West Lafayette, Indiana. / Alex Martin/Journal and Courier / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Obviously, the SEC has dominated over the course of this current decade with Oklahoma under coach Patty Gasso winning four straight national championships from 2021-24. In 2025, this is how the No. 9 through No. 16 teams with having home field advantage will play out:

No. 10 SEC’s LSU Tigers

No. 11 ACC’s Clemson Tigers

No. 12 Big 12’s Texas Tech Raiders

No. 13 Big 12’s Arizona Wildcats

No. 14 ACC’s Duke Blue Devils

No. 15 SEC’s Alabama Crimson Tide

MORE: Dan Lanning Wows Peers, Wins Prestigious Stallings Award For Humanitarianism On Sentimental Evening

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Oregon is ranked the final seed at No. 16 to have home field pride. The Big Ten champions in the Michigan Wolverines will have to play in the Austin field along with Texas.

Coach Lombardi has been taking charge of the new energy in the clubhouse with freshman infielder Rylee McCoy (.396 batting average, 17 home runs, 52 RBI’s) and right-handed pitcher Grein Lyndsey (26-2 W-L record, 194 strikeouts, 1.93 ERA through 148.2 innings) are the focal points of the Ducks.

Will Lombardi and the Ducks be able to make a run in the tournament?



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Ohio State has 36 varsity sports. So how will it handle revenue sharing and NIL?

COLUMBUS, Ohio — College athletic departments across the country have long been preparing for approval of the House v. NCAA settlement, which is ushering in a new revenue-sharing era of college sports. Few have more decisions to make than Ohio State, which boasts 36 Division I sports teams. So what will the Buckeyes do when […]

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COLUMBUS, Ohio — College athletic departments across the country have long been preparing for approval of the House v. NCAA settlement, which is ushering in a new revenue-sharing era of college sports. Few have more decisions to make than Ohio State, which boasts 36 Division I sports teams.

So what will the Buckeyes do when revenue sharing takes effect July 1 and $20.5 million can be shared with athletes?

Much of the department’s energy has gone to finding the correct model for an athletic department that has been firm in its commitment to keeping all of its varsity sports. The model, which athletic director Ross Bjork broke down with reporters Thursday, includes spending $18 million across four sports: football, men’s basketball, women’s basketball and women’s volleyball.

Though Bjork wouldn’t divulge how much each program is getting, he did say Ohio State chose those four sports based on its own metric-based system.

“The sports are popular, the Big Ten is a leader in volleyball and we want to get better,” Bjork said. “Coach (Jen) Flynn Oldenburg is working on a plan to get us back on track. With the attention we can receive, the Columbus market, volleyball is a booming sport and the Covelli Center is an amazing atmosphere.”

The other $2.5 million will be used to fund 91 new scholarships the department is adding for its 36 sports. According to the settlement, every new scholarship must count against the $20.5 million cap, with a maximum value of $2.5 million.

Bjork, who is nearing the one-year mark as Ohio State’s athletic director, is a fan of the newest change to college athletics.

“The main thing is clarity,” Bjork said. “Does it solve everything? Does it solve the employment piece? No, it doesn’t. Does it address Title IX and how that plays out? No, it doesn’t. So it’s not perfect, but it’s progress that we never had. It’s transformational progress.”

Ohio State’s plans don’t stop with the $20.5 million cap. On Tuesday, Ohio State announced the creation of the Buckeye Sports Group, a new name, image and likeness entity that takes the Buckeyes’ NIL efforts in-house. It will be run jointly by the athletic department and Learfield’s Ohio State Sports Properties to facilitate contracts and deals with athletes.

The days of NIL collectives like The Foundation and The 1870 Society working independently are gone, though they will serve in an advisory capacity to the new group.

While the settlement gives every athletic department in the country a set revenue-sharing cap, athletic departments can facilitate NIL deals with companies as long as the amount is based on a “fair market value.” Every third-party deal that exceeds $600 is subject to approval through a clearinghouse established by the College Sports Commission.

Ohio State should be well positioned to take advantage of the new rules, given its historical success, its status as the reigning national champion in football, its revenue as a premier program in the Big Ten and its large fan base, both locally and nationally. Bjork cited the fact that Columbus is the 14th largest city in the United States with 16 Fortune 1,000 companies and 50 companies that employ over 1,000 people. That’s a large base to begin with from an NIL perspective.

“Part of the analysis was how do we continue to capitalize on the brand and the city?” Bjork said. “The really cool thing is they may not have gone to school here, they lived in Ohio, went to school here, moved away, but they are Buckeye fans. Countless people I run into are in that category. It’s how do we reach those people? How do we do a statewide tour? Those are all things we’re mapping out.”

The job of the NIL entity will be to take the companies that are doing deals with Learfield and the Ohio State Properties already and match them with athletes, while also finding new companies to create partnerships with. The companies will pay the athletes, but the Buckeye Sports Group will help arrange the deal.

“We think we are in a really competitive spot, and if you layer in the third-party NIL environment, we are in a competitive spot,” Bjork said. “Now we have to orchestrate that, arrange that and make sure it meets fair market value. Ohio State football is a built-to-last championship brand. That’s not going away.”

In addition to funding 91 new scholarships across its varsity sports, Ohio State will also be able to help find NIL deals for the athletes in sports that may be overlooked. When Ohio State began thinking about its model, one of the first things it said was that it was not going to cut a sport.

“It’s the right thing to do based on legacy, history and an opportunity for those young people,” Bjork said.

(Photo: Jason Mowry / Getty Images)



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UTC hopes opting in on NCAA settlement will retain more athletes

University of Tennessee at Chattanooga athletic director Mark Wharton announced Thursday that the school will be opting in when it comes to the settlement for the House v. 0

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UTC hopes opting in on NCAA settlement will retain more athletes

University of Tennessee at Chattanooga athletic director Mark Wharton announced Thursday that the school will be opting in when it comes to the settlement for the House v.

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College coaching legend John Calipari has a hilarious take on NIL money

College basketball coaching legend John Calipari has long been known for his candid approach to speaking his mind. He has little regard for the opinions of others when it comes to his thoughts on the state of the game that he loves. As the 96th coach inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in the […]

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College basketball coaching legend John Calipari has long been known for his candid approach to speaking his mind. He has little regard for the opinions of others when it comes to his thoughts on the state of the game that he loves. As the 96th coach inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in the class of 2025, Calipari has the resume to back up any of his assertions.

While he struggled to adjust to the NBA game as a coach, he has won at every school he has been at in the collegiate ranks. UMass, Memphis, Kentucky, and now Arkansas were all elite programs vying for National Championships every year while he was coaching there. While the University of Arkansas certainly has one of the biggest name, image, and likeness (NIL) backers in the Walton family (heirs to the Wal-Mart fortune), Calipari himself has been critical of the program. He recently shared some hilarious insights on NIL.

Coach Cal was poking fun at the fact that NIL has enticed many kids to stay in college longer. They can earn millions while in college, despite not being NBA-ready. Former Michigan Wolverine and Kansas Jayhawks center Hunter Dickinson utilized every year of his eligibility to earn millions, with little to no chance of making it to the NBA. Calipari gained fame for his use of the “one-and-done” player while at Kentucky. He recruited elite five-star talent to come to Lexington for one year, knowing it was merely a brief stop before the NBA.

While Calipari is certainly utilizing NIL to build his roster, he has a negative feeling about the whole process. It sounds like he views it as a stain on the game and is determined to distribute dollars equally among his team. Regardless of how he approaches it, he never fails to provide a hilarious context when asked about trending topics.

Dickonso

Arkansas Razorbacks forward Trevon Brazile (4) reaches for the ball against Kansas Jayhawks center Hunter Dickinson (1) . Mandatory Credit: Gregory Fisher-Imagn Images / Gregory Fisher-Imagn Images

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Ohio State AD Ross Bjork on the House v. NCAA settlement

Two things will not change in college sports with the settlement of the House v. NCAA case, Ohio State athletic director Ross Bjork said: Athletes will still go to class in pursuit of a degree, and they will still play games. “Everything in the middle of that is going to be different,” Bjork told reporters […]

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Two things will not change in college sports with the settlement of the House v. NCAA case, Ohio State athletic director Ross Bjork said: Athletes will still go to class in pursuit of a degree, and they will still play games.

“Everything in the middle of that is going to be different,” Bjork told reporters during a press conference to discuss the effects of the House settlement. “That’s OK. We’re all adapting.”

On June 6, federal judge Claudia Wilken approved the House settlement after prolonged negotiations. The settlement includes a $20.5 million cap on name, image and likeness that athletic programs will pay its players directly. Until now, NIL payments were run through non-university sources, primarily collectives, though colleges could work with them.

Ohio State will use $18 million on NIL payments in four sports – football, men’s and women’s basketball and women’s volleyball. Bjork declined to say what percentage of that money each sport will get, though it’s certain football will get most of it. OSU will spend $2.5 million to pay for 91 additional scholarships spread among its 36 varsity programs.

Bjork said the settlement does not fix all of college sports’ problems. But he said it does provide clarity after three years without clear-cut rules since NIL rights were granted.

“It’s not perfect, but it’s progress we’ve never had before,” Bjork said. “It’s transformational progress.”

Here are six takeaways from Bjork’s press conference:

Ohio State’s 36 varsity sports are here to stay

Ohio State takes much pride in having 36 varsity sports, and that will continue in a post-House landscape. OSU and Stanford are tied for the most varsity sports in the country.

“That was the starting point,” Bjork said. “We will maintain 36 sports. You have an obligation to the young people in those programs. There are a lot of historical programs that compete here. We want to maintain that. We want to grow that.”

Allocating resources to those programs might look different, he said. Not all sports will get an increase in scholarships. A few might face a reduction, though Bjork declined to specify which sports those might be. He said Title IX requirements mandating gender equity would factor into it.

But eliminating sports is not a consideration.

“We can generate the right kind of revenue,” Bjork said. “We’ve recalibrated the expenses the right way.”

Bjork believes OSU remains well-positioned for football

NIL funds were crucial to retaining the seniors and attracting transfers for Ohio State’s 2024 national championship run. OSU was regarded as one of the biggest spenders in NIL. But now that there’s a cap of $20.5 million – or $18 million outside of new scholarships – could that leveling of the playing field be to OSU’s disadvantage?

Bjork doesn’t believe so.

“Ohio State football is a built-to-last championship brand,” he said. “That’s not going away.”

OSU players will still be able to make money on top of what their NIL compensation is. Third parties can arrange deals with a player as long as they are deemed by the newly created College Sports Commission to be of fair-market value and a valid business purpose and not used as a recruiting incentive. Given the passion for OSU football and the size of the Columbus market, Bjork believes that will add to the attractiveness of Ohio State to potential Buckeyes.

“We think we’re in a very competitive spot,” he said.

OSU is devising a formula for NIL payments

The challenge of disbursing NIL now falls on Ohio State. It will have to decide how much to play each player.

“How we navigate it is going to be an evolution,” Bjork said.

He said coach Ryan Day and general manager Mark Pantoni are using analytics to determine the value of each position. Bjork said the hiring of defensive coordinator Matt Patricia, a longtime coach in the NFL, which has had a salary cap since 1994, will be “tremendously valuable.”

Patricia knows how the NFL values different positions.

“You can apply that to college,” Bjork said. “We will always be at the front of the game from a competitive standpoint, but others will have essentially the same resources. Then it’s a matter of how you continue to recruit to a championship brand, and we’re going to be right there every year.”

Bjork believes College Sports Commission judgments will stand

Since the announcement of the College Sports Commission, skeptics have questioned whether its rulings will be affirmed if challenged in court. After all, market value is usually considered to be whatever someone is willing to pay.

But Bjork believes the long negotiation between the parties in the House case will allow the College Sports Commission’s rulings to stand.

“I think what people are missing is it already has stood up in court,” he said. “It was approved. The settlement allowed for the (Power 4) conferences to create rules of engagement. The rules were then created based on valid business purpose, a range of compensation and associated entities. A judge has already signed off on this, and there’s arbitration, which is really hard to pierce.”

Bjork favors CFP expansion

Ohio State was a beneficiary of College Football Playoff expansion in 2024. Under the previous four-team system, the Buckeyes wouldn’t have qualified. Already, there has been talk of further expansion from 12 to 14 or 16 teams.

Bjork is in favor of it, though he didn’t specify a number.

“I could go either way,” he said.

Buy Ohio State posters, books, gear from CFP title win

He favors expansion because it would create more opportunities for players to play for a championship. More games also mean more revenue.

“We need more content because that will drive more revenue, that can drive more NIL opportunities for our athletes,” Bjork said.

The SEC and Big Ten, which are the two most powerful leagues, have pushed for several automatic qualifiers from their conferences. If the playoff expands, that could reduce the incentive to keep conference championship games.

“If you’re doing AQ (automatic qualifier) spots with play-in (CFP) games, could there be a different model? I think that’s a conversation that has to continue,” Bjork said.

Bjork still wants flexibility for football game times

Many OSU fans are grumbling about the noon kickoff for the much-anticipated season opener against Texas on Aug. 30, just as they complained about the Buckeyes being scheduled for eight noon games last year.

Bjork told The Dispatch in May that the Buckeyes tried to get the Texas game moved to prime time and even proposed moving the game to Aug. 31. But Texas, as is its right in the game contract, declined to play on a Sunday. Fox, which gets dibs on games for its Big Noon kickoff, wouldn’t budge, either.

“Really, there’s no flexibility in the contracts,” Bjork said. “Fox bought the noon window. CBS bought the afternoon window. NBC has the night window, and the Big Ten Network and Peacock layer into that.

“What we need is more flexibility. We have carried the day for Big Noon. There’s no question about it if you look at the viewership. We understand why Fox went with Big Noon. We understand why we’re picked all the time, but we’re hoping for more flexibility.”

He said Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti will work with the networks, but he’s not optimistic it will get results.

“Can anything change anytime soon?” Bjork said. “Probably not because those contracts are rigid, and they’re locked in for several years.”

Get more Ohio State football news by listening to our podcasts.

Ohio State football beat writer Bill Rabinowitz can be reached at brabinowitz@dispatch.com or on bluesky at billrabinowitz@bsky.social.



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UConn basketball star Azzi Fudd announces major skincare NIL partnership

Fresh off a National Championship and graduation from UConn, Final Four Most Outstanding Player Azzi Fudd has added a major skincare partnership to her diverse NIL portfolio. Returning to the Huskies for another season with the chance to repeat, Fudd has fully taken the baton from former teammate Paige Bueckers as one of the most […]

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Fresh off a National Championship and graduation from UConn, Final Four Most Outstanding Player Azzi Fudd has added a major skincare partnership to her diverse NIL portfolio.

Returning to the Huskies for another season with the chance to repeat, Fudd has fully taken the baton from former teammate Paige Bueckers as one of the most marketable and NIL-active athletes across the country. The All-Big East First Team member announced a new partnership with Paula’s Choice, as their first college athlete ambassador.

Through multiple Instagram collab posts with the brand, Fudd showcases the ease and efficiency of Paula’s Choice skincare wipes while staying active on the hardwood. In addition to social content, the brand will sponsor Fudd’s upcoming youth basketball camp.

“I’m very new to beauty, skin care, all of that stuff, but a lot of my friends use [Paula’s Choice] and so I’d tried some of their stuff,” Fudd told Glossy. “So when they reached out, I was super excited,”

“They have really amazing products,” Fudd continued. “[It’s a brand I feel good to] put my name next to – something that I can be proud of and not embarrassed by and that I use and want to use.”

As a redshirt junior this past season for UConn, Fudd averaged 13.6 points per game and led the Huskies with a 43.6 three-point field goal percentage. Battling injuries for most of her career, she started 30 games last year and is now positioned for an All-American senior campaign as the team leader, with Bueckers moving onto the WNBA as the Dallas Wings’ top draft selection.

Off the court, she has stared in NIL campaigns with Bueckers – including for Madison Reed, Bose and Oreo – but will certainly now be the face of a variety of brands as she is one of the most followed college basketball players in the country. Her previous partnerships include the likes of Under Armour’s Curry Brand, Raining Cane’s, Turbotax and JanSport, among others.

Fudd currently has a 97 “O2W Score” from Out2Win, the leading AI-powered athlete marketing intelligence platform – making her one of the top brand ambassadors in all of college sports.

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With no players left from last season’s team photo, Baylor begins summer practice with new roster

Associated Press WACO, Texas (AP) — Baylor coach Scott Drew had plenty of players for the first practice of the summer Wednesday, about two months after the team photo from last season was widely circulated on social media with an X marked over all 14 of those players since none was returning to the Bears. […]

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Associated Press

WACO, Texas (AP) — Baylor coach Scott Drew had plenty of players for the first practice of the summer Wednesday, about two months after the team photo from last season was widely circulated on social media with an X marked over all 14 of those players since none was returning to the Bears.

Only four of those players exhausted their college eligibility. Nine others left in the transfer portal and one-and-done guard VJ Edgecombe could become Baylor’s highest pick ever in the NBA draft later this month.

“Guys you didn’t want to lose and were valuable, we haven’t had many that we’ve lost. Whenever you do, that just tears at a coach, because you feel like you didn’t do your job,” Drew said this week. “With the portal, I think we’ve all gotten used to a lot more turnover in a hurry, and not to take things necessarily personal.”

The Bears rebuilt their roster with eight transfers and a four-player signing class with a five-star prospect and the son of a NBA champion. Among the 14 players at the first practice was Cameron Carr, the former Tennessee guard who transferred to Baylor in the middle of last season long after that team photo session.

One of the former Bears was guard Robert Wright, who averaged 11.5 points and 4.2 assists a game as a freshman last season and had reportedly agreed to a lucrative NIL deal to stay before transferring to BYU for an even bigger package.

“You know people are going to leave. Rob, obviously, was someone we had an agreement with. When you make an agreement, you think you’re done,” Drew said, without getting into any specifics. “Obviously that was a surprise to us, but again, the staff did a great job of putting together a roster and team. That’s part of, hopefully, the House settlement, where you get to a point where you know who’s on your team and when they’re locked in, they’re locked in.”

The eight incoming transfers have more than 500 of games played combined, including guards Dan Skillings, who played 100 games over three years for Cincinnati, and JJ White, who started 75 of 99 games at Omaha over the same period. Juslin Bodo Bodo is a 7-foot post from Cameroon, started all 71 of his games for NCAA Tournament team High Point the past two seasons. Obi Agbim, a 6-3 guard, was the Mountain West newcomer of the year after averaging 17.6 points and 3.4 assists in 29 games last season for Wyoming.

Five-star prospect Tounde Yessoufou, a small forward from St. Joseph High School in California, leads the signing class that also includes Andre Iguodala II, whose father was a four-time champion over 19 NBA seasons with four teams; Italian forward Maikcol Perez and big man May Soyoye.

Baylor, Gonzaga and Houston are the only teams to win at least one game in each of the past six NCAA Tournaments, though the Bears have lost in the second round the past four years since their national championship in 2021.

Drew and his staff will get an early look at the new squad with Baylor representing the United States at the World University Games next month in Germany.

“Any year you get a foreign tour, it’s huge. … Since we’re returning 0.0 (percent of our) scoring, this give us all an opportunity,” Drew said. “The games will be good for those that can play in it. But the practices will be great for everyone. And then, the one thing everybody leaves out is you do these team-bonding activities. There’s nothing better than being overseas, that really brings you together a lot more than when you have all the distractions you do in the United States.”

___

AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball




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