NIL
2025 NBA Draft: Top late decisions of underclassmen deciding if they should withdraw or turn pro
The pool of players for 2025 NBA Draft is taking shape after the deadline for players to keep their names in the draft or return to school for the 2025-26 college basketball season came and went. Players had until Wednesday at 11:59 p.m. ET to withdraw from the draft and maintain college eligibility under the […]

The pool of players for 2025 NBA Draft is taking shape after the deadline for players to keep their names in the draft or return to school for the 2025-26 college basketball season came and went. Players had until Wednesday at 11:59 p.m. ET to withdraw from the draft and maintain college eligibility under the NCAA deadline. Even though players had all day to decide their future, there wasn’t much 11th-hour drama in the moments leading up to the official deadline.
A handful of players, such as Washington State star Cedric Coward and Michigan forward Yaxel Lendeborg, made their intentions known before the deadline. Coward announced last weekend that he would stay in the draft and not transfer to Duke. Lendeborg, a potential first-round pick, decided to bypass the draft and play for Dusty May at Michigan.
On the day of the deadline, St. John’s forward RJ Luis Jr., Penn State big man Yanic Konan Niederhauser, Florida State forward Jamir Watkins and Arkansas wing Adou Thiero announced they would be staying in the draft.
Kentucky guard Otega Oweh, Auburn guard Tahaad Pettiford and San Diego State wing Miles Byrd were among the players who announced their intention to return to school for another season. Pettiford was a potential first-round pick but now will be given the keys to the offense at Auburn for a program fresh off a Final Four appearance.
With the deadline now in the books, here is who’s staying in college and who’s chasing their NBA dreams.
Notable late NBA Draft decisions
Yanic Konan Niederhauser, Penn State
Big Board ranking: 42
Draft decision: Staying in the draft
Konan Niederhauser had a strong showing at the NBA Draft Combine earlier this month and raised his stock. The 7-foot forward could benefit from other players electing to return to school instead of staying in the draft. Konan Niederhauser projects as a second-round pick. — Cameron Salerno
RJ Luis Jr., St. John’s
Big Board ranking: 71
Draft decision: Staying in the draft
It’s not surprising that Luis is staying in the draft, but after entering the transfer portal after a breakout season at St. John’s, it appeared staying in college could be on the table. Instead, Luis is turning pro. Luis has protectable tools as a 6-foot-7 wing to make an impact at the NBA level, but he will likely slide to the second round of the draft. — Salerno
Labaron Philon, Alabama
Big Board ranking: 23
Draft decision: Returning to Alabama
A late-night surprise! Philon, who told CBS Sports at the NBA Draft Combine that the door was closed on a return to college basketball, has changed his mind and will run it back at Alabama for his sophomore season. The 6-foot-4 lead guard looked poised to be a potential first-round pick next month, but he could skyrocket into the lottery conversation in 2026 with another strong season in Tuscaloosa. It’s a massive boon for an Alabama roster that looked a tad underwhelming … until now. Philon will put his hat in the ring as a legitimate SEC Player of the Year candidate in 2025-26. — Isaac Trotter
Miles Byrd, San Diego State
Big Board ranking: 52
Draft decision: Returning to San Diego State
Byrd is coming off a breakout 2024-25 campaign but still needs more time in college to maximize his stock. Byrd started 30 games and averaged career-highs in points, steals, blocks, assists and rebounds. He should be a candidate to become a first-round pick in 2026 alongside his teammate, Magoon Gwath. — Salerno
2025 NBA Draft: Florida’s Alex Condon headlines list of five declared prospects who should return to school
Cameron Salerno

Otega Oweh, Kentucky
Big Board ranking: NR
Draft decision: Returning to Kentucky
Oweh is coming back to Kentucky. The former Oklahoma guard transferred to Kentucky last offseason and enjoyed the best season of his career. Oweh averaged 16.2 points, 4.7 rebounds and 1.7 assists. Returning to school is the right decision and is a huge win for coach Mark Pope. — Salerno
Otega Oweh withdraws from NBA Draft: Kentucky’s top player returns, gives Mark Pope a loaded roster for Year 2
Matt Norlander

Adou Thiero, Arkansas
Big Board ranking: 40
Draft decision: Staying in the draft
Arkansas coach John Calipari will rely on Thiero this summer to keep his streak of consecutive drafts with a first-round selection. Calipari has had a player selected in the first round since 2008, which dates back to his time at Memphis. Thiero is a fringe first-round pick who could see a boost in his stock due to other players returning to school. — Salerno
Tahaad Pettiford, Auburn
Big Board ranking: 27
Draft decision: Returning to Auburn
Pettiford returning to school isn’t much of a surprise. It’s the right decision. He was going to be a fringe first-round pick. Instead, he gets the chance to return to Auburn and will get the keys to the offense and an NIL deal worth more than $2 million, a source told CBS Sports’ Matt Norlander.
He was a microwave scorer off the bench last season, and his role will increase drastically. Pettiford should be a sleeper All-American candidate. — Salerno
Tahaad Pettiford withdraws from NBA Draft: Sophomore guard returns to Auburn after Final Four season
Matt Norlander

Jamir Watkins, Florida State
Big Board ranking: 68
Draft decision: Staying in the draft
After entering the transfer portal after two seasons at Florida State, Watkins is remaining in the draft. This is somewhat of a surprising move, as Watkins projects as a mid-to-late second-round selection. Watkins drew interest in the transfer portal from various teams. —Salerno
Nate Bittle, Oregon
Big Board ranking: NR
Draft decision: Returning to Oregon
Bittle withdrew from the NBA Draft and will return to Oregon for his senior season. The 7-foot, 240-pound center is one of the elite stretch bigs in all of college basketball. He shot 40% from 3-point range in Big Ten play while notching the second-best block percentage in league play. Bittle was a Third Team All-Big Ten selection this past season.
The big man’s return gives Oregon one of the elite duos in all of college basketball. Purdue’s point guard-big man combination of Braden Smith and Trey Kaufman-Renn may be the only point guard-big man pairing that is better than Bittle and lead guard Jackson Shelstad. — Trotter
Yaxel Lendeborg, Michigan
Big Board ranking: 43
Draft decision: Withdrawing from draft, transferring to Michigan
Lendeborg, a projected first-round pick in two recent mock drafts by CBS Sports, will headline one of the premier transfer portal classes in college basketball at Michigan, which ranks second behind St. John’s in the 247Sports recruiting rankings.
Lendeborg received a NIL package believed to be in the neighborhood of $3 million to return to school, sources indicated to CBS Sports. He led Division l in double-doubles at UAB last season. — Salerno
Projected first-round pick Yaxel Lendeborg to withdraw from 2025 NBA Draft, will transfer to Michigan
Shanna McCarriston

Alex Condon, Florida
Big Board ranking: 56
Draft decision: Returning to Florida
One of the biggest offseason wins for the reigning national champions came on the eve of the withdrawal deadline when Condon announced his return to Florida. Condon was Florida’s starting center last season but will benefit by returning to school for another season. He will enter next season as a projected first-round pick in the 2026 draft. — Salerno
Alex Condon returns to Florida: Gators may have top frontcourt after big man withdraws from 2025 NBA Draft
Austin Nivison

Cedric Coward, Washington State/Duke
Big Board ranking: 18
Draft decision: Staying in the 2025 NBA Draft
One of the biggest winners of the NBA Draft Combine was Coward, so it’s not surprising that he will never play a game for Duke. Coward played in just seven games last season for Washington State and averaged 17.7 points, 7.0 rebounds and 3.7 assists.
Coward began his career at the Division III level and had a two-year stint at Eastern Washington before transferring to WSU. Coward projected as a first-round pick in multiple mock drafts by CBS Sports. — Salerno
Cedric Coward to remain in NBA Draft: Duke roster rounds into shape as prized transfer elects to go pro
Carter Bahns

Milos Uzan, Houston
Big Board ranking: 45
Draft decision: Returning to Houston
Uzan took a significant step forward during his first year at Houston. He was the Cougars’ best 3-point shooter, connecting on 42.8% from beyond the arc. But outside of his performance against Purdue in the Sweet 16 — which saw him score a game-winning bucket to help the Cougars advance — he didn’t have his best showing in the NCAA Tournament.
Houston projects as a preseason top-three team heading into the 2025-26 campaign. Getting Uzan back helps the Cougars make the case for preseason No. 1 this fall. — Salerno
Karter Knox, Arkansas
Big Board ranking: NR
Draft decision: Returning to Arkansas
Knox, the brother of former Kentucky star and lottery pick Kevin Knox ll, played for the same coach his brother did during his first season. Knox was previously committed to Kentucky before flipping to follow coach John Calipari to Arkansas.
Knox should be in line for a larger role in Year 2. He averaged 8.3 points and 3.3 rebounds in 36 games for the Razorbacks. — Salerno
Karter Knox withdraws from NBA Draft: Arkansas retains talented wing as John Calipari molds Year 2 roster
Carter Bahns

PJ Haggerty, Memphis / Kansas State
Big Board ranking: 63
Draft decision: Withdrawing from draft, transferring to Kansas State
Haggerty will be at his fourth college in four years. After stops at TCU, Tulsa and, most recently, Memphis, Haggerty went through the draft process before withdrawing from the draft. Haggerty was one of the top-ranked players in the transfer portal available. He will join a Kansas State squad coming off a 16-17 showing.
Haggerty averaged 21.7 points and earned All-American honors from CBS Sports. — Salerno
No stranger to splash additions, is Kansas State’s roster ready to support blockbuster transfer PJ Haggerty?
Isaac Trotter

Darrion Williams, NC State
Big Board ranking: 44
Draft decision: Returning to school, transferring to NC State
Williams was one of the heroes of Texas Tech’s run to the Elite Eight this past spring. After declaring for the draft while simultaneously entering the transfer portal, Williams decided to remove his name from draft consideration and committed to NC State.
Williams’ commitment is part of a roster overhaul at NC State for first-year coach Will Wade. — Salerno
Darrion Williams commits to NC State: Wolfpack add March Madness star, continue to load up under Will Wade
Zachary Pereles

NIL
Jim Harbaugh donates team gear to support NIL at Michigan through Champions Circle auction
Jim Harbaugh is entering his second season with the Los Angeles Chargers, but the former Michigan football coach is still supporting the program he took to three straight Big Ten championships and the 2023 national title. Champions Circle is currently auctioning team-issued gear that Harbaugh wore during his time with the Wolverines. Proceeds from the online garage sale will […]

Jim Harbaugh is entering his second season with the Los Angeles Chargers, but the former Michigan football coach is still supporting the program he took to three straight Big Ten championships and the 2023 national title.
Champions Circle is currently auctioning team-issued gear that Harbaugh wore during his time with the Wolverines. Proceeds from the online garage sale will support Michigan football NIL.
“A lifelong football man and one of the sport’s most vocal advocates for student-athlete rights, Coach Harbaugh was among the most prominent college coaches in support of Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) during his time at Michigan,” reads a press release.
“Before departing for Los Angeles, Coach Harbaugh generously donated a wide array of team-issued gear, much of it worn by him during his nine seasons at Michigan, to NIL collective Champions Circle. These items are now up for bid and funds from the items will benefit Michigan Football NIL.”
The auction includes cleats, shirts, jackets and other memorabilia collected during Harbaugh’s tenure in Ann Arbor. Some of the featured items:
- A team-issued “MICH1GAN 1,000 Wins” bomber jacket given to the Michigan football team after becoming the first program to reach the 1,000 all-time win mark during the 2023 season.
- Autographed “career hat” pack including one autographed hat from Jim Harbaugh’s high school football team, the Ann Arbor Pioneer Pioneers, one autographed hat from Jim Harbaugh’s college football team, the Michigan Wolverines, and one autographed hat from Jim Harbaugh’s second NFL team, the Indianapolis Colts.
- Team-issued Air Jordan 13 football cleats worn by Jim Harbaugh.
Those interested in the auction can shop the collection by clicking here. Bidding closes Wednesday, July 9 at 7 p.m. ET.
Champions Circle was the first name, image and likeness (NIL) collective to become an official partner of Michigan Athletics.
“We welcome the Champions Circle as the first U of M collective to achieve the status as an official partner of the Michigan Athletics,” Athletic Director Warde Manuel said when that news was announced in 2023. “Champions Circle has been thoughtful and proactive in its approach to support NIL activities for student-athletes across our entire athletic department. They have done a tremendous amount of work to properly leverage our marks to benefit our young people.”
Other Champions Circle initiatives have included the “One More Year Fund,” which helped retain Blake Corum, Mike Sainristil, Zak Zinter, Trevor Keegan, Kris Jenkins and others for the 2023 national championship run. The “Those Who Stay (Home)” campaign helped welcome the nation’s No. 1 recruit, Bryce Underwood, to the program. According to Champions Circle, more than 11,000 individuals have donated to the NIL collective.
“We want to thank our Founding Members and others associated with Champions Circle who have worked tirelessly behind the scenes to make it possible to continue our work building championship teams at Michigan,” the organization said.
NIL
A screenshot from College Football 26 showing Dabo Swinney’s in-game model sparked strong reactions online.
A screenshot from College Football 26 showing Dabo Swinney’s in-game model sparked strong reactions online. originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney is officially in a video game — but fans are wondering if EA Sports has ever actually seen him. Advertisement On Tuesday morning, EA Sports released a much-anticipated deep dive […]

A screenshot from College Football 26 showing Dabo Swinney’s in-game model sparked strong reactions online. originally appeared on Athlon Sports.
Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney is officially in a video game — but fans are wondering if EA Sports has ever actually seen him.
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On Tuesday morning, EA Sports released a much-anticipated deep dive into the Dynasty Mode of College Football 26, unveiling gameplay footage and new features ahead of the July 10 release. Among the biggest additions: real head coaches are now officially featured on the sidelines — a major upgrade from the generic placeholders used in previous versions.
But when the Clemson faithful caught their first glimpse of Swinney’s digital likeness, the reaction was… not kind.
The model, which appeared in a screen capture during the EA Sports YouTube reveal, drew near-instant criticism across social media. Fans pointed out that while coaches like Kirby Smart, Marcus Freeman, and James Franklin bear a strong resemblance to their real-life counterparts, Swinney’s digital double looks like a random character generated from scratch.
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“This isn’t Dabo. This is Dale from Clemson, who eats at the Esso every Sunday after church and thinks NIL is witchcraft,” one user joked on X.
Another fan added, “EA really looked at Dabo Swinney and said, ‘Let’s make him look like a divorced stepdad who sells pest control door-to-door.’”
Others compared the in-game Swinney to a mash-up of Jeff Daniels, Liam Neeson, Bob Odenkirk, and even former president George W. Bush — anything but the Clemson coach fans know so well.
Clemson football head coach Dabo Swinney talks with media.© Ken Ruinard / staff / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
To be fair, the inclusion of actual head coaches — including assistants like Garrett Riley and Tom Allen for Clemson — is a welcome and long-awaited improvement. It adds authenticity and immersion to a franchise that had been dormant since 2013 due to NIL-related legal battles.
Still, many wondered how EA could get Swinney so wrong after reportedly receiving thousands of reference photos from Clemson. “If this is the worst part of the game, we’ll survive,” one fan admitted. “But seriously, they had one job.”
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This isn’t the first time EA Sports has missed the mark with a Clemson figure. In last year’s College Football 25 trailer, a quick shot of the Tigers running down The Hill showed an unrecognizable version of offensive lineman Walker Parks.
Parks, listed at 6’5”, 310 pounds, looked closer to 375 in the game — fans joked he was “one biscuit away” from needing his own zip code. The clip went viral and sparked a wave of laughs and eye-rolls across social media.
Now, with Dabo’s look causing a new stir, it seems Clemson still can’t catch a break from EA’s character modeling team.
EA Sports has yet to respond to the criticism, but based on the flood of memes and commentary, the developers may want to consider a last-minute patch — or at the very least, a more accurate rendering in next year’s release.
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Until then, fans will have to settle for watching “Not-Dabo” roam the sidelines, looking more ready to lecture on the dangers of TikTok at a Rotary Club than lead Clemson into Death Valley.
Related: FSU QB’s Trash Talk Gives Clemson Major Motivation for November Showdown
Related: Clemson Poised to Snatch 4-Star Safety From Jaws of Michigan, Miami
Related: Former MLB Umpire Who Ejected Clemson Star Strikes Again in CWS Controversy
This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 25, 2025, where it first appeared.
NIL
Jeremiah Fears NIL Deals
I cover NBA at the Playoffs. I specialize in covering breaking news, Previews, in in-depth analysis (breaking down numbers, complex stats, nuances of the game, and converting them into reader-friendly content). Furthermore, I got into the sports media while looking for an entry into the media industry. I love International Relations, and since entry without […]


I cover NBA at the Playoffs. I specialize in covering breaking news, Previews, in in-depth analysis (breaking down numbers, complex stats, nuances of the game, and converting them into reader-friendly content). Furthermore, I got into the sports media while looking for an entry into the media industry. I love International Relations, and since entry without majoring in the subject was difficult, I got into sports. Now, while majoring in International Relations on one side, I also like covering sports as part of the journey as a young Journalist.
NIL
Steve Sarkisian highlights what sets Texas apart in NIL recruiting battles
Texas Longhorns’ head coach Steve Sarkisian adamantly believes his program has the best product in the country. The Longhorns have certainly reached new heights under Sarkisian since he took the job in 2021. After a losing season in his first year, Texas has posted a 33-10 record with a Big 12 championship in 2023 and […]

Texas Longhorns’ head coach Steve Sarkisian adamantly believes his program has the best product in the country.
The Longhorns have certainly reached new heights under Sarkisian since he took the job in 2021. After a losing season in his first year, Texas has posted a 33-10 record with a Big 12 championship in 2023 and back-to-back College Football Playoff appearances over the last two seasons.
Things have also improved significantly on the recruiting trail, as Texas is coming off the nation’s top class of the 2025 cycle after signing the No. 6 class and No. 3 class, respectively, over the previous two cycles.
Additionally, the Longhorns have produced the most NFL Draft picks (23) by any program over the last two years.
Sarkisian noted those accomplishments, along with making the 2024 SEC title game in the first season in the conference, when explaining why Texas is such an enticing spot for some of the top players in the country.
“All the while that’s occurring at a top five public institution in the United States,” Sarkisian said Tuesday on “3rd & Longhorn.” “All the while being part of an athletic department that’s won four of the five last athletic director’s cups.”
Longhorns football is backed by a large NIL war chest that is estimated to spend $22.2 million this year, the most in the country, per NCAA estimates. And Sarkisian believes there are additional opportunties for his players given Austin’s lack of professional sports teams.
“But all the while you’re doing it in the city of Austin, which, oh, by the way, is the largest city in the US with no pro sports,” Sarkisian said. “So, no NFL, no major league baseball, no NBA. So, who are getting those NIL deals?”
Sarkisian and Co. appear to be using that aspect to sign recruits and transfers to lesser deals than they might get elsewhere, something he believes has to happen to maintain depth and stay near the top of college football.
“Maybe we get a guy for a little bit less than another school’s offering,” he said. “Especially in this day and age, that’s got to happen … I (a recruit) want to look at more of the long-term money and Texas is going to provide me an opportunity to to create more opportunities whether it’s on the field, off the field, degree, NIL, brand building, player development, opportunity in the NFL.”
“We’ve got a lot of avenues to go come here and be really successful,” Sarkisian continued. So, there’s a lot to it. But like I said, I think we have the best product in the US. I don’t think there’s another school that can say that.”
NIL
IU basketball recruiting target Sammy Jackson picks VCU – The Daily Hoosier
Darian DeVries suffered his first high school recruiting decision day loss this afternoon. 4-star wing Sammy Jackson surprised many Wednesday when he picked perennial mid-major power Virginia Commonwealth over Indiana and Texas, along with St. Joe’s. Jackson announced the decision at his high school. His father, long-time NBA player Marc Jackson, also started his college […]

Darian DeVries suffered his first high school recruiting decision day loss this afternoon.
4-star wing Sammy Jackson surprised many Wednesday when he picked perennial mid-major power Virginia Commonwealth over Indiana and Texas, along with St. Joe’s.
Jackson announced the decision at his high school. His father, long-time NBA player Marc Jackson, also started his college career at VCU before transferring to Temple.
A Philadelphia product, Jackson chose to play at VCU for another product of his hometown. New VCU head coach Phil Martelli, Jr. played at St. Joe’s in Philadelphia.
Jackson took an official visit to IU earlier this month.
DeVries and the IU staff have several other wing players on their 2026 board, including Prince-Alexander Moody, who is on an official visit in Bloomington this week.
For more on where things stand with IU’s class of 2026 recruiting efforts, GO HERE:
IU basketball class of 2026 recruiting scorecard: Here’s where things stand in late June
For complete coverage of IU basketball recruiting, GO HERE.
The Daily Hoosier –“Where Indiana fans assemble when they’re not at Assembly”
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NIL
The importance of regaining the aura of Alabama Football
The aura has been lost, and in year two of the DeBoer era, it is more important than ever for some of that to return to the Alabama football program. With the NIL and transfer portal era, there is a lot more parity in college football, and because of that, we’ve seen Alabama be less […]

The aura has been lost, and in year two of the DeBoer era, it is more important than ever for some of that to return to the Alabama football program. With the NIL and transfer portal era, there is a lot more parity in college football, and because of that, we’ve seen Alabama be less dominant and opponents having more confidence than ever before that they can beat Alabama. We saw that in 2023 with how Quinn Ewers came into Bryant-Denny Stadium and dominated, and it was seen far too much last season.
This summer so far, we’ve seen Diego Pavia’s social media response to Ryan Williams, and the newest hot topic this week is what Thomas Castellanos had to say about the week one matchup. I get it, players should have confidence in their abilities and teams being able to beat Alabama, but it’s a different world when Vanderbilt legitimately feels like they are on the same level, or a team coming off a 2-10 season has any bulletin board material to give going into the season. The jury is still out on the Crimson Tide going into this season, and because of that, now more than ever, teams feel like it’s time to get their licks back.
Everything seems to still revolve around what Nick Saban did and what he still does to help the program. Though his presence is important and his run will always be held in high regard, it is important that in Kalen DeBoer’s second season that we start to see less of that focus on the past. The big question is, how do you do that? And the simple answer is to win games, and that starts with winning convincingly in Tallahassee, winning all three revenge games at home in 2025, and ending the season much stronger than 2024 with at least one playoff game. The path of transition is far from easy, but if Duke was able to transition from Coach K to John Scheyer without much, if any, drop off, there is no doubt the same can be done in Tuscaloosa.
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