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Bill Paulos of UNLV NIL collective Friends of UNILV discusses future | UNLV

The universe of name, image and likeness continues to alter college athletics at every turn. NIL has changed the game. It’s mostly an incentive by collectives to raise money for the purpose of enticing recruits to sign with a respective school. Some of these deals have reached astronomical levels, with the best of the best […]

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The universe of name, image and likeness continues to alter college athletics at every turn. NIL has changed the game.

It’s mostly an incentive by collectives to raise money for the purpose of enticing recruits to sign with a respective school.

Some of these deals have reached astronomical levels, with the best of the best athletes receiving millions of dollars.

But that might change if and when the House vs. NCAA antitrust case is decided, if schools are allowed a revenue-sharing system to compensate athletes directly.

It could also have important implications for the future of NIL. It could include a central clearinghouse to review and assess all NIL deals. But make no mistake, NIL in some form or fashion is here to stay.

And it could remain the same for years depending on the appeals certain to come with the House decision.

Friends of UNILV is the collective for the Rebels, the outside arm that raises money for the purpose of earning the interest of recruits who have UNLV on their list of prospective schools.

Bill Paulos leads the NIL efforts for UNLV. The Review-Journal recently chatted with Paulos about his role and that of NIL at the university.

RJ: What is the overall goal for NIL specific to UNLV?

Paulos: The goal of UNLV NIL is to get into a power conference like the Big 12. That’s the goal. If we want to do that, we need to act like a power conference school. That’s UNLV’s goal. That’s my goal. That’s everyone’s goal here.

But these power conferences need to know we can raise money for NIL, that we can compete at that level.

RJ: Is that plausible? What have you seen in your numbers to make you believe that level of resources can be raised?

Paulos: It is absolutely plausible. We’re having more success this year than we’ve ever had. Major companies in town are supporting us. And in order for us to get coaches of the stature of (Dan Mullen in football and Josh Pastner in basketball), we had to assure them we could raise NIL money so they could compete.

If you go out and hire a coach today, the first question isn’t necessarily how much money they’re going to make. It’s about how strong is your NIL.

RJ: How have you been selling your top programs to donors?

Paulos: Basically, it’s like this: You may not like what NIL is today, but we need to explain to everybody it’s going to morph into a much better situation. It’s giving back to the university through the athletic department.

We know in the 1980s and 1990s UNLV became UNLV because of Jerry Tarkanian and Runnin’ Rebel basketball. The last two years, when we had incredible national exposure with our football team, our registrations with the university went up 6 percent. That’s real money.

Should we get into a conference like the Big 12, we now get millions of more a year through television revenues, and Las Vegas gets a tremendous amount of exposure. That’s what we sell — it’s a major economic benefit to Las Vegas and UNLV.

RJ: What in your mind will change with NIL at UNLV should the House vs. NCAA settlement end with schools being permitted to provide direct financial payments to student-athletes?

Paulos: It’s not going to eradicate the use of outside funds and collectives like NIL in order to help the university raise money. It will just help schools monitor their payments to report outside NIL agreements. There will be more regulation when it comes to NIL deals. I believe you’re not going to see the $5 million quarterback for much longer.

RJ: You earlier said it was a goal to double the $1.5 million raised for basketball last season and to increase the $3 million for football. Will you make those numbers?

Paulos: We haven’t missed yet, and we don’t intend on missing this year. There is new wealth in Las Vegas, small companies that are doing very well. We’re getting more and more people interested in helping UNLV succeed.

You look at stories of (Power Four) conference teams, when their athletic departments became the front porch of their universities. They’ve all exceeded their wildest expectations, That’s our hope — 100 percent.

This is a passion for me and, quite frankly, those we sit down with and ask to donate. They’re doing it to get recognition for the university and to get us into a power conference, Which would mean so much to the city as a whole.

RJ: Has the NIL collective at UNLV gone the way you first imagined?

Paulos: It’s hard to believe, but this is our fifth year raising funds. We have doubled our fundraising almost every single year, and this year we’ll triple it. We give to all sports — any sport that signs up with the collective. We’ll help anybody. You tell me where the money goes. I don’t tell you.

We’re the most attractive person at the dance right now. If you want your athletic department to be successful and competitive and keep moving forward, there is no choice. You have to pay. The horse has left the barn. This is here to stay.

If you want something to happen like UNLV getting into a power conference, this is what you’re going to have to do.

Contact Ed Graney at egraney@reviewjournal.com. Follow @edgraney on X.



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Draft Notes: Latest Mocks, Murray-Boyles, Jakucionis, NIL Impact, Seniors, Team Needs

The latest ESPN mock draft has plenty of guards going in the lottery. Their experts, Jonathan Givony and Jeremy Woo, believe that eight guards and/or wings will go in the first 13 picks. After Cooper Flagg (Mavericks) and Dylan Harper (Spurs), the latest mock has guards V.J. Edgecombe (Sixers), Kon Knueppel (Hornets) and Jeremiah Fears […]

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The latest ESPN mock draft has plenty of guards going in the lottery. Their experts, Jonathan Givony and Jeremy Woo, believe that eight guards and/or wings will go in the first 13 picks.

After Cooper Flagg (Mavericks) and Dylan Harper (Spurs), the latest mock has guards V.J. Edgecombe (Sixers), Kon Knueppel (Hornets) and Jeremiah Fears (Jazz) rounding out the top five. Ace Bailey, formerly considered a top three pick, slips to the Wizards at No. 6. The Suns, who are acquiring the No.  10 pick from the Rockets, are projected to take South Carolina big man Collin Murray-Boyles.

Here’s more draft-related info:

  • In his latest mock draft, The Athletic’s Sam Vecenie believes that the Sixers trading down from the No. 3 slot remains a real possibility. The Hornets have also had discussions moving both up and down the board from the No. 4 spot, while Texas wing Tre Johnson could be a surprise selection in the top five. Johnson could go as high as No. 3.
  • Speaking of Murray-Boyles, he worked out for the Trail Blazers over the weekend, as did Illinois guard Kasparas Jakucionis, Aaron Fentress of The Oregonian tweets. ESPN ranks Murray-Boyles at No. 13 overall with Jakucionis at No. 10. Portland owns the No. 11 pick.
  • Just 32 non-international early entrants from colleges and other basketball teams or leagues and 14 international players remain in the draft, a dramatic dropoff from recent years. What’s the difference? NIL money has motivated most prospects to stay in college, unless they believe they’ll go in the first round, as Amanda Christovich of Front Office Sports details. “If you are not a guaranteed first-round pick, top-20, top-30 guy—unless you really do not want to play college basketball anymore, we are recommending and most of them are staying in school as long as they possibly can,” Michael Raymond, president and founder of Raymond Representation, told Christovich.
  • The draft is usually headed by one-and-dones and other underclassmen. However, there are more seasoned college players who will come off the board. Hoops Hype’s Cyro Asseo de Choch takes a look at the cream of the senior crop.
  • The Athletic’s Law Murray breaks down the biggest draft needs for each team, identifying the picks each of them hold.



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Which Nevada coaches have had the best post-Wolf Pack careers?

Former Nevada baseball coach Jay Johnson is a national champion again. Now at LSU, Johnson has won two national titles in the last three seasons, bringing the Tigers two crowns during his first four years on campus after being hired, by among others, Stephanie Rempe, who was at LSU at the time and now runs […]

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Former Nevada baseball coach Jay Johnson is a national champion again. Now at LSU, Johnson has won two national titles in the last three seasons, bringing the Tigers two crowns during his first four years on campus after being hired, by among others, Stephanie Rempe, who was at LSU at the time and now runs the Nevada athletic department as athletic director. We lead this week’s Monday Mailbag with a Johnson-focused question before hitting some other topics. Thanks, as always, for the inquiries.

Put Jay Johnson near the top of the list, but I have him No. 2 right now. Here’s the top 10.

1. Head football coach Buck Shaw (won 62 college games with five top-15 national finishes in 10 years post-Nevada while winning 90 more games in the AAFC/NFL, including the 1960 NFL Championship with the Eagles; he was the 49ers’ first head coach)

2. Head baseball coach Jay Johnson (two national titles; four College World Series in 10 years post-Nevada)

3. Assistant baseball coach John Savage (800-plus wins; four College World Series; one national title post-Nevada)

4. Assistant football coach Bobby Petrino (137 college wins, one NFL head job, one famous motorcycle crash and one neck brace post-Nevada)

5. Men’s basketball coach Eric Musselman (two Elite Eights, three Sweet 16s in six seasons post-Nevada)

6. Head football coach Ray “R.E.” Courtright (two nationals titles as Michigan’s men’s golf coach post-Nevada)

7. Swimming and diving coach Mike Shrader (nine Mountain West titles and 11 coach of the year honors in 18 seasons at San Diego State post-Nevada)

8. Football assistant coach John L. Smith (157 college wins with stints at Idaho, Utah State, Louisville, Michigan State, Arkansas, Fort Lewis and Kentucky State post-Nevada)

9. Men’s basketball coach Sonny Allen (most of Allen’s great career happened before he was Nevada’s coach, but he did go on to coach a WNBA team, the Sacramento Monarchs, post-Nevada)

10. Head football coach Jim Aiken (just 21-20 at Oregon post-Nevada, but that included a top-10 season and Cotton Bowl appearance in 1948)

Next would have been former Nevada track and field coach Curt Kraft, who led East Carolina to three conference titles in 19 seasons post-Nevada. Former Nevada baseball assistant Jay Uhlman has done a nice job at Tulane, leading that team to two NCAA Regionals in four years. And a special shoutout to Nevada football coach James Hopper, who was the Wolf Pack’s coach for one season in 1900 (4-2-1) and a year at Cal in 1904 (6-1-1) before turning to writing where he published 450 short stories and six novels as a influential writer in the first couple of decades of the 1900s.

Among head coaches to move on, the only one I know who would win a national title outside of Jay Johnson is former Nevada football coach Ray “R.E.” Courtright, who won two national titles as Michigan’s men’s golf coach.

As far as Dodgers vs. Padres, only two times was a batter intentionally hit in that series. And both times it was Shohei Ohtani. So, I don’t know why the Padres were so upset. They brought up the fact the Dodgers have hit Fernando Tatis Jr. six hits since he made his MLB debut. In the same time period, the Padres have hit Dodgers catcher Will Smith 11 times, Max Muncy nine times and Mookie Betts six times. Cry me a river, Padres. San Diego pitchers have hit 68 Dodgers batters to the Dodgers pitchers hitting 37 Padres batters since Tatis’ MLB debut. And the Dodgers have as many World Series titles (two) in the last five years as the Padres have NL West championships in the last 26 seasons. This is not a rivalry. The Padres just want to make it one. If it did come to blows, Joe Kelly would come out of retirement to be Nolan Ryan to Tatis’s Robin Venutra.

I actually could see that happening at some point as Jay Johnson remembers his time at Nevada fondly. I’m surprised he hasn’t scheduled a game against Nevada, either when he was at Arizona or now at LSU. Let’s make that happen.

And as LSU won its second national title in three years last season, I got to thinking former McQueen High standout Robby Snelling could have been on both of those Tigers teams. I don’t blame him for taking the $3 million signing bonus after being a first-round draft pick in 2023. That was the right move. But he would have been a freshman on the 2023 LSU title team and a draft-eligible junior this season after committing to Johnson and LSU out of high school before turning pro. Snelling is having a solid season at Double-A Pensacola as a 21-year-old this year, sitting a 2-5 with a 4.18 ERA in 12 games with 70 strikeouts in 60.1 innings as his velocity has spiked back up over a dip last season. But those would have been cool experiences for him.

Steve Alford played at Indiana a number of times while Iowa’s head coach from 1999-2007 but has not played the Hoosiers since then. That’s 18 total seasons, including six each at New Mexico, UCLA and Nevada. If it hasn’t happened yet, it probably won’t happen. Although that’d be a cool moment for Alford as he’s still an Indiana legend.

I’m sure Nate Yeskie’s had a lot of head-coaching offers as he reportedly turned down Mississippi State a number of years ago and has been one of college baseball’s top pitching coaches for the last two decades, which includes a national title at Oregon State in 2018 and LSU in 2025. At LSU, Yeskie has a base salary of $400,000 and got $80,000 in postseason bonuses this season. That’s head-coach money at most places. It just comes down to whether Yeskie wants to be a head coach. I would guess he will be a head coach soon as he wanted the Oregon State job that instead went to Mitch Canham in 2020. LSU’s last pitching coach, Wes Johnson, became Georgia’s head coach in 2023, so Yeskie could be in for a similar kind of job.

I sat down with Steve Alford today for a 25-minute interview on the offseason that I’ll post on our website later today or tomorrow. I asked about the smaller point guard model that’s being used this season (6-foot Tyler Rolison, 6-1 Tayshawn Comer and 5-9 Myles Walker) and he said that’s largely coincidental, adding the team’s ballhandling and ability to pressure the ball defensively should be improved over last year. He said the Wolf Pack’s post size (7-1 Jeriah Coleman, 6-10 Joel Armotrading, 6-9 Elijah Price, 6-8 Kaleb Lowery, 6-9 Ethan Croley) should be a plus. He added shooting is a question mark but something that’s been fine in the first couple of offseason practices.

I would agree Nevada seems to have a faster, more athletic, more defensive-oriented team compared to last year, although that does carry some offensive efficiency questions. Alford’s first impressions of the 2025-26 team have been positive.

“Really good, really excited about it,” Alford said. “It’s just adapting to a new era. Last year was the first year in 34 years we didn’t have a freshman on the team. As I enter year 35, it’s gonna be the first year we’ve had nine new players. You only get 13 scholarships, and we’re gonna have nine new players. That’s a lot. … We wanted to, I think first and foremost, become more athletic. I think last year’s team, though we were a little bit older, wasn’t quite as athletic as we’d like to be. I think we’ve increased our athleticism. I think we’re gonna be deeper up front now, which will help us. Jeriah getting an extra year. Ethan being a freshman. Joel and Elijah playing those positions. Our freshmen don’t look like freshmen. Ethan and and Peyton (White) are very physical, and Myles is a very quick, explosive point guard. They don’t look like freshmen, which is good. I think we’ll be a more athletic, more physical team is my hope.

“And then we wanted to add scoring and obviously shooting. There’s some question marks with shooting, but as I’ve watched the four or five practices that we’ve had, these guys know how to shoot the basketball. I think Tayshawn brings us another point guard with TR, which will really help us. I think Kenan gave us that presence. Last year, Kobe (Sanders) not a true point guard, more of a combo. And then TR really came on from January on. But a lot of the success that we’ve had prior to Nevada is playing multiple point guards. And I think the way the game has gone, you’re looking at the Pacer-Thunder series, you’ve got a lot of ball-handling guards. And I think our ball handling has a chance to be at a level that we haven’t had it. And if we can do that, then I think that creates more opportunities for us offensively and opens up better shooting opportunities for us. But also what we can do defensively, I think this has the potential — again, it’s just potential; it’s early — but potentially our deepest team, our most athletic team where we can increase pressure when we wanna increase pressure and be a little bit more disruptive defensively is my hope than what we’ve been maybe in the last year or two.”

There are a lot of great writers in the league. I’ll shout out the Albuquerque Journal’s Geoff Grammer; the San Diego Union-Tribune’s Mark Zeigler; The Coloradoan’s Kevin Lytle; The Gazette’s Brent Briggeman; the Fresno Bee’s Robert Kuwada; and BJ Rains going independent with Bronco Nation News and making it work is really cool. Those guys have been covering the league for a long time.

And I’ll take mini-golf, although I love TopGolf. We go to Roseville once or twice a year to hit some balls at that facility. It will be nice to have that in Reno at the Grand Sierra Resort in a couple of years.

Here are the 10 biggest betting-line underdog spreads for Nevada dating to 2000:

1. at Penn State, +43.5 (2025) — TBD

2. at USC, +38 (2023) — Didn’t cover

3. at Florida State, +35.5 (2013) — Didn’t cover

4. at Texas A&M, +32 (2015) — Covered

5. at Colorado State, +30 (2001) — Covered

6. at Washington State, +28.5 (2017) — Didn’t cover

7. vs. Kansas, +28 (2023) — Covered

8t. at Fresno State, +27.5 (2004) — Didn’t cover

8t. at Boise State, +27.5 (2011) — Covered

8t. at Notre Dame, +27.5 (2016) — Didn’t cover

So, that’s 4-5 against the spread and 0-9 straight up. The biggest underdog line Nevada has won straight up is 17 points (against San Diego State in 2019 and Washington in 2003). Since joining the FBS in 1992, Nevada has played eight top-10 teams, going 1-7 in those games, the win coming against No. 3 Boise State in 2010.

Jeff Tisdel went 23-22 overall and 13-8 in conference in four seasons at Nevada with two first-place finishes and a second with a bowl win (the 1996 Las Vegas Bowl). Yes, he inherited a much better situation than Ken Wilson, but Tisdel’s time had some legitimate successes. And while Wilson didn’t have much success as a head coach (4-20 in two years), he did contribute to a lot of success to Nevada as an assistant. If you’re just looking at head-coaching tenure Tisdel <>> Wilson. Tisdel had a really good head-coaching career post-Nevada, too, going 82–36 in 11 years at Sierra College.

Zero percent.

No. The revenue sharing the colleges can now pay athletes is on top of NIL deals, not in replacement of them. And while there’s a clearinghouse to approve these deals, NIL Go, I don’t think that will do much to limit NIL deals. Major donors can still have a huge impact on roster construction.

Many colleges have announced which teams they will share revenue with, although few have offered specifics per team. Nevada has only said its goal is to hit $5 million combined in revenue sharing and NIL for the 2025-26 season, which should put it in the competitive range of the Mountain West if it gets to that number. We don’t have a per-sport breakdown on which teams will get money, but that list will definitely include football, men’s basketball, women’s basketball and baseball. I imagine softball will be on that list, too. It should be. Nevada should be investing heavily into softball right now.

No. LSU would get destroyed. There’s a massive jump from the SEC to Triple-A let alone MLB.

I watched zero seconds of this year’s NBA Finals, and it had nothing to do with the talking heads on ESPN, although those talking heads are annoying. Pacers versus Thunder just didn’t interest me, and almost none of the games were close. Games 1 and 4 had some tension. That’s about it. And while we’ve seen a lot of ink spilled trying to figure out why pitchers keep needing Tommy John surgery, let’s get some think pieces on why three Eastern Conference stars who wear No. 0 — the Bucks’ Damian Lillard; the Celtics’ Jayson Tatum; and the Pacers Tyrese Haliburton — all tore their Achilles in the playoff. Tatu is 27 and Haliburton is 25. That’s too young to suffer that kind of injury.

1) I’ve tried to make Smashburgers on my Camp Chef flat-top grill and they don’t turn out as well as my regular burgers, so I’m off the trend.

2) Caramelized onions.

3) Mustard if I have to pick one. If I get two, add ketchup. Never mayo. That’s gross.

4) I’ve never met anybody who publicly admits they like coleslaw. French fries are the best. If you can’t have that as a burger side, just do a salad.

No idea. There are many “pros” to living on the West Coast, but one of the best is the Pacific time zone sports starts. Staying up until 10 p.m. to watch games end on the West Coast is tough enough. But that’s 1 a.m. on the East Coast. That’s crazy. NFL games don’t start until 1 p.m. on the East Coast rather than the 10 a.m. start on the West Coast. More proof the west coast in the best coast.

See y’all next week!

Sports columnist Chris Murray provides insight on Northern Nevada sports. He writes a weekly Monday Mailbag despite it giving him a headache and it taking several hours to write. But people seem to like it, so he does it anyway. Contact him at crmurray@sbgtv.com or follow him on Twitter @ByChrisMurray.



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NIU’S FRAZIER TO SERVE AS NACDA PRESIDENT IN 2025-26

Story Links DeKALB, Ill. – Northern Illinois University Vice President and Director of Athletics and Recreation Sean T. Frazier will serve as president of the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (NACDA) in 2025-26 following his appointment by the NACDA Board of Directors at the association’s annual convention in […]

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DeKALB, Ill. – Northern Illinois University Vice President and Director of Athletics and Recreation Sean T. Frazier will serve as president of the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (NACDA) in 2025-26 following his appointment by the NACDA Board of Directors at the association’s annual convention in Orlando earlier this month. 

Frazier, who begins his 13th year at NIU in July, has served as a NACDA Officer since 2023, was a member of the NACDA Executive Committee from 2016-20 and spent three years as president of the Minority Opportunities and Athletic Association (MOAA) from 2010-13. He succeeds past president Ross Bjork of Ohio State. 

“I am overwhelmed by the overall vote of confidence from NACDA – this is a full circle moment for me,” Frazier said. “We have a lot of work to do, and it is going to take a lot of commitment from all of us. Especially during these times in college athletics, the practitioner’s voice is extremely important. For me, and many of us, it’s about the student-athlete experience, the leadership, the staff … the things that make our profession the greatest of all time. As my mentor Mr. Cleary once said to me – at the end of the day, this is not too hard, but you have to be consistent and true to yourself. I’m excited about the journey – I will not let you down.”

Over the last 12 years, Frazier has guided the Huskies to historic milestones competitively, academically and socially, and in 2024-25, set a course for NIU Athletics’ future with the announcement that NIU will join the Mountain West in football and the Horizon League for 14 of its sports programs, beginning in 2025-26. This forward-thinking response to the changing college athletics landscape positions the Huskies for sustainability and continued success on the competition fields and off. 

Under Frazier, NIU Athletics’ umbrella has expanded to include the NIU Convocation Center, NIU Recreation and the Huskie Marching Band. The Huskies continue to re-set the bar in terms of academic achievement, have claimed 14 Mid-American Conference Championships – the most under leadership of any NIU athletic director – and have broken fundraising records in support of Huskie student-athletes.  

Frazier’s record of success at NIU has led to national recognition. In 2021-22, he was named one of five finalists for the Athletics Director of the Year by Sports Business Journal and in 2023, he was recognized by Crain’s Chicago Business. In May 2024, Frazier became a Hall of Famer as he was inducted into the Suffolk County Sports Hall of Fame on his native Long Island.

In 2021, Frazier joined the United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee (USOPC) College Sports Sustainability Think Tank which convened leaders from across the collegiate, Olympic and Paralympic landscape. He has written numerous papers, presented on topics of diversity, leadership and hiring at national meetings and served on many NCAA committees. In addition, NIU became the first two-time recipient of the NCAA and MOAA Award for Diversity and Inclusion, earning the honor in 2016 and in 2022. 

A former football student-athlete at the University of Alabama, Frazier has 27 years of overall experience as a director of athletics at the NCAA Division I, II and III levels, as an administrator at two Division I universities, as a coach and as a student-athlete. Prior to NIU, Frazier spent six years in senior leadership roles at the University of Wisconsin (UW) and was promoted to deputy director of athletics in 2011. Prior to Wisconsin, Frazier served as director of athletics at Merrimack College in North Andover, Mass., was the director of athletics and recreation at Clarkson University in Potsdam, N.Y. and led the athletics and recreation department at Manhattanville College in Purchase, N.Y.

 

He enters his term as president of NACDA during a time of monumental change in intercollegiate athletics as leaders across the country adapt to the revenue sharing model and other terms finalized by the approved settlement of the House case. In addition, Name, Image and Likeness (NIL), the transfer portal and adjustments to the College Football Playoff (CFP) continue to affect the daily business of college athletics. 

— NIU —

Twitter: @NIUAthletics

Facebook: NIU Huskies

Instagram: niuhuskies

YouTube: NIU Athletics Official

 



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UNC plan to pay players revenue, NIL after House settlement

UNC football coach Bill Belichick summer press conference UNC football coach Bill Belichick held a 20-minute press conference. He answered questions about outside “noise” and the roster. UNC athletes in football, men’s basketball, women’s basketball, and baseball will receive a share of revenue starting July 1st. UNC will increase its athletic scholarships from 338 to […]

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  • UNC athletes in football, men’s basketball, women’s basketball, and baseball will receive a share of revenue starting July 1st.
  • UNC will increase its athletic scholarships from 338 to 532 across all sports.
  • UNC is exploring new revenue streams like naming rights and sponsorships to offset increased costs.

University of North Carolina athletes will be paid revenue directly by the school, beginning July 1, in addition to income they already earn for use of their name, image and likeness.

UNC athletics director Bubba Cunningham outlined the university’s plan for the revenue sharing era in a letter posted on June 23. This follows the approval of the House vs. NCAA settlement on June 6, which moves college sports closer to a professional model. Schools opting into the format can pay athletes up to an annual cap of $20.5 million.

“This is a significant evolution that will change our department’s financial model while providing greater financial opportunities for Tar Heel student-athletes,” Cunningham said in a school-issued statement.

“At Carolina, we have been preparing for these changes for more than a year. We are fully committed to adapting to this new era and continuing to create outstanding championship experiences for our student-athletes across our 28-sport, broad-based program.”

UNC is among the schools positioning itself to share the full amount of revenue share to its athletes. Cunningham revealed how UNC’s athletics department plans to handle the changes.

“As we begin this new era, one thing won’t change: our dedication to excellence and winning in and outside of competition,” Cunningham said.

UNC will share most of $20.5 million with men’s basketball, football

Men’s basketball and football at UNC will receive a majority of the school’s $20.5 million in revenue sharing, according to Cunningham’s letter. Women’s basketball and baseball players will also get a cut of the revenue share, bringing UNC’s total to four sports. The rev-share cap will increase by 4% annually.

UNC scholarship increases for athletes

The settlement institutes roster limits for all sports, but removes scholarship limits. With that change, Cunningham said UNC will increases its number of scholarships by nearly 200 across 28 sports, going from 338 to 532.

“The ability to have more Tar Heels on full scholarship will greatly strengthen our athletics program and the student-athlete experience at Carolina,” Cunningham said. “This is a great opportunity to support additional student-athletes financially, outside of revenue share, and we want to keep building our Rams Club Scholarship Endowment in the hope of increasing scholarships even more in the future.”

UNC backpay for athletes, budget

UNC estimates an impact of $2 million annually for the next 10 years due to the $2.7 billion in backpay to athletes who weren’t allowed to profit off NIL. The NCAA is funding payments for schools by withholding a portion of its annual distribution of funds. Cunningham said UNC’s budget, which was $150 million this year, will grow 30% or 20% by next year.

“To prepare, we have hired a new Chief Revenue Officer to investigate and initiate new revenue opportunities, including naming rights, field sponsorships and jersey patches, expanding football’s Bell Tower Block Party to draw more fans, options to further optimize our relationship with corporate sponsorship partner Learfield and more aggressive ticket sales initiatives,” Cunningham said.

“ACC Success Initiatives and additional funding allocated by the state of North Carolina from gambling revenues may also assist our efforts in the coming years, and we will continue to evaluate our Department’s budget and spending for cost-cutting opportunities.”

Rodd Baxley covers Duke, North Carolina and N.C. State for The Fayetteville Observer as part of the USA TODAY Network. Follow his ACC coverage on X/Twitter or Bluesky: @RoddBaxley. Got questions regarding those teams? Send them to rbaxley@fayobserver.com.



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‘Each individual school can decide how they spend the money’ :: WRALSportsFan.com

Brian Murphy explains revenue sharing. Show Transcript We don’t know the breakdown. We do know that the back pay included in the house settlement goes 75% to football, 15% to men’s basketball, 5% to women’s basketball, and 5% to all other sports. So if North Carolina is spending a little bit less on football, I […]

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Brian Murphy explains revenue sharing.



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Florida State QB Tommy Castellanos ‘Doesn’t See’ Alabama Stopping Him

Despite being two months out from opening the 2025 college football season against Alabama, Florida State’s quarterback, Tommy Castellanos, has already called out the Crimson Tide. “I’m excited, man,” Castellanos said in an interview with On3. “People, I don’t know if they know, but you go back and watch every first game that I played […]

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Despite being two months out from opening the 2025 college football season against Alabama, Florida State’s quarterback, Tommy Castellanos, has already called out the Crimson Tide.

“I’m excited, man,” Castellanos said in an interview with On3. “People, I don’t know if they know, but you go back and watch every first game that I played in, we always start fast. I dreamed of moments like this. I dreamed of playing against Alabama. They don’t have Nick Saban to save them. I just don’t see them stopping me.”

It’s a bold statement from a player who hasn’t had the most decorated college football career to this point and has yet to play a snap for his new team. But, there’s no questioning Castellanos’s confidence. 

He transferred to Florida State ahead of his senior season. It’s his third ACC school after spending two years at Boston College and one at Central Florida, and Castellanos is trying to make a name for himself off the field to drum up the anticipation for the game on the field. 

In 2023, he completed 57.3% of his pass attempts for 2,248 yards, 15 touchdowns and 14 interceptions as a sophomore. He then took a step up in his junior season, improving his accuracy to 61.5%, while throwing 18 touchdowns and five interceptions through the first eight games of the season. But, midway through the season, Boston College lost three consecutive games, and then Castellanos got hurt against Syracuse, and his backup, Grayson James, replaced him and helped the Eagles break their losing streak. 

James’ performance pushed him ahead of Castellanos on the depth chart and, to deal with that decision to change quarterbacks, Castellanos took some time away from the team, while James finished out the season as the starter and led the Eagles to a Bowl Game.

That Syracuse game ended up being Castellanos’ last for Boston College. Now, he’s got a fresh start at Florida State, where he’s trying to make some waves, and introduce himself to the Seminoles’ biggest opponent well before the season even starts.  

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