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ACC commissioner Jim Phillips feels good about the league’s newfound stability after chaos

By MARK LONG AMELIA ISLAND, Fla. (AP) — The Atlantic Coast Conference is entering a period of stability. How long it lasts is anyone’s guess. Not even commissioner Jim Phillips knows for sure. “I still live one day at a time,” Phillips quipped. The ACC wrapped up its spring meetings Wednesday at the Ritz-Carlton in […]

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By MARK LONG

AMELIA ISLAND, Fla. (AP) — The Atlantic Coast Conference is entering a period of stability.

How long it lasts is anyone’s guess. Not even commissioner Jim Phillips knows for sure.

“I still live one day at a time,” Phillips quipped.

The ACC wrapped up its spring meetings Wednesday at the Ritz-Carlton in Amelia Island, with athletic directors and coaches having spent three days discussing wide-ranging issues affecting football and basketball.

The event came amid the backdrop of the pending $2.8 billion NCAA settlement, which would allow schools to share up to $20.5 million annually directly with their athletes.

The ACC spent the past two years tracking that legal battle while also wading through contentious litigation from two of its top member schools, Clemson and Florida State.

The Tigers and Seminoles approved a settlement in March that changed the league’s revenue-distribution model to benefit schools with marquee football brands. Both would presumably fall into that category.

Although the 2030-31 season looms as a potential spot for more changes to the college football landscape, the revised deal should fortify a league that looked to be on the verge of collapse while falling further behind the Southeastern Conference and the Big Ten.

“I just think you got to settle down,” Phillips said, noting he envisions four or five years of stability ahead. “And I think college athletics needs it to settle down, not just the ACC. I think we’ve positioned ourselves for that, and that’s a good thing. It just is.

“Chaos and the constant wondering of what’s happening here or there, I just think that distracts from the business at hand. But I feel good about where we’re at.”

The league’s revised revenue-distribution model incorporates TV viewership as a way for the league’s top programs to generate more money.

Florida State, for example, expects roughly $18 million extra annually from the tweaked structure. Those schools outside the top tier could see a decline of about $7 million a year.

“We’re really excited that this is now put behind us,” FSU athletic director Michael Alford said. “We have a path going forward. We have a path to really look at how we control the conference together, how we expand on the great brands that are in this conference and really promote the ACC and especially ACC football moving forward and give it its day in the sun.”

Presidential help ahead?

Even though ACC schools are bracing for the NCAA settlement and how it will change their business model, Phillips believes President Donald Trump’s proposed commission on collegiate athletics could help.

“We have not been able to get this thing into the end zone, so to speak,” Phillips said. “If the President feels that a commission could potentially help, I’m all for it.”

The proposed commission would be co-chaired by former Alabama coach Nick Saban and current Texas Tech board of regents chairman Cody Campbell.

“I think it’s well-intended,” Phillips said. “I do feel that the time is right based on all the work that’s previously been done and a supportive administration that’s in there. So I’m hopeful that that can be a positive to an end result that gets us a standardized law across the country with NIL.”

NCAA president Charlie Baker spoke at the ACC meetings Monday and said he was “up for anything” if it helped formalize NIL laws that differ from state to state.

“I think it speaks to the fact that everybody is paying a lot of attention right now to what’s going on in college sports,” Baker said. “I’m up for anything that can help us get somewhere.”

Future of the CFP

While power four conferences — the ACC, the Big Ten, Big 12 and the SEC — continue to negotiate the future of the College Football Playoff beginning in 2026, Phillips declined to reveal specifics regarding the league’s stance on automatic qualifiers.

“I remain steadfast about fairness in the system and access,” he said. “Out of respect for my colleagues, I want to hold off on commenting about AQs and specific models.”

The 16-team playoff model that has been widely discussed would grant four automatic berths to the Big Ten, four to the SEC, two to the ACC and two to the Big 12. That would leave four bids, with as many as three of those going to at-large teams and the other to the highest-ranked team from the Group of Six.

The ACC, according to several coaches, wants three guaranteed spots.

“You start to wonder if we are going to have an invitational,” SMU coach Rhett Lashlee said. “Every year, one league may be better than the other, and it can change to some degree.

“To say we’re going to pick teams based on what’s happened the last 15 years, especially in an environment where we have more and more parity with the way the rules are, I think it’s a slippery slope.”

___

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Ed Graney

LAS VEGAS — Bill Paulos is happy there will be more oversight, that the House vs. NCAA settlement demands more scrutiny of name, image and likeness deals within college athletics. That a centralized clearinghouse will be in charge of regulating any NIL transactions. × This page requires Javascript. Javascript is required for you to be […]

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Ed Graney

LAS VEGAS — Bill Paulos is happy there will be more oversight, that the House vs. NCAA settlement demands more scrutiny of name, image and likeness deals within college athletics.

That a centralized clearinghouse will be in charge of regulating any NIL transactions.

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Ed Graney

LAS VEGAS — Bill Paulos is happy there will be more oversight, that the House vs. NCAA settlement demands more scrutiny of name, image and likeness deals within college athletics. That a centralized clearinghouse will be in charge of regulating any NIL transactions. × This page requires Javascript. Javascript is required for you to be […]

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Ed Graney

LAS VEGAS — Bill Paulos is happy there will be more oversight, that the House vs. NCAA settlement demands more scrutiny of name, image and likeness deals within college athletics.

That a centralized clearinghouse will be in charge of regulating any NIL transactions.

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Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.

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Wisconsin accuses Miami of tampering, sports law expert weighs in

article MILWAUKEE – The University of Wisconsin filed a lawsuit, accusing the University of Miami of tampering with a football player. Now, they’re taking their evidence to court in a case that could set precedent. Sports law expert Local perspective: Matt Mitten is the executive director of the National Sports Law Institute at Marquette University. […]

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The University of Wisconsin filed a lawsuit, accusing the University of Miami of tampering with a football player. Now, they’re taking their evidence to court in a case that could set precedent.

Sports law expert

Local perspective:

Matt Mitten is the executive director of the National Sports Law Institute at Marquette University. He said the case is one the entire college sports world will be watching.

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“I think the university wants to establish a legal precedent,” he said. “A deal is a deal, and that’s basically what the University of Wisconsin is saying: ‘We had a deal with our athlete.'”

The backstory:

The Badgers saw the football player as a rising star and a pillar to build around. The facts of the lawsuit align with that player being Xavier Lucas.

The complaint, filed in Dane County court Friday, said the Badgers offered Lucas one of the largest name, image and likeness deals of any Wisconsin student-athlete to secure his commitment for two years.

Wisconsin said Lucas “enthusiastically” signed the deal on Dec. 2. But when he returned home to Florida for winter break, Wisconsin said he sent them a “sudden and unexpected request” to transfer. The university declined, citing the NIL contracts.

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Wisconsin said a family member told them a University of Miami coach and a “prominent alumnus” visited Lucas, which would have violated the NCAA’s tampering rules because Lucas was not yet in the transfer portal. 

Lucas announced his commitment to Miami a month later.

What they’re saying:

In a statement to FOX6 News, the University of Wisconsin said it reluctantly brought the case but did so to “maintain a level playing field.” The University of Miami did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The Source: FOX6 News obtained and reviewed the lawsuit filed in Dane County court, and interviewed Mitten, for this report.

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College football magazine insanely predicts Tennessee football to finish 11th in SEC

Bulletin board material has hit the shelves for the Tennessee football locker room as Josh Heupel prepares for his fifth season on Rocky Top.  Lindy’s 2025 National College Football Magazine has shared its predictions for the SEC this year, and the Vols are predicted to finish in the bottom half.  Tennessee has been predicted to […]

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Bulletin board material has hit the shelves for the Tennessee football locker room as Josh Heupel prepares for his fifth season on Rocky Top. 

Lindy’s 2025 National College Football Magazine has shared its predictions for the SEC this year, and the Vols are predicted to finish in the bottom half. 

Tennessee has been predicted to finish No. 11 in the SEC this year after losing former five-star quarterback Nico Iamaleava to UCLA in the transfer portal. As a result, the Vols signed UCLA quarterback Joey Aguilar to replace Nico in the QB room. 

It’s unclear who will be the Vols’ starting quarterback this year, which could be why Lindy’s magazine isn’t high on Tennessee. Whether it be Aguilar, Jake Merklinger, or freshman George MacIntyre, Tennessee has the potential to be just as good as last year. 

The loss of Nico has forced people to move Tennessee down the SEC leaderboard this season. Based on Tennessee’s schedule alone, that likely won’t be reality as the Vols have a favorable schedule this season. 

SEC Football Unfiltered host Blake Toppmeyer also credited the drop to Nico’s loss but referred to it as more of a knee-jerk reaction rather than a reasonable prediction. 

“This feels like a knee-jerk, half-baked reaction to Iamaleava’s transfer,” Toppmeyer said. Tennessee’s ceiling altered when Iamaleava spurned the Vols in mid-April. But, I’m unconvinced the quarterback switch changed Tennessee’s floor much. Heupel’s teams are very tough at Neyland Stadium, buoying the Vols’ chances in an important swing game at home against what should be an improved Oklahoma team. Tennessee ought to win four or five SEC games. It’s tough to imagine that not being good enough to finish in the top 10 of the SEC standings.”

Lindy’s predicts Texas as the top team in the SEC this year. That is the least surprising prediction, as they are jumping on the Longhorns bandwagon this year. Texas is followed by No. 2 LSU, No. 3 Alabama, No. 4 Georgia, and No. 5 Oklahoma. 

As for Tennessee’s landing spot at No. 11, there are only five teams behind the Vols, and they will play four of them this season. Texas A&M is behind the Vols at No. 12, followed by No. 13 Arkansas, No. 14 Vanderbilt, No. 15 Kentucky, and No. 16 Mississippi State.

Between Arkansas, Kentucky, Mississippi State, and Vanderbilt, the Vols should be looking at at least three wins. Add at least three wins between ETSU, New Mexico State, Syracuse, and UAB, and Tennessee is sitting at a minimum of six wins before the season kicks off. 

Tennessee kicks off its season in Atlanta this year, with a matchup against Syracuse in the Chick-fil-A Kick-Off. This will be their first test against a Power Four opponent and could set the tone for the rest of the season. 



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UA infielder entering portal

Arkansas infielder entering portal FAYETTEVILLE — University of Arkansas infielder Gabe Fraser shared posts to his Instagram page Friday night that stated… 1

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UA infielder entering portal

Arkansas infielder

entering portal

FAYETTEVILLE — University of Arkansas infielder Gabe Fraser shared posts to his Instagram page Friday night that stated…

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Former Louisville QB Tyler Shough presses Saints with bold contract demand

Former Louisville football star Tyler Shough has been throwing darts all off-season for the New Orleans Saints. The Saints drafted the former star at Louisville with the eighth pick in the second round, and the No. 40 overall pick in the NFL Draft. Shough is emerging as many experts’ favorite quarterback from this draft. The […]

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Former Louisville QB Tyler Shough presses Saints with bold contract demand

Former Louisville football star Tyler Shough has been throwing darts all off-season for the New Orleans Saints. The Saints drafted the former star at Louisville with the eighth pick in the second round, and the No. 40 overall pick in the NFL Draft.

Shough is emerging as many experts’ favorite quarterback from this draft. The former Cardinal’s offseason tape has already left experts speechless, as many are left leaving practice saying ‘Oh my God.’

Well, Shough is now trending in the news with the Saints, as he has yet to sign his contract and is now demanding a guaranteed deal from the Team.

Related: Tyler Shough favorite to replace Derek Carr after multiple ‘Oh My God’ moments

Former Louisville QB Tyler Shough presses Saints with bold contract demand

While this might seem like a big ask from the 25-year-old rookie, it is actually becoming normal for second-round players to ask for this. Just 36 players who were drafted have not yet signed their contracts, and 30 of those players are from the second round, Shough included.

Shough is expected to start for the Saints next season after Derek Carr retired, making his ask for a guaranteed contract respectable. Joel Corry of CBS Sports reported that Shough is ‘insisting’ on a fully guaranteed contract.

“The second-round signings have come to a grinding halt because of 40th overall pick Tyler Shough, who was the eighth player selected in the round. According to sources, Shough is insisting on a fully guaranteed contract since he is expecting to be the New Orleans Saints’ starting quarterback for the 2025 regular-season opener with Derek Carr recently retiring.”

Joel Corry

The former Cardinal is being smart and trying to get his money’s worth, especially if he is starting next season. Shough has shown nothing but promise in OTAs this offseason and has the full potential to lead the Saints and beat Spencer Rattler for the starting job.

The Saints’ official training camp starts July 22, and all players are expected to be there. Louisville and Saints fans will keep an eye out on Shough’s holdout and just how serious he is.

Related: Vince Marrow’s fiery message to Louisville Football was a complete home run

For all the latest on Louisville football’s offseason and recruiting, stay tuned.

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