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Two Boston College Softball Infielders Enter Portal, Transfer to ACC Foe

Two Boston College softball players have entered the transfer portal and are headed to a conference foe.  Infielders Emma Jackson and Gator Robinson entered their names into the transfer portal over the weekend and are both going to Cal. Jackson spent two seasons with the Eagles. During her time in Chestnut Hill, she played at […]

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Two Boston College Softball Infielders Enter Portal, Transfer to ACC Foe

Two Boston College softball players have entered the transfer portal and are headed to a conference foe. 

Infielders Emma Jackson and Gator Robinson entered their names into the transfer portal over the weekend and are both going to Cal.

Jackson spent two seasons with the Eagles. During her time in Chestnut Hill, she played at second base and appeared in 105 games which included 104 starts and recorded 75 hits, 13 doubles, six triples, two home runs, a .359 slugging percentage, a .332 on-base percentage, batted in 28 runs, and stole 11 bases. 

“Back to the bay,” said Jackson in her announcement post on transferring to Cal via Instagram on Monday. 

Robinson also spent two seasons in Chestnut Hill. In her time at Boston College, she played at shortstop and notched a .218 batting average, .361 on-base percentage, .301 slugging percentage, 58 hits, ten doubles, four home runs, 31 runs batted in, and 24 stolen bases. 

“Something abt tha [sic] west coast,” said Robinson in her announcement post on transferring to Cal on Monday. 

The duo joins a Golden Bears program that went 37-21 overall this season which includes an 11-13 mark in ACC play and made an appearance in the ACC Tournament and Norman Regional. 

Robinson and Jackson are just two of five Boston College players that have entered the portal since the start of the offseason. They join pitchers Abby Dunning and Gabriella Aughton and outfielder Darien McDonough. 

McDonough is the only other player to announce her new home. She transferred to Binghamton.

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Marcus Freeman’s latest commit is a major throwback in the NIL era

With the world of the Transfer Portal and NIL, college sports have become very different than what they were even 10 years ago. NIL and the Transfer Portal have changed the face of college sports forever, and while it seems like some athletes are in it all for the money and just to prepare for […]

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With the world of the Transfer Portal and NIL, college sports have become very different than what they were even 10 years ago. NIL and the Transfer Portal have changed the face of college sports forever, and while it seems like some athletes are in it all for the money and just to prepare for their professional career, others are still in it for the education, just like Notre Dame’s latest commit.

Notre Dame had one of their biggest recruiting weekends they have had all recruiting cycle during the holiday weekend. Receiving commitments from three big-time wide receiver prospects, Devin Fitzgerald, Kaydon Finley, and Brayden Robinson. Robinson was the latest to commit as a 4-star wide receiver, choosing the Fighting Irish over the Miami Hurricanes for one reason that might surprise a lot of people in this day in age of college football.

In his interview with On3’s Blue & Gold, Robinson talked about why he chose the Fighting Irish, and it was not just because of the stellar football program. Robinson spoke about the education he believes he can get at Notre Dame and how that was a selling point from the coaching staff.

“The education there is huge,” Robinson said. “They preached that the Notre Dame degree can help you do anything in life, that’s definitely big for me. You get to meet the right people and get to where I want to be after I’m done playing football.”

Education is a not a huge emphasis in college sports nowadays

With the world of NIL and the Transfer Portal, a student-athlete can spend four years in college and make more than some would make in their lifetime. They can also spend four years in college and go to a different university in a different part of the country every year. The emphasis on going to college is not necessarily on getting an education, but simply playing sports in order to go to the pros.

A lot of student-athletes go to college and don’t even finish their degree in order to go to the NFL, or MLB, or NBA, or whatever professional league, in order to continue their career. However, they can’t play sports forever, and then what do they do after with no degree?

Sure, they have a professional career, and if they are lucky, they are big enough to not need a degree, but many of them don’t have anything to fall back on. Brayden Robinson doesn’t want that for himself, so while he chose Notre Dame for their football program, he also chose the Fighting Irish because of the education he can get while playing football.



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Where Arkansas lands in Phil Steele’s 1-136 college football rankings

Arkansas football’s season is quickly approaching. With just under 54 days until the Razorbacks take the field, the preseason rankings are flooding in. Phil Steele released his 2025 college football season preview and ranked all 136 teams from first to last. And where Arkansas ranks may surprise some. Where Phil Steele ranks Arkansas Steele ranked […]

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Arkansas football’s season is quickly approaching. With just under 54 days until the Razorbacks take the field, the preseason rankings are flooding in. Phil Steele released his 2025 college football season preview and ranked all 136 teams from first to last. And where Arkansas ranks may surprise some.

Where Phil Steele ranks Arkansas

Steele ranked the Hogs at No. 33, just a few spots away from breaking into the top 25. However, fans should take this ranking with a grain of salt. Despite Arkansas’ decent position, Steele has 11 SEC teams ranked ahead of them. The only teams behind the Hogs are Mississippi State, Kentucky, Vanderbilt, and, surprisingly, Missouri.

With all the production Arkansas is replacing via the Transfer Portal, the Hogs are lucky they’re being thought of as highly as they are. However, Sam Pittman did hit the portal with a purpose this season, bringing in studs on the offensive line to give the most important returning piece, Taylen Green, a chance. Defensively, the Hogs had to replace more, so it may be up to the offense to make Steele’s rankings a reality for the Razorbacks.

Phil Steele SEC rankings

  1. Texas (3)
  2. Alabama (4)
  3. Georgia (7)
  4. Oklahoma (8)
  5. Texas A&M (9)
  6. Florida (10)
  7. LSU (11)
  8. Tennessee (20)
  9. Ole Miss (22)
  10. Auburn (24)
  11. South Carolina (27)
  12. Arkansas (33)
  13. Vanderbilt (38)
  14. Missouri (43)
  15. Kentucky (50)
  16. Mississippi State (55)

Phil Steele top 25

  1. Penn State
  2. Notre Dame
  3. Texas
  4. Alabama
  5. Ohio State
  6. Clemson
  7. Georgia
  8. Oklahoma
  9. Texas A&M
  10. Florida
  11. LSU
  12. Michigan
  13. Oregon
  14. Miami
  15. Arizona State
  16. Indiana
  17. Illinois
  18. Baylor
  19. Utah
  20. Tennessee
  21. USC
  22. Ole Miss
  23. SMU
  24. Auburn
  25. Texas Tech



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Everything to know about NCAA's 30

College football and basketball programs will have one last chance to add talent through the transfer portal before the 2025-26 season. The NCAA Committee on Legislative Relief issued a waiver last week allowing a portion of athletes to enter a one-time transfer portal window from July 7 to Aug. 5. Speaking with sources across the Power Four … 0

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Everything to know about NCAA's 30

College football and basketball programs will have one last chance to add talent through the transfer portal before the 2025-26 season. The NCAA Committee on Legislative Relief issued a waiver last week allowing a portion of athletes to enter a one-time transfer portal window from July 7 to Aug. 5.

Speaking with sources across the Power Four …

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First Woman To Join Harlem Globetrotters Sues Team For Unauthorized Use Of NIL

by Nahlah Abdur-Rahman July 7, 2025 Woodard believes the team profited off her name, image, and likeness without her authorized use. The first woman to play for the Harlem Globetrotters feels she got played, and never paid, by the team after her name was used for merchandising. Lynette Woodard made history in 1985 by becoming […]

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First Woman To Join Harlem Globetrotters Sues Team For Unauthorized Use Of NIL

Phoenix Blue, Nikki Blue, basketball, lawsuit

Woodard believes the team profited off her name, image, and likeness without her authorized use.


The first woman to play for the Harlem Globetrotters feels she got played, and never paid, by the team after her name was used for merchandising.

Lynette Woodard made history in 1985 by becoming the first woman to join the exhibition basketball squad. She toured with the team for two years. However, her relationship with the Globetrotters soured after she made no money from their apparel collaboration that featured her. Woodard recently sued the team, claiming an unauthorized use of her name, image, and likeness (NIL).

According to the New York Post, the Globetrotters used the Olympian’s NIL without her permission for hoodies and sweats manufactured by a company called Undrcrwn from 2021 to 2024. The lawsuit claims the Globetrotters did not reach out to Woodard for consent. She argues it is because “they knew [she] would not give it for free.”

The streetwear brand collaborated with the Globetrotters to launch a clothing line that celebrated their history. It heavily included the time Woodard participated. Apparel not only featured Woodard but also highlighted her significance in the team’s legacy. Furthermore, Woodard claims the items are still available on the secondary market.

Woodard is not only a famous Globetrotter but also a household name in professional and collegiate basketball. The 65-year-old is a four-time All-American who played at Kansas. On a global level, she led the 1984 U.S. Olympic Women’s Basketball team to gold. Also a 2004 inductee into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame, the 6-foot-6 guard has been inducted into multiple Halls of Fame for her contributions to the sport.

Woodard’s lawsuit claims that her contracts with the Globetrotters included a California choice of law provision. According to Sportico, this dictates that the state’s law regarding NIL is valid. As a member of the United Basketball Players Association, Woodard claimed that a Collective Bargaining Agreement ratified by both the players’ union and the Globetrotters granted her royalties on merchandise sales.

Her case also adds a new component to the growing case for NIL, expanding the conversations that typically revolved around collegiate athletes. Woodard seeks damages as well as profits from the clothing sales. She also wants an injunction to halt further unauthorized use of her image.

RELATED CONTENT: Texas Tech Pitcher NiJaree Canady’s $1M NIL Deal Proves What’s Possible In Women’s Sports

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CFB Rev-Sharing Creates Questions – Front Office Sports

Morning Edition July 8, 2025 The NCAA’s revenue-sharing era is off with a bang. It also amplifies long-held questions: Are college athletes employees? And how long before private equity plays a big role in funding programs? —David Rumsey, Eric Fisher, and Colin Salao Lubbock Avalanche-Journal College athletes are starting to get paid big money directly […]

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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Morning Edition

July 8, 2025


The NCAA’s revenue-sharing era is off with a bang. It also amplifies long-held questions: Are college athletes employees? And how long before private equity plays a big role in funding programs?

David Rumsey, Eric Fisher, and Colin Salao



Lubbock Avalanche-Journal

College athletes are starting to get paid big money directly from their schools now that the revenue-sharing era is here. But will this new landscape bring structure to college sports, or will the shifting industry remain more like the Wild West? 

“The $1 billion question is: Are these athletes employees? If the schools want that answer to be no, then they’re going to have to be very, very careful how they structure these contracts,” Will Hall, a Florida-based sports and entertainment attorney for law firm Jones Walker, told Front Office Sports.

Those revenue-sharing contracts are already reaching staggering numbers, like the three-year, $5.1 million deal Texas Tech is giving five-star offensive tackle Felix Ojo. The Red Raiders’ spending spree appears to be extending into the future, too, as they are now reportedly the favorite to land edge rusher LaDamion Guyton, currently the No. 1–ranked prospect in the 2027 recruiting class, according to Rivals.

NIL Collectives Face Uncertain Future

Before revenue-sharing became legal with the approval of the House v. NCAA settlement, players like Ojo and Guyton would have had to rely on NIL (name, image, and likeness) deals to make money in college. 

Now, the NIL collectives that funded top programs’ $20 million football rosters last season are changing how they do business. “An NIL collective will have to look very different than it has in the past few years,” said Hall, who previously helped set up and advise the first NIL collective at Florida State. Many Power 4 schools have closed their NIL collectives entirely.

Hall points to the newly created NIL Go clearinghouse run by the burgeoning College Sports Commission, which will have a vetting process to ensure NIL deals offered by boosters and collectives are fair-market value, and not pay-for-play. “If it has teeth, then, yes, 100%, the idea of an NIL collective as we know it should go away,” he said.

What About Private Equity?

The start of the revenue-sharing era has coincided with interest from private-equity firms entering college sports. 

While the Big 12 opted against bringing in PE at the conference level, sports business consultancy Elevate launched a $500 million initiative to infuse institutional capital directly into college sports, and Boise State is actively considering bringing PE investment into the Broncos’ athletic department.

Despite the uptick in activity, veteran sports lawyer Mike Rueda told FOS “it’s a bit early to tell” whether PE firms investing in college athletic departments would be a profitable exercise like the PE investments in NFL franchises are widely believed to be. 

“We’re still trying to figure out how this is going to work,” said Rueda, who is the head of U.S. sports and entertainment at London-headquartered international law firm Withers.


ESPN’s long-term future with MLB remains decidedly uncertain, but the Disney-owned network is leaving it all on the field, bringing one of its biggest stars to Atlanta next week to be part of Home Run Derby pre-event coverage. 

The Pat McAfee Show will broadcast live from the Coca-Cola Roxy, adjacent to Truist Park, the afternoon of July 14—hours before ESPN shows MLB’s Home Run Derby which annually represents one of the network’s top pieces of primetime programming of the entire summer. 

The presence of Pat McAfee in Atlanta will be joined by a series of other programming plans surrounding the Home Run Derby, including a Georgia stop in the SportsCenter “50 States in 50 Days” content initiative, a pre-Derby episode of Baseball Tonight, and a return of an alternate, Statcast-based production of the event.

The main Derby broadcast will again be led by Karl Ravech and Eduardo Pérez, along with former MLB star Todd Frazier, who won the event 10 years ago while playing for the Reds. That competition was the first Derby to feature a timed format, which helped reinvigorate the event and served as a forerunner of sorts for the pitch clock the league introduced two years ago. 

McAfee has had a featured role in many other key ESPN productions, as he stands alongside Stephen A. Smith as one of the network’s top personalities, and his broadcasting from Atlanta further signifies the importance of the Derby to ESPN.

Last year’s Derby from Arlington, Texas, averaged 5.45 million viewers, down 11% from 2023’s event, as it competed with the 2024 Republican National Convention. The full, eight-player field for this year’s Derby has not been finalized, but confirmed competitors thus far include the Braves’ Ronald Acuña Jr., Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh, Nationals outfielder James Wood, and Twins outfielder Byron Buxton. 

ESPN, meanwhile, has re-engaged with MLB about a potentially restructured rights relationship after previously signaling its intent to walk away from the league after the 2025 season. The outcome of those talks remains uncertain, but MLB commissioner Rob Manfred has said he intends to have the rights situation determined by next week’s All-Star Game. 

UFC and outspoken president Dana White have staged competitions in plenty of unique places, including the Sphere in Las Vegas and a temporary, open-air arena in the United Arab Emirates. The latest notion, however, could be UFC’s most dramatic and controversial. 

A UFC spokesperson confirmed to Front Office Sports that discussions are underway with U.S. President Donald Trump to stage a mixed-martial-arts competition at the White House next year as part of celebrations tied to the 250th anniversary of the country’s independence. 

Trump disclosed plans to have the UFC fight there last week in an event attended by 20,000 to 25,000 people, adding that “we have a lot of land there. … Dana is going to do it. Dana is great. One of a kind.”

White is expected to speak in more detail soon about the developing plan, but he already has said on Instagram, “This will be epic!!!” Many of the key logistical details, though, including who will fight, who will attend, how it will work with typical White House security, and how it intersects with the rest of UFC’s competition, remain undetermined. Former UFC champion Conor McGregor has already signaled his interest in competing at the White House event.

“There’s a long way to go still,” said a source familiar with the discussions. 

If completed, the UFC fights would be the first pro sports events hosted at the White House, though it has been the site of many recreational competitions over the years. 

Deeper Relationship

The deepening tie between Trump and UFC, and White specifically, has been no secret. Trump has attended UFC events for years, and White has been an ardent and public supporter of the president. He introduced Trump on the final night of the 2024 Republican National Convention. 

Days after the 2024 presidential election won by Trump, White told The New Yorker he wanted “nothing to do with politics.” That sentiment hasn’t entirely held form, though, and when unveiling a new boxing venture earlier this year, White said he looked forward to bringing top fighters to the White House. 

“They’re fans,” White said in March of the Trump Administration to FOS. “Whenever our fighters win and they go back to their home countries, they usually meet with the president or whoever the ruler is. All over the world, people are interested in who the toughest person in the world is.”

The developing White House plans, meanwhile, prompted strong reactions in both the political and sports communities.

“Trump’s plan to stage a UFC event at the White House makes perfect sense. It is the natural climax of a partnership in which the UFC has become the stage for MAGA mythology,” wrote the U.K.-based Guardian.

Susan Mullane-Imagn Images

Wimbledon has several major on-court storylines entering the quarterfinals—though the tournament’s off-court battle is just as exciting.

On the men’s side, Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner appear to be on a collision course to meet in the finals just a month after their historic battle at Roland-Garros. But worthy challengers remain entering the quarterfinals Tuesday, including Novak Djokovic, who is chasing a historic 25th Grand Slam, and Americans Taylor Fritz and Ben Shelton.

The women’s bracket saw a historic number of top-10 seeds fall in the first week, including every single former champion. The door is open for world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka to claim her fourth Grand Slam, and leave the French Open as the only major title she’s yet to win. 

Only two other top-10 players remain: former world No. 1 Iga Świątek, who has notoriously struggled on grass, and 18-year-old Mirra Andreeva. 

But as the quarterfinals begin Tuesday, so will the U.K. High Court’s review of the proposed Wimbledon expansion. All England Lawn Tennis Club (AELTC) has been looking to expand for decades and, in September 2024, the Greater London Authority (GLA) granted it planning permission.

The proposal would add 39 courts by the early 2030s, more than doubling the number of courts to 71. That would be more than double the number of courts at the US Open and Australian Open and four times as many as Roland-Garros.

The AELTC believes the expansion will help it sell more tickets for the Grand Slam, which totaled 526,000 last year, more than 100,000 less than the French Open and about half of the US and Australian opens.

Several tennis stars have shown support for the expansion, including Djokovic and Alcaraz. 

However, there has been opposition to AELTC’s plans, with the loudest voice being a group established in 2021 called Save Wimbledon Park (SWP). SWP told Front Office Sports that it is not against expansion, but it has several issues with the proposal—including how some areas used for the expansion should be left to the public.

The hearing in the coming days is not about the approval of expansion, but rather to review SWP’s claims and the planning permit granted by the GLA.


Would you be interested in attending a UFC fight on the White House lawn?

Monday’s result: 59% of respondents think Napheesa Collier’s and Breanna Stewart’s roles as Unrivaled cofounders create a conflict of interest for their WNBPA leadership roles.






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How Other Two-Sport Stars Juggled Football and Baseball

Multi-sport stars are a dying breed. Even as far back as 2002, when Sports Illustrated profiled Michael Bush and Brian Brohm, specialization was rooting out multi-faceted athletes. Matt Ponatoski bucks that trend. Before his senior season, he’s already won the Ohio Gatorade Player of the Year in baseball and football. He’s a Top 10 QB […]

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Multi-sport stars are a dying breed. Even as far back as 2002, when Sports Illustrated profiled Michael Bush and Brian Brohm, specialization was rooting out multi-faceted athletes. Matt Ponatoski bucks that trend.

Before his senior season, he’s already won the Ohio Gatorade Player of the Year in baseball and football. He’s a Top 10 QB and a Top 20 baseball player in the 2026 recruiting class. It’s clear that Ponatoski has the talent to excel at both, but how will he manage his time at the highest level? There are plenty of recent success stories that illustrate it’s possible.

Austin Simmons

In week two of the 2025 college football season, Austin Simmons will make his first SEC start for Ole Miss. A college football wunderkind, he reclassified up two classes to join Lane Kiffin’s program ahead of the 2023 college football season. After redshirting in the fall, he made 13 appearances as a relief pitcher for Mike Bianco in the spring of 2024. He held opponents to a team low batting average of .173, allowing nine hits in 14 innings.

Near the end of his spring campaign, Simmons suffered a UCL strain. That’s when he turned his attention to football, announcing in January of 2025 that he was hanging up his baseball cleats for good.

Kyler Murray

Following Ponatoski’s commitment to Kentucky, he told Jacob Polacheck that his goal was to pull a Kyler Murray and get drafted in both sports. Murray might be the better comp, because like Ponatoski, he played in the field.

Murray batted .296 and had 47 RBIs in the spring of 2018. That summer, the Oakland A’s took him with the ninth overall pick in the MLB Draft. At that time, Murray had just been a backup for Baker Mayfield. Things changed that fall.

Murray threw for 4,361 yards and 42 touchdowns on his way to a Heisman Trophy. Oklahoma avenged a loss to Texas in the Big 12 title to earn a spot in the CFP, where the Sooners fell to top-seeded Alabama. Murray’s baseball signing bonus was worth $4.66 million. He turned it down for a $23.6 million signing bonus as the top pick in the NFL Draft by the Arizona Cardinals.

Jameis Winston

Jameis Winston had a 3.00 ERA and had an on-base percentage of .377 for a team that played in a Super Regional. That fall, he threw 40 touchdowns, won the Heisman Trophy, and led Florida State to a BCS National Championship. It’s safe to say that 2013 was a good year for Winston.

Despite his success on the gridiron, he continued playing baseball. The relief pitcher appeared in seven more games than the year prior and had an even better ERA of 1.09, allowing only 18 hits in 33.1 innings. His shenanigans off the field created headlines, but he was still pretty good for Jimbo Fisher in 2014. Winston threw for just shy of 4,000 yards and won the ACC title before falling to Oregon in the Rose Bowl after the most hilarious turnover of his career.

Russell Wilson

Long before he was a Super Bowl-winning quarterback, Russell Wilson had a tenuous relationship with N.C. State football coach Tom O’Brien because of his love of the game of baseball. He played second base and outfield for the Wolfpack from 2008-10. After leading N.C. State to a 9-win season in 2010, he reported to training camp with the Colorado Rockies. He spent the offseason playing Minor League Baseball, which eventually led to N.C. State relinquishing his scholarship, allowing him to play his final season of college football elsewhere.

That decision worked out great for Wisconsin. Wilson set the single-season FBS record for passer rating and led the Badgers to a Big Ten Title and an appearance in the Rose Bowl.

The moral of the story is clear: Playing two sports only works if the coaches and player are on the same page.



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