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Women's Rowing Set to Compete in WCC Championships on Friday and Saturday

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SPOKANE, Wash. —  The Gonzaga women’s rowing team heads to the West Coast Conference Championships to defend their title this Friday and Saturday, May 16-17. The race takes place on Lake Natoma in Sacramento, Calif.

The Zags have historically been dominant at the championships, winning the last nine championships and 22 in program history. The team was picked to finish second in the conference in the preseason coaches polls, only behind nationally ranked Oregon State. 

This year will feature new schools in the competition including Oregon State and Washington State. The whole field also includes Creighton, Portland, Sacramento State, Saint Mary’s, San Diego and Santa Clara.

This championship is also different because the races take place over a course of two days instead of the usual one. On Friday, races begin at 8:30 a.m. with the first head of the 2V4 races. The day concludes at 10:15 a.m. with the second heat of the 1V8 boats.

The second day starts at 8 a.m. with the 2V4 Petite Final. The last race of the day is the 1V8 Grand Final at 9: 45 a.m. 

The live stream of the races on Saturday can be found on ESPN+ (LINK). Full results can also be found HERE.

LINEUPS
1V Eight 
Cox: Lula Macey
Stroke: Katie Sierhuis
7: Isabella Barstow
6: Amanda Triebensee
5: Edie Benson
4: Molly Hess
3: Camille Ruhlin-Hicks
2: Cassidy Parr
Bow: Ella Beck

2V Eight
Cox: Ava Beekman
Stroke: Marjane Rivat
7: Katie Hill
6: Sam Sabin
5: Leah Manzo-McCottry
4: Maddie Reed
3: Chloe Breznikar
2: Jenna Kleckler 
Bow: Ines Marquez

I Four
Cox: G Consiglio
Stroke: Kat Ward
3: Hazel Gaston
2: Rory Taylor
Bow: Kana Barlag

II Four
Cox: KD Ramirez
Stroke: Ella Bolt
3: Isabella Romain
2: Grace Hare
Bow: Lia Brackney

III Four
Cox: Maddie McPhillips
Stroke: Lauren Royce
3: Jenna Gilberg
2: Lucy Coyle
Bow: Greta Kramer 

LAST TIME AT WCC CHAMPIONSHIPS (May 18, 2024)
LAKE NATOMA, Calif. – For the ninth straight season and 22nd time overall, the Gonzaga women’s rowing team are West Coast Conference Champions.
 
The Bulldogs placed first in almost every race and finished the day with 40 team points. San Diego took second with 38 points.

“Really proud of this team as people and as racers,” head coach Andrew Derrick said. “Top to bottom they did a great job representing our program. I know the 2v8 is a little upset with their performance, but that’s just because of the standard they expect of themselves, we are super proud of all of them. It’s a really fun group and looking forward to taking them to Cincinnati to represent Gonzaga and all the WCC programs.”

The first race of the day was the 2V4 competition, where Gonzaga had two boats competing. The A boat took first with a time of 7:48.260, dominating the race from start to finish. The B boat for the Zags placed second with a time of 8:00.709, and also held that spot for the whole race.

The 1V4 race was next up where the Zags also placed first with a time of 7:30.180. The Bulldogs started off a couple seats ahead of San Diego and pulled ahead and never looked back, defeating USD by 26 seconds.

“It was awesome to see the depth of our program today,” senior Mollie Monson said. “To see our fours come out so strong is a testament to the work we’ve put in this whole season to develop speed in to the bottom half of our team. We’re excited about how today turned out but the jobs not finished and we look forward to building off of this experience as we look towards NCAAs next week.”

In the third race of the day, the 2V8 boat placed second with a time of 6:52.390, right behind San Diego’s first-place finish of 6:51.390. The Zags and USD battled down the stretch and had a photo finish as the two boats were neck-and-neck down the whole racecourse and especially in the last 500 meters.

The final race of the day was the 1V8 boat, where Gonzaga dominated with a first-place finish of 6:38.800, which was 12 seconds ahead of second-place San Diego. Gonzaga started the race out front and really pulled ahead to an open water race as they did not let up at any point during the competition.

“The conference win today is a product of the work of our amazing coaching staff and teammates,” Hannah Cooney said. “Our team’s tradition of excellence is built every day as we push each other to be better. I cannot wait to see the team continue to grow over the coming years!”

After the races, the conference handed out conference honors with Hannah CooneyAmanda TriebenseeCamille Ruhlin-Hicks and Ella Beck being All-WCC. Lula Macey won the coxswain of the year and Hannah Cooney won rower of the year. Andrew Derrick was also tabbed as coach of the year for the second-straight season.

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PRIMER: NCAA Volleyball Championship Second Round

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MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. – No. 23 Iowa State (23-7, 12-6 Big 12) continues its 18th NCAA Championships appearance as the No. 5 seed advancing to the second round to meet No. 4-seed Minnesota.

Saturday, Dec. 6, 7 p.m., vs. No. 17 Minnesota (23-9, 12-8 Big Ten)

Maturi Pavilion, Minneapolis, Minn.

Tickets | Live Stats | ESPN+ | Media Center | Notes

By the Numbers

1 – Morgan Brandt leads all active Big 12 players with 3,773 career assists. The total ranks fourth in program history.

3 – Christy Johnson-Lynch ranks No. 3 all time in Big 12 history with 219 league victories.

3 – ISU ends regular season as the Big 12 leader in three categories: kills (14.14 per set), assists (13.03 per set) and digs (15.22 per set). The kill and assist average rank top 20 nationally.

5 – Iowa State placed five on All-Big 12 teams and took home Big 12 Libero and Setter of the Year.

10 – Maya Duckworth now ranks 10th in Iowa State history with 1,072 kills. Duckworth became the 12th in ISU history to join the 1,000-kill club.

12 – Iowa State has 12 Big 12 wins for the first time since 2012.

The 2025 Cyclones

ISU advanced with a first-round win over St. Thomas. Rachel Van Gorp had 33 digs, the second-most in a tournament match by a Cyclone and most since 2012. ISU served 12 aces led by Nayeli Ti’a with five, tying the ISU tournament record. Van Gorp served four, now the third-highest tournament ace total.

Iowa State ended regular season at 22-7 and 12-6 in Big 12 play to finish tied for third after being picking ninth in preseason. ISU has the most regular season wins since 2011, while the last time ISU was ranked this late in the season was in 2017.

Rachel Van Gorp is the unanimous Big 12 Libero of the Year, and Morgan Brandt earned Big 12 Setter of the Year while both were placed on All-Big 12 First Team. Tierney Jackson was named All-Big 12 Second team, while true freshmen Alea Goolsby and Reagan Hanfelt were selected for the All-Rookie Team.



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Former NASCAR driver Michael Annett dies at 39

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Former NASCAR driver Michael Annett has died. He was 39.

JR Motorsports announced Annett’s death in a social media post Friday evening with no other details. Annett drove for the team in the Xfinity Series for five seasons from 2017-21.

Annett made over 100 starts in NASCAR’s Cup Series and over 300 starts in NASCAR’s second-tier Xfinity Series. Annett’s lone Xfinity Series win came in 2019, when he won the season-opening race at Daytona. He went on to have five more top-five finishes and finished ninth in the points standings that season.

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His best season in the Xfinity Series came in 2012 when he drove for Richard Petty Motorsports. Annett had six top-five finishes and 17 top-10 finishes and finished fifth in the points standings.

At JR Motorsports, he never finished outside the top 15 in the points standings.

Annett competed in 106 Cup Series races over the 2014, 2015 and 2016 seasons. He drove for underfunded teams Tommy Baldwin Racing and HScott Racing during his time at NASCAR’s top level and had just six top-20 finishes in his Cup Series career. His best finish came in 2015 when he was 13th at the Daytona 500.

Annett retired after the 2021 season after he dealt with a stress fracture in his right leg for much of the season. He missed seven races that year. He also missed races during the 2013 season after he suffered a fractured and dislocated sternum in a crash at Daytona when his car slammed head-on into the wall.



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2025 NCAA volleyball live updates: Bracket, schedule, highlights

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Updated Dec. 6, 2025, 9:04 p.m. ET



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Michael Annett, former NASCAR driver, dies at 39

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FILE – Michael Annett, driver of the #1 Pilot Flying J Chevrolet, waits on the grid prior to the NASCAR Xfinity Series Kansas Lottery 300 at Kansas Speedway on October 23, 2021 in Kansas City, Kansas. (Photo by Sean Gardner/Getty Images)

Michael Annett, a former NASCAR driver and winner in the Xfinity Series, has died at 39.

JR Motorsports, a team Annett drove for, confirmed his death Friday in a social media post.

Michael Annett cause of death 

What we know:

Annett’s death was announced Friday, but no details have been released. Annett was a native of Des Moines, Iowa.

What we don’t know:

It’s unclear when and how he died, though former NASCAR driver Brad Keselowski said he’s “glad he is no longer suffering.”

What they’re saying:

“NASCAR is deeply saddened to learn of the passing of former NASCAR driver Michael Annett,” NASCAR said in a statement. “Michael was a respected competitor whose determination, professionalism, and positive spirit were felt by everyone in the garage. Throughout his career, he represented our sport with integrity and the passion of a true racer. NASCAR extends its condolences to Michael’s family and many friends.”

“Our thoughts and prayers are with the entire Annett family with the passing of our friend Michael Annett,” JR Motorsports shared on social media via X. “Michael was a key member of JRM from 2017 until he retired in 2021 and was an important part in turning us into the four-car organization we remain today.”

Michael Annett’s career

The backstory:

According to NASCAR, Annett made 436 combined starts in NASCAR’s three national touring series. He was most prominent in the Xfinity Series with 321 starts.

In 2019, Annett won the series’ season-opening race at Daytona International Speedway. It was his only national-level win. 

Annett was also a two-time winner in the ARCA Menards Series, once in Talladega and once in Daytona.

Annett debuted in the Xfinity Series in 2008, then went full-time in 2009. He drove for Germain Racing, Rusty Wallace Racing, Richard Petty Motorsports, Turner Scott Motorsports and JR Motorsports, which is co-owned by Dale Earnhardt Jr.

He stepped away from racing after the 2021 season due to a stress fracture in his leg.

The Source: This report includes information and comments from NASCAR, JR Motorsports and NASCAR driver Brad Keselowski.

NASCAR



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Michael Jordan, Heather Gibbs headline Friday in NASCAR trial

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Michael Jordan took the stand on Friday afternoon in the Western District of North Carolina to close out the first week of the 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports v NASCAR antitrust lawsuit trial to much fanfare.

Jordan, who co-owns 23XI Racing with Cup Series driver Denny Hamlin and longtime business associate Curtis Polk, are suing NASCAR and CEO Jim France and the 15-month process reached the trial phase this week.

As a refresher, the court has determined that NASCAR is a monopsony, or in layman’s terms, a buyer’s monopoly. The Sanctioning Body is the only purchaser of premier Stock Car racing teams in the market and the question for the jury is whether or not that market power was used to hurt competition and depress the earnings of race teams during the charter extension negotiation period.

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Basically, 23XI and Front Row allege that they would have earned more revenue from NASCAR if not for anticompetitive behavior from France that also took on the form of preventing competition from emerging in the marketplace.

Ultimately, 13 of 15 teams in the Cup Series signed the charter extension after over two years of contentious negotiating but the team owned by Hamlin and Jordan did not, alongside FRM owner Bob Jenkins.

“Someone had to step forward to challenge NASCAR,” Jordan said during his time on the stand.

Much of his one hour made the case that NASCAR should be operated more like the National Basketball Association, where he made his claim to fame, in which the league and teams split revenue closer to 50 percent but also share growth responsibilities more evenly.

“If you share responsibility, the healthiness of the sport can grow,” Jordan said. “It needed to be looked at from a whole different perspective. That’s why we’re here.”

The rebuttal from NASCAR, which was made in court on Friday from defense attorney Lawrence Buterman, is that NASCAR is privately-owned by the France family and is not a stick-and-ball league in which the teams effectively own the sport.

Jordan told Buterman that such privately owned sports ventures are ‘rarely successful.’

And yet, Jordan bought into Hamlin’s vision, and even put up the most money to launch what was originally called ‘Michael Jordan Motorsports with Denny Hamlin.’ He is the majority owner and has put $35 to $40 million into the race team.

He did so despite Polk, who has managed many of his affairs for 35 years, telling Jordan that NASCAR was ‘risky to (his) brand and image’ and risked the loss of tens of millions of dollars ‘but you want to do it so I’m doing my best to manage it.’

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To wit, Jordan is a professed life long NASCAR fan and was entirely bought-in to Hamlin’s vision that the NASCAR team could at least make a projected $900,000 profit.

Has the team made a reasonable profit?

“Yes.”

Despite the profits, which Jordan claims is a matter of how professionally run the team is while having his star power to lean on, he doesn’t think the charter system’s current construction is equitable. Jordan said he entered NASCAR with optimistic eyes but found the ‘nature of the business to be unfair’ as he spent more time understanding its economic model.

So then, why did Jordan continue to purchase these charters at continually increasing prices? The third charter cost $28 million after the second cost 13.5 and the initial one cost $4.7 million.  

“There was a discussion between me and Denny about being successful… people who know me know I like to win and I will pursue anything to win and getting a third charter improves our chance to win the championship.”

Jordan said he was ‘very invested’ in the sport and there were so few charters available and struck while the opportunity persisted itself … even amidst the contentious charter negotiations they ultimately didn’t sign.

Even in this moment, where his party has sued NASCAR, Jordan believes a refined business model that is an equal partnership would benefit all involved.

“The thing I’m hoping for is you create more of a partnership between two entities,” Jordan said. “If that’s the case, it becomes a more valuable business. If you can ever compromise on the things that matter, you can grow your business.”

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As part of the trial, and the cross examination with Buterman, NASCAR got opportunities to continue to build their case as well.

Throughout the week, NASCAR has painted Polk as an outsider who came into NASCAR with Jordan and Hamlin with no other interest beyond eventually getting to the point to where 23XI Racing would sue the Sanctioning Body.

It produced discovered documents where Polk expressed that he found races ‘boring as shit’ and painful to watch.’ As Buterman told the jury through his cross-examination, Jordan and Hamlin genuinely love racing but Polk doesn’t.

Therefore, he doesn’t view it in any other way beyond a business opportunity. Buterman asked Jordan if his longtime manager enjoyed racing like the other partners do.

“Obviously not,” Jordan said.

Buterman presented evidence that showed a text where Polk told Jordan ‘our plan is to be a pest and have a mosquito bite every week,’ during charter negotiations with NASCAR. His plan was to leak financial proposals to the media.

Jordan’s response?
(Thumbs up emoji)

At one point in negotiations, Jordan asked Polk ‘how is it going,’ and Polk said 8-9 smaller teams sent a proposal for a permanent charter system to NASCAR that asked for $11 million per chartered car. It’s 23XI and Front Row’s position that teams need $20 million per and only ended up getting $12.5 million in the 2025 agreement.

Polk said he wanted to have a meeting with them to ‘educate them on why that wouldn’t be acceptable to the teams.’

Jordan’s response?
(Thumbs up emoji)

Polk said eventually he was going to send a different letter to NASCAR with ‘alternative evergreen language.’

There was a moment of levity between Jordan and Buterman before the session ended.

Buterman: “Thank you for your time and thank you for making my nine year old think I’m cool.”
Jordan, to Buterman, who normally wears sneakers with his suit: “You’re not wearing your Jordans today.”
Buterman: “I’m not.”

Heather Gibbs

While Jordan was the headline witness, Heather Gibbs was arguably the most impactful of the day.  The daughter-in-law of team founder Coach Joe Gibbs preceded ‘Air Jordan’ the hour prior.

While on the stand, she spoke to her history in the sport, one in which she met the son of Joe … Coy …  and fell in love with him and their favorite sport. This was also the first time she had spoken publicly about the November 2022 death of Coy, in which ‘my husband didn’t wake up,’ the morning after their son Ty won the Xfinity Series championship at Phoenix Raceway.

Since then, Heather has been more involved with the day-to-day operations of Joe Gibbs Racing and in the charter negotiations. In this time, she said she fully understand now that the financial realities of the Cup Series are “very challenging for the teams,” especially for a family that has no other business to subsidize their losses.

Heather wrote a fiery letter to NASCAR leadership in response to league commissioner Steve Phelps’ assertion that team spending was reckless. She said the comment bothered her, and while she ultimately believed NASCAR needed a different economic model, heaped praise and respect for the France family.

 

Upon being given the deadline to sign the charters, one that several high-level team people continue to call a ‘gun to the head’ proposition because that’s what NASCAR leadership seemed to agree that it was in their own discovered words, Joe Gibbs told France ‘don’t do this to us.’

Heather said the final draft came in at 5 p.m. on September 6 and they were given until 6 p.m. to sign it, but independent of matters that they disagreed over, the document was also riddled with grammatical and syntax issues. NASCAR said they would fix these issues with side letters. Heather said the agreement didn’t guarantee any broadcast revenue in the seven-year extension period beyond the first seven years.

When Heather called France, she said his response to their concerns was ‘I’m done with the conversation’ and ‘If I wake up and I have 20 charters, I have 20 charters.’

So why did she ultimately sign it?

Heather said that in real time, she only could think of Coy and JD’s legacy, and that JGR not signing the charters and the risk of losing any kind of agreement was too much to bear.

In cross examination, Heather was asked about this continued issue of charter permanency, making the charters permanent rather than something that has to be negotiated every year, closer to a stick-and-ball league franchise.

She said she used ‘auto-renewal with terms’ to NASCAR as opposed to ‘evergreen’ or ‘permanent’ because there was something about the word ‘permanent’ that bothered Jim.

NASCAR team types each say, despite pushback from NASCAR, that permanent charters doesn’t mean permanent terms. The teams just wanted the asset to be permanent because that would increase it respective enterprise values.  

O’Donnell wraps up

All told, between the past two days, NASCAR president Steve O’Donnell spent just short of five hours on the stand between examination, cross examination and re-examination, including the first two hours of Friday morning.

After a Thursday that was spent on NASCAR’s reaction to SRX, and the possibility that it or the teams could launch a competitor to the Sanctioning Body, O’Donnell and his team’s lead lawyer (Chris Yates) spent considerable time addressing that topic. 

O’Donnell said there are over 1,000 tracks in the United States that a potential competitor could utilize. He says he has visited at least 125 of them. Of all the tracks in the country, only 30 have NASCAR sanctioned exclusivity clauses attached to them.

Examples provided included Hickory Motor Speedway in North Carolina, South Boston Speedway in Virginia, Barber Motorsports Park in Alabama, Road American in Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin, Pikes Peak International in Colorado and Kern County Raceway in Bakersfield California.

O’Donnell said such a series could partner with IndyCar and run on a street course.

Read Also:

O’Donnell said his concerns about SRX’s emergence was a priority because he says he received a phone call from NBC Sports executive Sam Flood that basically questioned the viability of their rights agreement when CBS and then ESPN was getting a NASCAR variant.

O’Donnell said seeing Chase Elliott driving a NAPA sponsored car in a SRX race was alarming.

O’Donnell also claimed, falsely, that SRX is ‘coming back,’ thus NASCAR didn’t ultimately damage it. Instead, GMS Race Cars bought the physical assets from co-founder Ray Evernham for track day purposes but not the series’ intellectual property.

Motorsport confirmed with multiple individuals associated with SRX that there is indeed no comeback in the works.

While the 23XI and Front Row side have spent the week painting the non-compete clauses as anticompetitive, NASCAR and O’Donnell have used their time to say it was just the byproduct of negotiations.

NASCAR got ‘good faith’ commitments from the teams, who in turn received guaranteed revenue and guarantee starting spots.

“It was about being all in together, working towards the best broadcast deal,” O’Donnell said.

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A key tenet of NASCAR’s defense is that the Sanctioning Body cannot reasonably be acting anticompetitively because charter payouts have increased from one term to the next, and enterprise value for a charter on the open market has increased from $1 million in 2016 to $45 million this past season.

“It shows that people believe in the sport,” O’Donnell said. “It’s been a challenge with the litigation but despite that, charter value has increased and private equity has increased the value of charters.”

That’s private equity partnership opportunities that were not permitted under the previous agreement but now permitted.

23XI and Front Row say their charters would be worth multiple times more, over $100,000 on the open market, if they were permanent, however.

O’Donnell said ‘in our minds, the charters were not originally put together to be permanent,’ citing schedule and car evolutions.

There was also a lot of talk with O’Donnell about a cost cap and cost floor, which was proposed as part of the 2025 charter negotiations but never came to fruition. NASCAR generally wants a cost cap to reel in the ‘reckless spending’ that is a well-documented part of its bargaining position with the race teams.

O’Donnell said it’s a 50/50 issue when talking to teams about a cost cap. He says that some teams that ‘are dominating’ may ‘not be enthusiastic’ citing Penske, Gibbs and Hendrick but middle teams are ‘more receptive’ to the idea.

He said that Formula 1 team enterprise value increased higher due to a cost cap system.

A cost floor was also proposed, but O’Donnell said a handful of teams reported to him that they are already below the proposed number and it would be a challenge for them to spend more and be efficient.

So much talk this week has focused on what the teams called its ‘four pillars’ proposal, and that can be seen below.

O’Donnell said that asking for $720 million, which is again the $20 million per chartered entry data point, ‘shocked me’ because the previous rights agreement was only $800 million per year. He said giving that amount to the teams would leave nothing for the tracks and inhibit overall industry growth.

He said IndyCar teams get 25 percent of revenue and that’s $2-2.5 million per car.

In re-examination, Kessler says IndyCar’s TV deal is $8 million per entry, which is $20 million or more to teams.

Kessler: “I think that’s 700 percent of 8.”
O’Donnell: “Okay.”

Read Also:

O’Donnell also addressed Polk, the aforementioned business partner of Jordan, and said meeting with the 23XI Racing executive were ‘the most difficult meeting I’ve had with an individual in my 30 years in NASCAR.

Again, NASCAR has painted Polk as someone who intended from the start to intentionally disrupt the status quo with the goal of eventually bringing this lawsuit.

“Mr. Polk stuck to his messages,” O’Donnell said. “He did not have an appreciation for the sport. He was a businessman who said he could leave anytime. He threatened to kick me out of my own meeting … He wasn’t coming from a place of respect.”

Kessler seized on the ‘respect’ line in asking O’Donnell if NASCAR executives like Phelps have always been respectful of team owners, like Richard Childress.

This was, of course, a reference to discovered text messages between Phelps and Scott Prime where the former expressed repeated frustration with the owner of the legendary No. 3 car by calling him ‘a stupid redneck’ who ‘needs to be taken out back and flogged.’

That particular piece of evidence is barred from being used as an exhibit and NASCAR’s attorney’s, specifically Yates, objected to the question because the jury isn’t supposed to know about it an inflammatory reasons.

That is how O’Donnell’s lengthy time on the stand came to a close.

Notes from Judge Bell

Charles R. Jonas

Charles R. Jonas

Kenneth D. Bell, the district court judge overseeing this case since last November warned the NASCAR side that ‘growing the sport’ is not a valid defense. He also said it could be a self-admission.

“Growing the sport is another way of saying increasing the revenues of NASCAR,” Bell said.

He has also finally told the jury about the likelihood that this trial is seemingly going to go beyond its scheduled 10-days over two-weeks timeline.

After dismissing the jury on Thursday, Judge Bell told those in the room that both councils needed to speed things along because the jury was told two weeks and that it’s a burden on them.

“I don’t know that we’re going to finish next Friday,” Judge Bell told the jury. “That remains our goal. I am working to keep things moving.

“Everyone in this court room is paid to be here, some more than others, and while I recognize you all get a stipend, I acknowledge the burden this trial places on you and the court thanks your service.”

Bell thanked the jury for their attentiveness, and that he noticed that everyone locked in, and it was appreciated.

It seems more likely that the trial will end by December 15 or 16 as opposed to December 12.

 
 

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Georgia targets $390K from Damon Wilson II in landmark NIL dispute

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NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

The University of Georgia Athletic Association is taking legal action against one of the football team’s former star pass rushers. 

Georgia is asking for damages totaling $390,000 after defensive end Damon Wilson II elected to transfer to Missouri after the 2024 season. 

The department cited an NIL buyout clause in Wilson’s contract and requested that a judge compel the defensive end to enter arbitration to reach a settlement. The clause in Wilson’s former agreement effectively acts as a buyout fee for terminating early.

Damon Wilson II celebrates during a game

Missouri Tigers defensive end Damon Wilson II celebrates after recovering a fumble during the second half against the Alabama Crimson Tide at Faurot Field at Memorial Stadium Oct. 11, 2025, in Columbia, Mo.  (Jay Biggerstaff/Imagn Images)

Wilson was recently served a court summons, legal records show.

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After recording 3.5 sacks during his freshman and sophomore seasons at UGA, Wilson inked a new deal with Georgia’s Classic City Collective. In January, just two weeks after landing the new contract, Wilson made the switch to Missouri.

Wilson had nine sacks in his first regular season with the Tigers.

A view of Georgia Bulldogs helmets

Georgia Bulldogs helmets on the bench during the Georgia spring game at Sanford Stadium in Athens, Ga., April 12, 2025. (Dale Zanine/Imagn Images)

The formation of collectives has become more common at schools across the nation. Many collectives include liquidated damages clauses in their agreements with players to try to protect financial investments in athletes and discourage transfers.

Wilson reportedly received payouts totaling $30,000 under the terms of his latest deal with Georgia before he left Athens, Georgia. The athletic association argues Wilson owed the $390,000 sum within 30 days of his departure.

CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIP GAME PICKS, PREVIEW: WHAT TO EXPECT IN INDIANA-OSU, MORE

“When the University of Georgia Athletic Association enters binding agreements with student-athletes, we honor our commitments and expect student-athletes to do the same,” Georgia spokesperson Steven Drummond said in a statement to ESPN.

Wilson could not be reached directly for comment. Missouri-based attorneys Bogdan Susan and Jeff Jensen are representing Wilson. Susan argued that Wilson’s career decisions were never motivated by money.

Damon Wilson II looks on during a game

Damon Wilson II (8) of the Missouri Tigers against the Mississippi State Bulldogs at Faurot Field at Memorial Stadium in Columbia, Mo., Nov. 15, 2025. (Jeff Le/Getty Images)

“After all the facts come out, people will be shocked at how the University of Georgia treated a student-athlete,” Susan said in a statement.  “It has never been about the money for Damon. He just wants to play the game he loves and pursue his dream of playing in the NFL.”

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Georgia’s move marks one of the first times a school has publicly sought NIL damages from a former athlete over an alleged breach of contract. The dispute sets the table for potentially setting a precedent on whether liquidated damages clauses will act as an effective, defensible replacement for more traditional buyout fees.

However, it should be noted that Arkansas’ NIL collective did retain the services of an attorney to try to enforce a buyout clause in quarterback Madden Iamaleava’s deal. Iamaleava spent his freshman season with UCLA. Wide receiver Dazmin James also left Arkansas, prompting his former school to file a complaint.

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