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Ball State University – Official Athletics Site

ATHENS, Ohio – – After being no-hit in a 2-0 loss to being the day, the Ball State softball team smashed four hits and scored two runs in the first inning of the nightcap to help secure a 5-2 victory Tuesday afternoon at league-leading Ohio.   In the opening game, a two-out error in the […]

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ATHENS, Ohio – – After being no-hit in a 2-0 loss to being the day, the Ball State softball team smashed four hits and scored two runs in the first inning of the nightcap to help secure a 5-2 victory Tuesday afternoon at league-leading Ohio.
 
In the opening game, a two-out error in the bottom of the sixth proved costly for the Cardinals (30-15; 15-8 MAC) as the Bobcats (34-15; 17-6 MAC) followed with the only hit of the contest; a two-run home run to right-center field.
 
It was the lone miscue on a virtually flawless game for junior Ella Whitney who allowed just the one hit over her 7.0 innings of work while striking out five. While she did issue a walk and hit a pair of Ohio batters, no Bobcat had managed to move past first base until the home run.
 
However, Ohio pitcher Skipp Miller was just as dominate, allowing just one walk and two hit in a no-hit performance her own. Both of Ball State’s hit batters came to open the top of the fourth, but BSU could not manufacture a run as the Bobcats were able to stop any rally attempt by catching redshirt catcher McKayla Timmons trying to steal third with one out.
 
The nightcap was a different story, luckily, as the Cardinals opened the game with four hits and a pair of runs in the top of the first. Sophomore shortstop Maia Pietrzak started the contest with a single up the middle, while Timmons dropped a single into shallow right field to give BSU a pair of runners.
 
Two batters later, Whitney was hit by a pitch to load the bases, before a clutch two-out single up the middle from junior center fielder Ashlee Lovett drove in the first two runs.
 
The score remained 2-0 until the bottom of the third, when Ohio plated one on a one-out single and another on a bases loaded sac fly two batters later.
 
Those were the lone blemishes on another strong outing by freshman pitcher Breanna Severino who limited the MAC leading Bobcats to four hits and two runs in picking up the complete game victory. Severino improved to 8-5 with the win in which she forced 14 fly outs and seven groundouts.
 
Severino’s effort set the stage for another rally from the top of the Ball State lineup in the top of the seventh which started with a double to left center from Pietrzak. Timmons followed with a single, and after stealing second, saw a perfectly executed squeeze bunt from senior left fielder Kara Gunter drive in Pietrzak for what proved to be the game-winning run.
 
The Cardinals were not done scoring, however, as senior first baseman Kaitlyn Gibson followed with an RBI single to drive in Timmons, while an error on the play allowed Gunter to cross the plate.
 
Ohio would get its first two batters on board in the bottom of the frame, with a walk and a single, but a fly to Gunter in left and back-to-back force plays ended the game.
 
NOTES
– Ball State batters were hit by four pitches on Tuesday, raising its NCAA-leading total to 83 … Pietrzak was hit once in each game, raising her season total to 12, while Timmons was hit in the opener and Whitney in the nightcap … Timmons was hit for the 15th time this season and is tied with redshirt junior second baseman McKenna Mulholland for the team lead … The 15 HBPs are also tied for the Ball State single season record with Lisa Rozanski (2008) and Hanne Studemann (2015).
 
– With the win in the nightcap, Ball State reached the 30-win mark for the 17th time in program history and for the first time since the 2021 squad went 37-18 … Of the 17 seasons with 30-or-more wins, 12 have come in the past 18 years.
 
– With her first inning single in the second game, Timmons became just the 11th player in program history to reach 200 career hits and is currently tied for 10th on the all-time list at 201.
 
UP NEXT
The Cardinals closes the 2025 regular season this weekend by hosting second-place Central Michigan for a three-game series at the Ball State Softball Stadium. The teams are scheduled to play a 1 p.m. doubleheader Saturday and a single game Sunday at Noon.



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Report: Boogie Fland NIL deal expected to be ‘north of’ $2 million at Florida

After transferring from Arkansas, Boogie Fland is set to receive a lucrative NIL deal at Florida, CBS Sports’ Matt Norlander reported. His agreement is expected to be “north of” $2 million. Fland arrives at UF as one of the best available players still in the transfer portal this cycle after withdrawing from the 2025 NBA […]

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After transferring from Arkansas, Boogie Fland is set to receive a lucrative NIL deal at Florida, CBS Sports’ Matt Norlander reported. His agreement is expected to be “north of” $2 million.

Fland arrives at UF as one of the best available players still in the transfer portal this cycle after withdrawing from the 2025 NBA Draft. He became the No. 10 overall player and No. 3-ranked point guard to hit the open market, according to the On3 Industry Transfer Rankings.

Now, he’s heading to Florida after putting up strong numbers at Arkansas before suffering a hand injury. Fland’s addition provides a major boost for the Gators as they look to repeat as national champions in 2025-26.

As a freshman at Arkansas last season, Fland appeared in 21 games, including 18 starts, as the injury knocked him out for two months. He made his return during the NCAA Tournament, dropping six points in back-to-back games against Kansas and St. John’s after jumping back into the lineup.

Fland arrived in Fayetteville as a key recruiting win for John Calipari as he took over at Arkansas. A product of Harlem (NY) Archbishop Stepinac, he was a four-star prospect and the No. 18 overall player from the 2024 cycle, according to the On3 Industry Ranking, a weighted average that utilizes all four major recruiting media companies. Fland was also the top-ranked point guard from the cycle.

Boogie Fland’s On3 NIL Valuation

Boogie Fland also holds a $1.4 million On3 NIL Valuation as he makes his way to Gainesville. That figure ranks No. 21 in the men’s college basketball NIL rankings and No. 60 in the On3 NIL 100, the first of its kind and defacto NIL ranking of the top 100 high school and college athletes ranked by their On3 NIL Valuation.

“Despite what some fans and media believe, there is not an unlimited amount of money being deployed to manage rosters,” said Shannon Terry, the founder and CEO of On3. “Any model – whether it’s today’s broken NCAA ‘student-athlete’ construct or media rights sharing through employment, which is almost a certainty in the near future – demands efficiency based on the athlete and school knowing the athlete’s respective market value.”

The On3 NIL Valuation is calculated by combining Roster Value and personal NIL. Roster value is the value an athlete has by being a member of his or her team at his or her school, which factors into the role of NIL collectives. NIL in an athlete’s name, image and likeness and the value it could bring to regional and national brands outside of the scope of NIL collectives.

About On3 NIL Valuation, Brand Value, Roster Value



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Happy Gump Day: College Football Wednesday!

Happy Gump Day! We’re going to focus on College Football today, despite there being little news out there. Why? Because previews are starting to roll out, as we find ourselves just 95 days from the 2025 season kickoff. But first, the man who rescued Alabama football and retired as the greatest of all-time, has added […]

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Happy Gump Day! We’re going to focus on College Football today, despite there being little news out there. Why? Because previews are starting to roll out, as we find ourselves just 95 days from the 2025 season kickoff.

But first, the man who rescued Alabama football and retired as the greatest of all-time, has added more hardware to a trophy case that can fill up a medium-size McMansion in East Mobile at this point.

That’s Emmy award-winning Coach Nick Saban, thank you very much. Imagine being an “emerging talent” in your 70s and bagging an Emmy in your first year? The dude has superhuman work ethic.

We kind of knew this was coming too, because after saving LSU and Alabama football, he also saved the venerable College Gameday broadcast — its rating shot up 25% once Saint Nick grabbed the mic. And though I don’t personally care for McAffee, the interplay of meathead-meets-old-timer has been a ratings bonanza, and is the most unlikely and successful buddy cop show we’ve seen in a while.

And what did the GOAT say about his Emmy nomination? Classic Saban:

“Must have been not a good year for people in the Emmys.”

He also weighed in on playoff expansion: Pandora’s box has been opened, may as well invite a few more to the party.

“Back in the years I was never for expanding the playoff because I thought bowl games were really important to the history and tradition of college football,” Saban said. “Now that we have expanded the playoff, now the bowl games have taken a less significant role. I think expanding the playoff and having as many teams involved as we can —without playing too many games for the players. I think that’s a little bit of a concern — is probably a good thing.”


Now, time for some footbaw.

We begin with genuinely the worst playoff bracket prediction I’ve ever seen:

Please note, for this to happen, Alabama would have to lose to LSU on its home field in the regular season, then lose to LSU in Bryant Denny West. Or Georgia being a mid-seed, and then losing to tissue-soft Oregon. Or that an Illinois team with a catastrophe of a defense will somehow survive the Buckeyes, USC, a trip to Seattle, a trip to Madison, and an Indiana offense in Bloomington that can drop points in a hurry — and do all it to finish third or fourth in the Big 10. Or that the Big 10 will even have four teams for that matter.

We could go on, but the more you look at it, the more impressively terrible it is.


Just a second to toot our own horn here. Roll ‘Bama Roll: The Champagne of ‘Bama Blogs since 2006, has been ranked third among the most influential Tuscaloosa sites, just behind UA Athletics and the Tuscaloosa News. And that’s pretty damned cool. So, thanks for being here with us, guys, and making it your own.


ESPN takes a stab at their Preseason story lines to watch. Of course, Alabama is going to be on there.

3. DeBoer at Alabama, Year 2: …Replacing Nick Saban at Alabama was always going to be a unique conundrum because it’s completely unfair to expect anyone to replace the greatest college football coach of all time. The coach who came after Saban was going to be measured against him. That’s just how this works. While that dynamic is probably unfair, that doesn’t make DeBoer’s task any easier…

I still don’t think most of the CFB media grasp the profound hole KDB found himself in last February. We should recap it though:

  • He had to replace the greatest coach of all time
  • OSU tampering with the roster before Saban even left, taking Alabama’s most important defender with them
  • Lost almost half the class to the initial portal period and a second transfer window after the coaching change
  • Did not have the benefit of signing additional help following that second transfer window
  • Had to re-recruit the entire roster and get them to buy-in, at least to stay
  • Implement two new schemes, and retool much of the program from the ground-up
  • Try and establish recruiting ties 2500 miles away from KDB’s head coaching experience at Fresno and Washington
  • Bring in almost an entirely new staff
  • Hired an offensive coordinator who accepted the job, backed out late, and then left ‘Bama scrambling for a replacement
  • Inherited a team rife with prima donna who too often prioritized self over team, and had been allowed to create a culture of entitlement
  • Inherited two mediocre lines, and a running back corps that has sadly proven to be JAGs
  • Incorporating freshmen and transfers all over the roster.
  • And, when all that was done, the games had to be played, and the Tide had the second-toughest schedule in the SEC and the 7th hardest overall.

Despite that, Alabama was 8-2 in late November, and tracking for a bid in the playoffs. I still maintain that it’s not that ‘Bama finished 9-4 that bothered people, it’s to whom and how those losses occurred: two games especially. If Alabama beats Vandy or Alabama finishes on a high note against a depleted Michigan team, there’s not nearly the pressure on DeBoer this season. He had to have one of those, preferably both. Still, 9-4 with ‘Bama’s back against the wall, and all of the structural woes he inherited, was a good job under the circumstances. And this is functionally Year One in my books.


College Football News is a site I don’t hit up much in the season. But during the offseason, Fuitak does a great job meticulously previewing every college football team in D1, as well as the FCS.

We’ll look at two today: Vanderbilt and Auburn.

snip

For a program with just 54 winning seasons in 121 years, 2024 was magical. Vanderbilt went to a bowl game and won it.

The season opened up with a win over Virginia Tech from the ACC, and ended it with a win over the ACC’s Georgia Tech. It beat Alabama for the first time since 1984. It had its first winning season since 2013. It was super-fun thanks to the wonderful Diego Pavia taking over at quarterback. All of that is what Commodore fans will remember.

We’re grading on a curve here. Going 6-6 in the regular season gets SEC coaches fired, but for Vanderbilt, it wasn’t just about the record. It pushed Texas hard in a 27-24 loss, and it showed up big in tough road defeats to Missouri and LSU.

No, Vanderbilt head coach Clark Lea will never accept any sort of a moral victory, and Pavia sure as shoot won’t, but for all the positives last year, there was a loss to a 3-9 Georgia State, and Alabama was the only regular season victory over a team that finished with a winning record.

This year’s version is loaded with experience, it’s better than the 2024 team, and it might just find enough magic again to keep it all going.

Even if that means another 6-6 regular season.

snip

Let’s start with this. Auburn will have a winning season, and it’ll go to a bowl game, and things will finally trend upwards again. While that might seem like a low bar, after four years without a winning season and no more than six wins since going 9-4 in 2019, being back to potentially normal matters.

Going to Baylor to start the season isn’t a layup, but Ball State, South Alabama, and Mercer will be a base of three wins. It won’t be easy, but Auburn has to beat Kentucky, win at Vanderbilt, and then come up with an upset somewhere.

LOL

Anyway, hit up CFN if you need your college football fix. Best offseason site for previews, IMO.


ESPN was not alone in starting to make predictions for the 2025 campaign: 247 National got in on the prognostications:

Kalen DeBoer would not be able to remove the stench of a season-opening loss to Florida State upon his return to Tuscaloosa if the Crimson Tide fail. Considering last year’s disappointing finish, Alabama is a marked program. Most are anticipate a rebound. Mike Norvell has another portal-infused roster with the Seminoles and after the faceplant in 2024, would love to get off on the right foot against a national brand. However, this is arguably Florida State’s second-toughest game of the year outside of a road trip to Clemson in November.


CBS Sports also has begun their Hawt Takes, and unsurprisingly SEC Hater Emeritus Danny Kannell thinks the SEC is mid.

Danny Kanell: The SEC champion will have a 9-3 regular season record

The SEC continues to increase its overall talent with nearly every transfer portal window, as even the best recruiting programs out of high school have been shopping for additions at positions of need. And while that has boosted the overall talent level of the conference it has also increased the parity and lessened the chances of seeing one team dominate the conference the way that Nick Saban’s Alabama program did throughout a good portion of the 2010s. Danny is doubting the strength of the conference with this prediction as much as the potential for more chaos, as the top teams have quarterback questions and the ability to separate from the pack has become more difficult in the modern era.

I genuinely don’t understand how Panhandle Uncle Rico keeps getting jobs. Schedules as much as talent determine the conference standings. He might not know that, cutting his teeth in the poverty ACC. But Georgia has a much easier path ahead of them this year, and Texas is once again pampered. If the SEC winner has more than two regular season losses, I will crawl to Tallahassee and smooch his fetid chocolate starfish in contrition.

I think I can keep my Chapstick in my pocket though; neither of those are going to happen.


How mad is OSU at having to play the Fox Big Noon game vs. Texas? The (ahem) esteemed lawmakers of the Buckeye State apparently have decided it’s their job to prevent noon kickoffs for all state schools.

No, that’s not a joke.

A bill has been introduced in the legislature to prohibit Ohio State and other state schools from playing most of its home games before 3:30 p.m. Under the terms of the proposal by Rep. Tex Fischer (R), games including at least one state school and games including top-10 teams would be prohibited from starting earlier than the mid-afternoon. With one exception.

“Division (B) of this section does not apply if an earlier start time of a college football game between two teams is a college football tradition,” the bill states. “For this purpose, a ‘college football tradition’ is a start time of a game between the teams of two institutions whose football teams have competed against each other at least fifty times and the start time has been the same for at least ninety-five per cent of those games.”

We have the democracy we deserve — we voted for every single one of these buffoons speedrunning their way to Idiocracy.

I would, however, like to direct the esteemed Assemblymen of Ohio to something called the United States Constitution, specifically Section 1, Article 10, Clause 3 (known as the the Contract Clause.) You sit in in law school, hungover and half-assing your way through the “lesser” provisions, and wait your whole life to see a Contract Clause case in the wild. Then — BAM! — Ohio serves one up for you. G’bless, gentlemen.

(No, we’re not talking about NIL today or the NCAA. It’s an important story, but I refuse to deal with this any more…or at least on this Gump Day).


The other day I made a comment similar to one Saban made regarding Ty Simpson: It’s both a rare trait, but a welcome one, to see perserverance in players now. Some guys have to season in the broth a bit longer. Mac Jones was one such player, so was Mal Moore. Nick Saban sees the same in semi-incumbent QB Ty Simpson:

“Ty was an outstanding high school player, no doubt. He’s a fine young man,” Saban said. “I think his example is a true example of development. He matured for two years, and now he’s getting an opportunity, and his experiences will help him be successful.”

Simpson was a 5-star quarterback and top-25 prospect in the 2022 recruiting class as a high school recruit. He redshirted his true freshman season behind starting quarterback Bryce Young and served as the primary backup during Saban’s final season in 2023 behind Jalen Milroe.

Despite losing the job to Milroe in 2023, Simpson didn’t enter the transfer portal and stuck around as the backup again in 2024. He’s now entering his fourth year in the Crimson Tide program, is the most experienced quarterback in the room, and seems to be in line to take over the starting job this coming fall.


And, finally, I leave you with a moment of levity.

He cracked the code.

Have a great one, Roll Tide.

Poll

Best time for a kickoff? (God’s Right and Proper Central Time Zone, of course).

  • 1%

    Breakfast with the Barn: the 11:00 a.m. JP game

    (4 votes)

  • 54%

    CBS 2:30 afternoon slot, forever and always.

    (123 votes)

  • 10%

    Weird late afternoon ESPN2 slot, like 5 or 6.

    (24 votes)

  • 26%

    Primetime, baby! 7 Central!

    (61 votes)

  • 0%

    I love getting home after the bars close. Give me that 8:30 late SEC Network game!

    (2 votes)

  • 2%

    Depends on how drunk I am.

    (5 votes)

  • 3%

    This is not basketball content. #Refund #BOG

    (8 votes)



227 votes total

Vote Now



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Some Schools Worry About Memo Binding Them to House Terms

Some Schools Worry About Memo Binding Them to House Terms Privacy Manager Link 1

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Zakai Zeigler lawsuit argues he would get $2-4 million next season

In Zakai Zeigler’s lawsuit against the NCAA, the former Tennessee Basketball star seeks the same five years of eligibility and the same NIL opportunities that other student-athletes have been and are taking advantage of. “He seeks to compete in the fifth year of his five-year eligibility window while pursuing a graduate degree,” the complaint stated. […]

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In Zakai Zeigler’s lawsuit against the NCAA, the former Tennessee Basketball star seeks the same five years of eligibility and the same NIL opportunities that other student-athletes have been and are taking advantage of.

“He seeks to compete in the fifth year of his five-year eligibility window while pursuing a graduate degree,” the complaint stated. “But he finds himself arbitrarily barred from doing so by an NCAA rule that limits athletes to participating in only four seasons of intercollegiate competition within the five-year window”. 

Zeigler is being represented by Litson PLLC and Garza Law Firm. The complaint was filed Tuesday in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee, requesting a preliminary injunction to allow Zeigler to compete next season while pursuing graduate studies.

The suit also argues that being unable to play a fifth season also denies Zeigler the chance to “compete or earn NIL compensation during his fifth year — the most lucrative year of the eligibility window for the vast majority of athletes.”

Zeigler’s lawyers projected a fifth season to be worth between $2 million and $4 million based on analysis from Spyre Sports Group, the NIL collective the University of Tennessee works with.

“This valuation reflects the market value of an upperclassman with a proven performance record and high visibility,” the complaint stated, “especially in a high-profile conference like the SEC.”

Zakai Zeigler lawsuit argues against redshirt system in college athletics

Zeigler, who was not invited to the NBA Draft Combine or the NBA’s G League Elite Camp earlier this month, starred at Tennessee over the last four seasons, quickly becoming the face of the program. He averaged 11.3 points, 5.4 assists, 2.6 rebounds and 1.8 steals in 29.3 minutes per game over 118 career games at Tennessee.

The complaint points out that Zeigler would be eligible for a fifth season had he sat out during a redshirt season earlier in his Tennessee career. But redshirt decisions are made by coaches, not players:

“Through the redshirt system, NCAA institutions — not athletes — largely control who gets access to the fifth year of eligibility, strategically ‘banking’ eligibility for some athletes while denying it to others, without consideration, based purely on institutional preference and benefit. But, because Zeigler participated in athletics for four consecutive years, the NCAA bars him from representing his school in interscholastic competition in the fifth year of the competition window—and thereby excludes him from the market for NIL compensation.

“All NCAA athletes should be eligible to compete and earn NIL compensation during each year of the five-year window—not just those selected to redshirt. By prohibiting fifth-year competition for most athletes, including Zeigler, the NCAA eliminates the most experienced, productive, and highest-paid group of players from the labor pool, creating a substantial anticompetitive effect that furthers no academic purpose. And as a result, the market output—the product viewed by consumers—is harmed.”

Zakai Zeigler’s senior season: 13.6 points, 7.4 assists, 2.9 rebounds, 1.9 steals per game

Zeigler had a career year last season, averaging 13.6 points, 7.4 assists, 2.9 rebounds and 1.9 steals in 34.2 minutes per game while leading Tennessee to a second straight trip to the Elite Eight. 

During the season he became Tennessee’s all-time assists leader (747), single-season assists leader (257), the SEC’s single-season assists record holder and the first player in SEC history with 1,550 points, 700 assists, 350 rebounds and 250 steals. 

Zeigler’s class is the first after the COVID pandemic to not automatically get a fifth year of eligibility. Student-athletes affected by the pandemic — players that began their careers as far back as 2016 — were given fifth years. 

“To be clear,” the complaint read, “Zeigler does not challenge the overall five-year window, but rather the arbitrary four-year competition limitation within it. Indeed, permitting NCAA athletes like Zeigler to compete while pursuing graduate degrees in their fifth year of eligibility would further the NCAA’s purported academic mission far more effectively than other widely accepted NCAA practices like redshirting.

“Zeigler files this lawsuit to seek relief so that the NCAA be enjoined from enforcing the Four-Seasons Rule against him and permitting him to compete during the 2025-2026 basketball season while pursuing a graduate degree.”



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Panthers Praised by NHL Fans After Dominant ECF Game 1 Win vs. Hurricanes

After a dominant 6-1 win over the Toronto Maple Leafs in Game 7 of the second round, the Florida Panthers’ offense kept rolling into the Eastern Conference Finals. Florida crushed the Carolina Hurricanes 5-2 in Game 1 on Tuesday, handing the Canes their first loss on home ice so far this postseason. The Panthers took […]

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After a dominant 6-1 win over the Toronto Maple Leafs in Game 7 of the second round, the Florida Panthers’ offense kept rolling into the Eastern Conference Finals.

Florida crushed the Carolina Hurricanes 5-2 in Game 1 on Tuesday, handing the Canes their first loss on home ice so far this postseason.

The Panthers took an early 2-0 lead thanks to goals from Carter Verhaeghe and Aaron Ekblad, but Sebastian Aho gave Carolina a first-period goal to keep things from getting too out of hand.

From there, it was all Florida.

A.J. Greer made it 3-1 early in the second period, and Sam Bennett and Eetu Luostarinen each added a goal in the third period, leaving the Hurricanes with a four-goal deficit and little time to mount a comeback.

Carolina added a power play goal in the final minutes, but it was too little, too late.

After the win, fans praised the Panthers for setting the tone with a dominant Game 1.

The Hurricanes are looking to avoid a repeat of the 2023 conference finals when they lost to the Panthers in just four games, but the first game of the series suggests Florida is going to have its way against Carolina.

The series is far from over, but the Canes need to make some major adjustments before Game 2.



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