Connect with us

NIL

Another Thompson (Alabama) high school football player turns down NIL deal

For the second time in the last year, a player at Thompson High School, one of the top high school football programs in Alabama has turned down a large Name, Image and Likeness (NIL) deal. Earlier this week, 5 Star Football Recruiting was the first to report that EDGE rusher Cameron Pritchett rejected a $750,000 […]

Published

on

Another Thompson (Alabama) high school football player turns down NIL deal

For the second time in the last year, a player at Thompson High School, one of the top high school football programs in Alabama has turned down a large Name, Image and Likeness (NIL) deal. Earlier this week, 5 Star Football Recruiting was the first to report that EDGE rusher Cameron Pritchett rejected a $750,000 NIL offer that would have required him to transfer to an out-of-state school.

Pritchett is a junior-to-be for the Warriors, the reigning Alabama 7A champs. His trainer Isaac Hadac told the Associated Press, “He believes that by the grace of God, he’s going to go far in the game of football, and all of the material things will come down the road. It means a lot to him to be able to stay and use his faith in the process to help him make that decision.”

High school student-athletes are currently not allowed to sign NIL deals. Since July 2021, 30 state athletic associations, plus the District of Columbia allowed high school athletes to monetize their name, image and likeness.

“First of all, I am so blessed and grateful to even be considered in that way. It’s really an honor and privilege that I do not take lightly or for granted,” Pritchett told 5 Star Football Recruiting. “Having said that, I truly believe that God has a plan for my career and for my life as long as I allow Him to guide my path. It’s important to me that my legacy is built on integrity, hard work, passion, and faith. I want to do that at Thompson.“

Last season, Pritchett, who has 20 college scholarship offers, according to 247Sports, recorded 78 total tackles, 15 tackles for loss, and 6.5 sacks in 14 games last season. His performance has drawn interest from top college programs like national champion Ohio State, Georgia, LSU and Notre Dame.

Thompson has won five of the last six Class 7A Alabama high school football championships under head coach Mark Freeman. The Warriors finished No. 39 in the High School Football America 300 national rankings, powered by NFL Play Football. It was the eighth straight season that the program finished in our national rankings.

Pritchett’s decision isn’t the first of its kind at Thompson. Quarterback Trent Seaborn, a three-time HSFA Academic All-American, reportedly turned down a seven-figure NIL deal from a trading card company in 2024.

Hadac credits both decisions to Coach Freeman, who has won 11 overall Alabama high school football championships at Thompson, Spanish Fort and Bessemer Academy.

“Coach Freeman is a legacy coach. He wants to leave a legacy with Thompson,” Hadac said. “These kids know that if they buy into the process, all of these things will come one way or another.”

The rise of NIL deals has transformed high school and college sports, with donor-backed collectives brokering lucrative agreements to attract top talent. However, Alabama’s lack of NIL legislation for high school athletes makes Pritchett’s offer—and his rejection of it—all the more significant.

Critics of the NIL system argue that it places undue pressure on young athletes, forcing them to make life-altering decisions before they’re ready.

NIL

College Softball Bracketology: Selection Sunday

Selection Sunday is here. Softball America releases its last College Softball Bracketology of the 2025 season. Watch the softball selection show at 7 p.m. ET on ESPN2. * = Denotes Automatic Bid NORMAN BLACKSBURG 1 Oklahoma* (1) 1 Virginia Tech (16) 4 Weber State* 4 Robert Morris* 2 Virginia 2 Ohio State 3 Indiana 3 […]

Published

on


Selection Sunday is here. Softball America releases its last College Softball Bracketology of the 2025 season. Watch the softball selection show at 7 p.m. ET on ESPN2.

* = Denotes Automatic Bid

NORMAN BLACKSBURG
1 Oklahoma* (1) 1 Virginia Tech (16)
4 Weber State* 4 Robert Morris*
2 Virginia 2 Ohio State
3 Indiana 3 Kentucky
COLLEGE STATION TUSCALOOSA
1 Texas A&M (2) 1 Alabama (15)
4 UC Santa Barbara* 4 Jackson State*
2 Cal 2 Oregon
3 Omaha* 3 Mercer*
GAINESVILLE DURHAM
1 Florida (3) 1 Duke (14)
4 Binghamton* 4 Howard*
2 UCF 2 Georgia
3 FAU 3 Coastal Carolina*
FAYETTEVILLE TUCSON
1 Arkansas (4) 1 Arizona (13)
4 Saint Louis* 4 Saint Francis*
2 Oklahoma State 2 GCU*
3 Purdue 3 Michigan*
TALLAHASSEE LUBBOCK
1 Florida State (5) 1 Texas Tech* (12)
4 Brown* 4 Miami*
2 Mississippi State 2 Ole Miss
3 USF* 3 Washington
KNOXVILLE CLEMSON
1 Tennessee (6) 1 Clemson* (11)
4 Eastern Illinois* 4 Elon*
2 Georgia Tech 2 Auburn
3 Belmont* 3 UNF*
AUSTIN COLUMBIA
1 Texas (7) 1 South Carolina (10)
4 Boston U.* 4 USC Upstate*
2 Nebraska 2 Liberty*
3 UConn* 3 North Carolina
LOS ANGELES BATON ROUGE
1 UCLA (8) 1 LSU (9)
4 Santa Clara* 4 Marist*
2 San Diego State* 2 Stanford
3 Arizona State 3 SELA*

College Softball Bracketology Breakdown

Hosts by conference:

SEC: 9
ACC: 4
Big 12: 2
Big Ten: 1

Bids by conference:

SEC: 14
ACC: 9
Big Ten: 8
Big 12: 5
American: 2
Every Other Conference: 1

Last Four In:

North Carolina (40-15)
Washington (34-17)
Indiana (33-18)
Purdue (30-23)

First Four Out:

BYU (32-17)
Nevada (41-14)
Northwestern (29-18-1)
North Texas (36-21)

College Softball Bracketology Thoughts

  • The metrics say Texas A&M should be the No. 1 seed and certainly can be once the bracket is unveiled. However, Oklahoma has the most Top-10 RPI wins, second in quad one wins, and I simply think that the four-time defending champions are going to catch a break.
  • UCLA being in the top eight seeds is a change from my recent bracketology but my gut feeling is the committee avoids seven SEC Super Regional hosts and the Bruins are the best choice. They might be rewarded for challenging themselves with a tough non-conference schedule that includes wins over Arkansas and Tennessee.
  • Virginia Tech once again gets the last spot over Oregon. The SOS and NC-SOS metrics just crush the Ducks, considering they played 31 games against quad-four opponents. The losses to Oregon State and Michigan State are worse than the Hokies’ series loss to Pitt. While both teams have five quad-one wins, all of Oregon’s being Top-10 RPI wins, Virginia Tech has six wins against the RPI 26-28 teams (Liberty, Virginia, Cal) and that can easily be seen on the team sheet by the committee.
  • Full transparency, North Carolina and Washington are listed in the Last Four In but should be safely in in Sunday. Indiana feels pretty good given the RPI, quad-one wins, Top-50 and 100 wins and lack of a quad-four loss.
  • I really wish a team stole a bid from a Mid-Major because I don’t love the options for the final team in this projection. Now the final spot in my opinion is up to Nevada, Purdue, BYU and Northwestern. I went Purdue because in the last three years, the worst RPI to get in as an at-large bid is 45, which was where the Boilermakers were at in the latest RPI update on Saturday. The addition of a quad-one win at the Big Ten Tournament, in addition to beating Northwestern helped a not-so-great resume. I wouldn’t be shocked if any of those four teams appeared in the bracket, BYU was the one I had the toughest time not putting in because they have more Top-100 wins but the 190 NC-SOS might be the difference.

More from Softball America:

Coaching Carousel Discussion Board
2026 Recruiting Rankings
Transfer Portal Wire



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Trent Dilfer Says NIL Money Influencing Schemes He Can Run at UAB

It stands to reason that UAB football coach Trent Dilfer has a little more to worry about than the state of NIL in college sports. After all, after two seasons at UAB he’s just 7-17 and he clearly has some work to do to keep his job. That’s where talent — and NIL — could help. […]

Published

on


It stands to reason that UAB football coach Trent Dilfer has a little more to worry about than the state of NIL in college sports.

After all, after two seasons at UAB he’s just 7-17 and he clearly has some work to do to keep his job. That’s where talent — and NIL — could help.

Dilfer, a former NFL quarterback who is guiding his first college program, has sounded off about NIL before, most notably advocating for a “floor” for upcoming revenue sharing in college sports.

Now, he’s sounding the alarm about another issue — the disparity of NIL money between power conference schools and Group of 5 schools and how it can influence the type of scheme you want to run.

Dilfer used an example from his own program. Bill Clark, now retired, set the standard at UAB football. He even remained the head coach after the program was killed and through its revival.

Clark was famous for running what Dilfer called a “mint defense.” The cover two scheme featured a two-gap system where linemen punch and hold up offensive linemen to create lanes for tacklers.

Dilfer told the Blazer Victory Podcast recently that he loves the system. He says many coaches hate playing against it.

But, to run that system the team has to have the personnel to do it. And that’s the problem. The players needed to execute the system are hard to find. And with NIL, they’re not cheap.

The power conference teams can make those NIL payments, Dilfer’s UAB Blazers and other Group of 5 programs cannot.

“Those guys are very expensive,” Dilfer said. “To run that defense right now is probably about $2 million and we have $1 million for the entire team.”

Yes, that’s $1 million in NIL money for an entire team. He said the Jack position in that defensive scheme can make $750,000 in NIL money.

“I’d love to play that defense. I can’t afford that defense,” he said.

For contrast, the Texas football program is believed to have a budget of anywhere from $35-40 million for 2025, which reportedly combines its NIL money with its expected money from revenue sharing in the House vs. NCAA settlement.

That’s a payroll that the Blazers — and the schools outside of the power four conferences — simply can’t afford, whether they like a particular scheme or not.



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Mississippi State baseball wins Ole Miss series: Takeaways

STARKVILLE — Mississippi State baseball has won consecutive SEC series.  The Bulldogs (31-20, 12-15 SEC) took two of three games from No. 22 Ole Miss (34-17, 14-13) at Dudy Noble Field over the weekend. The Rebels won Game 1 of the doubleheader 10-4 on May 9, but MSU prevailed in the next two games, 4-1 […]

Published

on


STARKVILLE — Mississippi State baseball has won consecutive SEC series. 

The Bulldogs (31-20, 12-15 SEC) took two of three games from No. 22 Ole Miss (34-17, 14-13) at Dudy Noble Field over the weekend. The Rebels won Game 1 of the doubleheader 10-4 on May 9, but MSU prevailed in the next two games, 4-1 and 6-5.

MSU is 6-1 since firing coach Chris Lemonis on April 28.

Here’s what we learned from the series, with one week remaining in the regular season. 

Mississippi State’s spark still lit after Chris Lemonis’ firing

Mississippi State’s resurgence since Lemonis’ firing has lasted longer than a week. It started with a run-rule win versus Memphis, and then a sweep of Kentucky.

The Ole Miss series win puts the Bulldogs closer to securing an NCAA Tournament appearance and in a much more comfortable position before the final series at Missouri. It also showed they might be peaking at just the right time, rather than backing into the postseason. 

“We’ve been playing better complementary baseball,” interim coach Justin Parker said. “I think that’s the biggest thing. It’s trending, yes, but we’re not as one-dimensional as maybe we were six weeks ago or a month ago. We’re able to win games in a couple different ways.”

In Game 2, the Bulldogs won behind an outstanding pitching performance by Evan Siary. They had 13 hits in Game 3. They did commit two errors in Game 3, but still had great defensive moments like Gatlin Sanders’ diving stop to produce a double play in the third inning. 

Evan Siary is capable of being a dominant pitcher

What we saw from Siary might not happen again this season, or in the next handful of seasons. 

The junior pitcher from Columbus was flat-out dominant, with 15 strikeouts in eight shutout innings, both career highs. He did not walk anyone, and 76 of his 98 pitches were strikes. 

“It was just stay focused, keep going and just trust the guy next to me, trust each other and just go do whatever it takes to win the ballgame,” Siary said.

It’s important because he hadn’t had a performance like that all season. He has been locked in as MSU’s Saturday starter since March, but typically has had a short leash of three or four innings. Friday starter Pico Kohn also has allowed six earned runs twice in his past three starts. 

“I think historically he’s struggled to put hitters away,” Parker said of Siary. “He’s one of the best strike throwers in the league. It’s just been getting to the finish line in the past, striking guys out, essentially. He’s done that a little bit better and better every week.”

Ryan McPherson will be trusted in big moments as a freshman

It wasn’t the first time freshman reliever Ryan McPherson has been inserted in high-leverage situations. He was the one who allowed a game-tying two-run homer in the ninth inning to Ole Miss in the Governor’s Cup on April 22. 

In Saturday’s Game 3, the Bulldogs were clinging to a 6-5 lead in the ninth inning after leading earlier 6-1. Ben Davis issued back-to-back walks, and Mississippi State replaced him with McPherson. The righthander from Florida induced a double play and then another ground ball to end the game and earn his second save of the season.

“What great poise,” Parker said. “Just making one pitch at a time.”

The Bulldogs don’t have a bona fide closer, so that experience could be handy for McPherson (4-0, 3.13 ERA) in the postseason. His two saves are tied for the team lead with Luke Dotson, Chase Hungate and Stone Simmons. 

“Me and Luke Dotson, we kind of were talking before the game that it’s like a revenge game or redemption game,” McPherson said. “It immediately just felt great.”

Sam Sklar is the Mississippi State beat reporter for the Clarion Ledger. Email him at ssklar@gannett.com and follow him on X @sklarsam_.



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Liberty placed in College Station Regional in NCAA Softball Championship

The Liberty softball team defeated Jacksonville State on Saturday in the 2025 CUSA Softball Championship to claim the league’s automatic bid to the 2025 NCAA Division I Softball Championship. During Sunday evening’s selection show, the Lady Flames learned they will travel to College Station, Texas to compete in the College Station Regional. To begin regional […]

Published

on


The Liberty softball team defeated Jacksonville State on Saturday in the 2025 CUSA Softball Championship to claim the league’s automatic bid to the 2025 NCAA Division I Softball Championship.

During Sunday evening’s selection show, the Lady Flames learned they will travel to College Station, Texas to compete in the College Station Regional. To begin regional play on Friday, the Flames will take on Marist at 1 pm on ESPN+. No. 1 overall seed Texas A&M, who is the regional host, will play Saint Francis on Friday.

The Marist Red Foxes enter regional play as champions of the MAAC, defeating Siena on Sunday, 10-2 in 5 innings, to claim the title. Marist is 47-7-1 on the season and a dominating 21-2-1 in conference play. They have won 17 straight games and are 36-2-1 since March 1. This year’s MAAC championship is its fourth under head coach Joe Ausanio and second in the past three years.

Meanwhile, Texas A&M is the No. 1 overall national seed following a 45-9 season and 16-7 SEC mark. The Aggies have won the national championship twice before and are making their 23rd straight NCAA Tournament appearance, but this year is the first time Texas A&M has been the No. 1 overall seed.

The Lady Flames will be competing in a fifth straight NCAA Tournament. Last year, Liberty came within one out of advancing further than the program has ever made it. However, the Lady Flames were unable to finish the job, falling to Georgia in game two of the regional final. Getting to a Super Regional has been a goal head coach Dot Richardson has set before her team this season.

In 2021, Liberty was the 2-seed in the Knoxville Regional where the Lady Flames defeated the host Tennessee who was the No. 9 national seed in an elimination game. Liberty lost two games in the Regional, including the Regional Final, to eventual Women’s College World Series participant James Madison. In 2022, Liberty defeated Georgia to open play in the Durham Regional. The Lady Flames would go on to lose their next two games, falling to Regional host Duke and Georgia to be eliminated. Two seasons ago, the Lady Flames defeated No. 2 national seed UCLA and also Grand Canyon but were eliminated in the regional final by San Diego State.

This will be the eighth time in program history in which Liberty will compete in a Regional. The Lady Flames won conference tournament titles in 2002, 2011, 2018, 2021, 2022, 2024, and this year. Liberty received an at-large in 2023.

FRIDAY, MAY 16

Game 1: Liberty (47-12) vs Marist (47-7-1), 1 p.m. (ESPN+)
Game 2: #1 Texas A&M (45-9) vs Saint Francis (26-24), 3:30 p.m. (SEC Network)

SATURDAY, MAY 17

Game 3: Winner Game 1 vs. Winner Game 2, TBD
Game 4: Loser Game 1 vs Loser Game 2, TBD
Game 5: Winner Game 4 vs Loser Game 3, TBD

SUNDAY, MAY 18

Game 6: Winner Game 3 vs. Winner Game 5, TBD
Game 7: Winner Game 6 vs Loser Game 6, TBD (if necessary)



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Bill Belichick supports Jordon Hudson at Miss Maine as she trails trans rival in public vote

Bill Belichick was a supportive boyfriend this weekend, turning up at the Miss. Maine beauty pageant to support his girlfriend, Jordon Hudson, who finished runner-up last year Joshua Mbu Senior Sports Reporter 12:35, 11 May 2025 Bill Belichick supported Jordon Hudson at the Miss. Maine pageant(Image: Getty) North Carolina head coach and NFL legend Bill […]

Published

on


Bill Belichick was a supportive boyfriend this weekend, turning up at the Miss. Maine beauty pageant to support his girlfriend, Jordon Hudson, who finished runner-up last year

Bill Belichick supported Jordon Hudson at the Miss. Maine pageant
Bill Belichick supported Jordon Hudson at the Miss. Maine pageant(Image: Getty)

North Carolina head coach and NFL legend Bill Belichick appeared at the Miss. Maine pageant to support his 24-year-old girlfriend, Jordon Hudson.

Hudson finished as the first runner-up in last year’s competition, but her appearance this year has drawn more attraction due to her high-profile relationship with Belichick, who is 49 years her senior. The couple have been publicly dating since June 2024, and in recent months, have made headlines for Hudson’s appearance at Tar Heels training camp, as well as Belichick’s car-crash CBS interview, where his girlfriend made strong interjections to shut down questions over their relationship.

Despite helping run Belichick’s PR and building up her real estate portfolio, Hudson has remained true to her passion for competing at beauty pageants. She is hoping to secure the Miss Maine crown this year, having finished runner-up last year. However, she’s competing against trans woman Isabelle St. Cyr, the first openly trans competitor in the event’s history, after being crowned the winner of her Maine town pageant, Miss Monson.

READ MORE: Rory McIlroy to finally give Erica Stoll what she wants with major family decisionREAD MORE: Shedeur Sanders suffers first NFL setback as Browns make announcement

While the official winner of Miss Maine has yet to be announced, early fan voting could spell trouble for Hudson, who collected considerably fewer votes than leader Lexi Bjork and less than St. Cyr. The fan-voting winner will significantly boost their chances of scooping the crown, with the leader gaining an automatic entry into the pageant’s semifinals.

Following the CBS interview, Hudson went to social media to address negative comments about her interactions with the interviewer. The awkward sit-down chat saw social media users criticize Hudson, who managed questions asked to Belichick. Hudson reposted tweets on social media platform X showing her and Belichick support.

An email from Belichick was also posted on Hudson’s personal Instagram account. Belichick also slapped down critics in the CBS interview who raised questions over his relationship.

Bill Belichick and Jordon Hudson met on a flight from Massachusetts to Florida in 2021
Bill Belichick and Jordon Hudson met on a flight from Massachusetts to Florida in 2021(Image: Getty)

“I’ve never been too worried about what everybody else thinks,” Belichick said. “Just try to do what I feel like is best for me and what’s right.”

Belichick is gearing up for a new adventure in football, coaching in college football at the Tar Heels. The 73-year-old took a season off before taking the job in North Carolina after leaving the New England Patriots at the end of the 2023 season.

Belichick’s first game in charge of the Tar Heels is scheduled for Sept. 1, 2025, against TCU at Kenan Stadium in Chapel Hill. “I believe we’re going to run a good program and have a good team. We’ll see where that all goes,” Belichick said. “I’m not making any predictions. I’m just saying I’m coming in to do the best I can.”

Hudson was present for Belichick's car crash CBS interview
Hudson was present for Belichick’s car crash CBS interview(Image: Getty)

The school also released a statement amid Hudson’s widespread attention. Reports claimed that Hudson had been banned from the Tar Heels’ football facilities, which have now been rubbished.

“While Jordon Hudson is not an employee at the University or Carolina Athletics, she is welcome to the Carolina Football facilities,” they said.

“Jordon will continue to manage all activities related to Coach Belichick’s personal brand outside of his responsibilities for Carolina Football and the University,” the statement continued.



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

2025 NCAA Softball Tournament bracket, schedule revealed

With conference tournaments in the books, the 2025 NCAA Softball Tournament bracket is set to be revealed. On Sunday night, the selections were announced. There were a number of automatic qualifiers that already knew their fate heading into Selection Sunday. Those that won conference tournaments had no ambiguity; they were in the field. But for […]

Published

on


With conference tournaments in the books, the 2025 NCAA Softball Tournament bracket is set to be revealed. On Sunday night, the selections were announced.

There were a number of automatic qualifiers that already knew their fate heading into Selection Sunday. Those that won conference tournaments had no ambiguity; they were in the field.

But for others, a spot in the NCAA Softball Tournament was not a guarantee. So there was some tension and intrigue when the announcements were made.

Let’s get to the selections. The NCAA Softball Tournament was revealed live on Sunday night, and On3 keeps you posted with the latest.

2025 NCAA Softball Tournament Bracket Regionals (May 16-18)

Bryan-College Station Regional

(1) Texas A&M
Saint Francis
Friday 3:30 p.m. ET – SEC Network
Marist
Liberty
Friday 1 p.m. ET – ESPN+

Norman Regional

(2) Oklahoma
Boston University
Friday 6 p.m. ET – ESPNU
Omaha
California
Friday 3:30 p.m. ET – ESPN+

Gainesville Regional

(3) Florida
Mercer
Friday 4:30 p.m. ET – ESPN+
Georgia Tech
Florida Atlantic
Friday 2 p.m. ET – ESPNU

Fayetteville Regional

(4) Arkansas
Saint Louis
Friday 6:30 p.m. ET – ESPN+
Indiana
Oklahoma State
Friday 4 p.m. ET – ESPN2

Tallahassee Regional

(5) Florida State
Robert Morris
Friday 2:30 p.m. ET – ACC Network
USF
Auburn
Friday 12 p.m. ET – ESPNU

Austin Regional

(6) Texas
Eastern Illinois
Friday 4:30 p.m. ET – ESPN+
Michigan
UCF
Friday 2 p.m. ET – ESPN2

Knoxville Regional

(7) Tennessee
Miami (OH)
Friday 1:30 p.m. ET – SEC Network
North Carolina
Ohio State
Friday 4 p.m. ET – ESPNU

Columbia Regional

(8) South Carolina
Elon
Friday 5:30 p.m. ET – ESPN+
North Florida
Virginia
Friday 3 p.m. ET – ESPN+

Los Angeles Regional

(9) UCLA
UC Santa Barbara
Friday 7:30 p.m. ET – ESPN+
San Diego State
Arizona State
Friday 10 p.m. ET – ESPN2

Baton Rouge Regional

(10) LSU
Southeastern Louisiana
Friday 5:30 p.m. ET – SEC Network
UConn
Nebraska
Friday 3 p.m. ET – ESPN+

Clemson Regional

(11) Clemson
SC Upstate
Friday 4:30 p.m. ET – ACC Network
Northwestern
Kentucky
Friday 2 p.m. ET – ESPN+

Lubbock Regional

(12) Texas Tech
Brown
Friday 5:30 p.m. ET – ESPN+
Washington
Mississippi State
Friday 8 p.m. ET – ESPN2

Tucson Regional

(13) Arizona
Santa Clara
Friday 7:30 p.m. ET – ESPN+
Grand Canyon
Ole Miss
Friday 10 p.m. ET – ESPNU

Durham Regional

(14) Duke
Howard
Friday 12 p.m. ET – ACC Network
Coastal Carolina
Georgia
Friday 2:30 p.m. ET – ESPN+

Tuscaloosa Regional

(15) Alabama
Jackson State
Friday 6 p.m. ET – ESPN+
Belmont
Virginia Tech
Friday 3:30 p.m. ET – ESPN+

Eugene Regional

(16) Oregon
Weber State
Friday 7:30 p.m. ET – ESPN+
Binghamton
Stanford
Friday 5 p.m. ET – ESPN+

Super Regionals (May 22-25)

Winner of Bryan-College Station Regional vs. Winner of Eugene Regional

Winner of Norman Regional vs. Winner of Tuscaloosa Regional

Winner of Gainesville Regional vs. Winner of Durham Regional

Winner of Fayetteville Regional vs. Winner of Tucson Regional

Winner of Tallahassee Regional vs. Winner of Lubbock Regional

Winner of Austin Regional vs. Winner of Clemson Regional

Winner of Knoxville Regional vs. Winner of Baton Rouge Regional

Winner of Columbia Regional vs. Winner of Los Angeles Regional

2025 Women’s College World Series

May 29 through June 5 or 6 at Devon Park in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma



Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending