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Bill Belichick Breaks Silence on NIL Chaos

Bill Belichick Breaks Silence on NIL Chaos originally appeared on Athlon Sports. When a six-time Super Bowl champion like Bill Belichick speaks, the sports world listens and this time, it’s not about the NFL, but the chaos surrounding college football’s NIL (Name, Image, and Likeness) era. Advertisement Belichick, who stunned fans by returning to the […]

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Bill Belichick Breaks Silence on NIL Chaos originally appeared on Athlon Sports.

When a six-time Super Bowl champion like Bill Belichick speaks, the sports world listens and this time, it’s not about the NFL, but the chaos surrounding college football’s NIL (Name, Image, and Likeness) era.

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Belichick, who stunned fans by returning to the college sidelines this spring as head coach of North Carolina, didn’t mince words when asked about the state of NIL during the ACC Spring Meetings. With the highly anticipated House v. NCAA settlement still pending after nearly a month on U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken’s desk, the legendary coach made his stance clear.

“For me, it’s really pretty simple: I’d say, tell me what the rules are and then we’ll play by them,” Belichick told ESPN’s Rece Davis on the College GameDay Podcast. “Right now a lot of it is up in the air.”

Belichick, now 73 and in his first college role since the 1970s, is entering this new chapter amidst massive uncertainty. More than 2,000 athletes entered the football transfer portal in 2024 alone, and the current NIL landscape is largely unregulated which is fueling concerns among coaches and administrators across the country.

If approved, the House settlement is expected to reshape enforcement through a newly formed College Sports Commission. Power Four conferences have already drafted new membership contracts that would bind schools to future decisions by this independent body in an attempt to stabilize the current free-for-all.

UNC head coach Bill BelichickBob Donnan-Imagn Images

UNC head coach Bill BelichickBob Donnan-Imagn Images

“Whatever it is… we’ll figure it out,” Belichick added. “But I’d say right now it’s a lot of ‘we’re not sure.’… I think things will settle eventually.”

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His comments echo sentiments from fellow ACC coach Dabo Swinney, who simply stated, “We just want some rules.”

The anticipation for clarity is palpable. With the NCAA expected to relinquish enforcement power to this new commission, coaches like Belichick are asking for one thing: a clear rulebook.

Belichick isn’t just adjusting to college football, he’s calling for its transformation. And until there’s structure, even the greatest minds in football are left waiting.

Related: Former Kentucky Great Has Words About NIL: “I’m Glad I Didn’t Play in That Era”

Related: Former Ivy League Star Turns Heads With Groundbreaking $6 Million NIL Deal

This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 4, 2025, where it first appeared.



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Jamestown Officially Joins NSIC – Bemidji State University

Story Links INDIANAPOLIS – The University of Jamestown has been approved to continue into year two of the NCAA Division II expedited membership process. This means that the University of Jamestown has one remaining year of provisional membership status, and the Jimmies will be a full NCAA Division II member in […]

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INDIANAPOLIS – The University of Jamestown has been approved to continue into year two of the NCAA Division II expedited membership process. This means that the University of Jamestown has one remaining year of provisional membership status, and the Jimmies will be a full NCAA Division II member in the 2026-27 school year if all remaining criteria are met. This will be the University of Jamestown’s first year as a member of the Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference (NSIC).

“The NSIC is excited to officially welcome the University of Jamestown as its newest member. UJ shares our core values of academic integrity, athletic excellence, and student-athlete well-being. Their addition strengthens the NSIC and enhances our continued commitment to providing a first-class experience for all student-athletes. We look forward to what the future will bring with the Jimmies a part of the NSIC.”

“Today’s announcement is a vote of confidence for UJ and our entire community as we begin our first year of competition as a member of the NCAA in the incredibly well- respected NSIC conference. We are grateful to Erin Lind and her team for their generous support throughout the past two years.  Today is an exciting day to be a Jimmie!” 

“We were very excited to get the news from the NCAA on Thursday that we were being moved forward in the expedited membership process. This gets us one step closer to full membership status in 2026-27. We’re also thrilled to be coming up on our first school year as a member of the NSIC. The NSIC is an incredibly reputable league and while there will be some challenges, we are excited to compete in such a top tier league with institutions that are in our backyard. We will continue to do the work that will make us a strong member of the league and an institution that the NSIC is proud to have as a member. It’s another great day to be a Jimmie!”

About the NSIC

The NSIC is a 16-team, 18-sport, NCAA Division II conference with institutions located in Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota. The NSIC is a model Division II conference that uses high-level athletics competition to develop  champions in the classroom and community while empowering student-athletes to be impactful and positive leaders. Formed in 1992 by the merger of the Northern Intercollegiate Conference (men’s league) and the Northern Sun Conference (women’s league), the NSIC has flourished over the past quarter century, maturing into a union of 16 Upper  Midwest colleges and universities. The NSIC has won 27 team national championships and crowned 121 individual national champions. For additional information, visit NorthernSun.org.

About NCAA Division II

The NCAA, the national governing body for college athletics, is a volunteer association of more than 1,000 colleges and universities that classify their athletics programs in one of three membership divisions. The 300+ institutions in NCAA Division II support a balanced approach in which student-athletes can earn scholarships based on their athletic ability, pursue their desired academic degree, and participate in all the campus and surrounding community have to offer. Division II student-athletes annually graduate at rates higher than their student body peers, and they have access to the best  championships-participant ratio among the NCAA’s three divisions. Division II gives student-athletes the unique opportunity to compete in the classroom, on the field, in their career, for their causes, and on their terms. For additional information, visit NCAA.org. 



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Florida Gators donor Gary Condron wants to see ‘guardrails’ for NIL

USA TODAY Sports spoke with more than 10 boosters at high profile power conference schools about NIL, and only two talked on the record. One of them was University of Florida booster Gary Condron, the largest single financial donor in the history of Gator Boosters, Inc. USA TODAY Sports also interviewed and profiled Texas Tech […]

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USA TODAY Sports spoke with more than 10 boosters at high profile power conference schools about NIL, and only two talked on the record. One of them was University of Florida booster Gary Condron, the largest single financial donor in the history of Gator Boosters, Inc.

USA TODAY Sports also interviewed and profiled Texas Tech billionaire booster Cody Campbell, who is working to reform the NIL space and “save college sports”, writes Matt Hayes. Hayes spoke to Condron about the current state of name, image and likeness.

“NIL space for boosters is like throwing money into a deep, dark hole with little to no return on the investment,” Condron said. “Nobody likes this. Not athletic directors, not coaches, not boosters. The only ones who like it are the players, and the attorneys and agents.”

Condron, 67, was a walk-on baseball player at Florida in the mid-1970s and graduated from UF in 1977 with a degree in building construction. He’s the CEO and founder of The Conlan Company, one of the leading builders for Amazon’s distribution centers around the country. 

In addition to his support for Gator Boosters, Inc., Condron has helped fund the rosters for football, men’s basketball, baseball and other UF sports. He recently donated $1 million to Todd Golden’s program after his team won the 2025 national championship and the SEC Tournament.

“Gary’s been incredibly impactful on our success. I’m pretty sure, for football, baseball. He’s done a lot for all these different programs. Gary deserves a ton of credit for the success, because players are incredibly important,” Golden said of Condron after the title celebration at halftime of the spring football game.

“Gary gave us a great gift – and the reality of it is we need a lot more. We need a lot more to retain our players.”

Golden, who also thanked several other donors for their contributions, was able to retain his top frontcourt players and also signed one of the nation’s best transfer classes with three top-100 signees, adding a total of five players to the backcourt with a pair of top-50 recruits.

Condron’s efforts also helped Florida football coach Billy Napier close strong in the 2025 recruiting cycle and UF baseball coach Kevin O’Sullivan reload with his 2025 class, which currently consists of nine transfers and 12 recruits, including Jaden Bastian, Aaron Watson and Jordan Yost.

During his interview with USA TODAY Sports, Condron recalled working multiple jobs to pay his way through college. That process, Condron told Hayes, gets lost in today’s landscape with players getting paid and walk-on spots being eliminated. He would like to see some NIL reform happen.    

“I came from a family that didn’t have two nickels to rub together,” Condron said. “If I had an opportunity to eat at the training table (at Florida) it was a blessing for me. If you saw what kids get today, the hair on your neck would stand up. I don’t know how much longer I can (fund NIL) unless we get some guardrails.”



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Official Site of The ECHL

Reading, Pa. – The Reading Royals, ECHL affiliate of the National Hockey League’s Philadelphia Flyers and American Hockey League’s Lehigh Valley Phantoms, announced that forward Connor McMenamin has re-signed for the 2025-26 season. McMenamin, 26, is entering his second-full professional season after a 17 point (7g-10a) showing in a 29-game shortened rookie campaign due to a […]

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Reading, Pa. – The Reading Royals, ECHL affiliate of the National Hockey League’s Philadelphia Flyers and American Hockey League’s Lehigh Valley Phantoms, announced that forward Connor McMenamin has re-signed for the 2025-26 season.

McMenamin, 26, is entering his second-full professional season after a 17 point (7g-10a) showing in a 29-game shortened rookie campaign due to a season-ending injury. McMenamin played 10 games for Reading during the 2023-24 season after he inked a contract with the Royals to begin his professional career on March 22.

Prior to going pro, he played five seasons of college hockey with four seasons at Penn State University and a fifth-year graduate season at the University of Minnesota-Duluth. With the Bulldogs during the 2023-24 season, McMenamin recorded 21 points (6g-15a) in 35 games. From 2019-23 at Penn State, he he recorded 66 points (24g-42a) in 129 games played with the Nittany Lions. Across his five-year NCAA career, McMenamin totaled 87 points (30g-57a), 57 penalty minutes and a +10 rating in 164 NCAA career games.

Additionally, McMenamin was an alternate captain for Penn State in the 2021-22 and 2022-23 campaigns. He previously played in the United States Hockey League, primarily with the Tr-City Storm where he was captain in the 2018-19 season.
 



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New NIL enforcement targets collectives, deals must serve ‘valid business purpose’

A new college sports enforcement arm charged with regulating name, image and likeness payments to athletes issued guidance Thursday that could make it extremely difficult for school-affiliated collectives to get their deals with athletes approved. The recently approved House settlement, which took effect on July 1, established a clearinghouse, called NIL Go, that must approve […]

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A new college sports enforcement arm charged with regulating name, image and likeness payments to athletes issued guidance Thursday that could make it extremely difficult for school-affiliated collectives to get their deals with athletes approved.

The recently approved House settlement, which took effect on July 1, established a clearinghouse, called NIL Go, that must approve all third-party deals for more than $600. The two main requirements for those deals are that they’re for a “valid business purpose” and within a fair-market “range of compensation.”

The goal is to prevent schools from utilizing booster-driven entities to funnel payments to recruits and transfers as a workaround to the $20.5 million revenue-sharing cap.

Guidance issued Thursday by the College Sports Commission said that “an entity with a business purpose of providing payments or benefits to student-athletes or institutions, rather than providing goods or services to the general public for profit, does not satisfy the valid business purpose requirement set forth in NCAA Rule 22.1.3.”

It then cited as an example a collective that “reach(es) a deal with a student-athlete to make an appearance on behalf of the collective at an event, even if that event is open to the general public, and the collective charges an admission fee (e.g., a golf tournament).” And, “The same collective’s deal with a student-athlete to promote the collective’s sale of merchandise to the public would not satisfy the valid business purpose requirement for the same reason.”

A message Thursday seeking comment from The Collective Association was not immediately returned.

In the four years since NIL took effect in 2021, collectives affiliated with specific schools have made hundreds of millions in deals with athletes just like those described in the examples. They pool funds from donors and boosters and use them to license the NIL rights of specific athletes in exchange for appearances and social media posts.

College sports leaders have long lamented that those deals are de facto pay-for-play inducements, not legitimate endorsement deals.

“For somebody to just slide you a few dollars because they want you to come or stay at a certain school and call it NIL, that’s make-believe, that’s not a real thing,” Purdue athletic director Mike Bobinski recently told NBC Sports.

Critics, though, believe any attempt to restrict how much athletes can make and by whom will eventually be declared another antitrust violation, much like several recent decisions that went against the NCAA. One distinction is that CSC and NIL Go were created by the Power 5 conferences, not the NCAA.

Ohio State made headlines last year when it disclosed that its football roster was earning a combined $20 million, most of it coming from one of two Buckeye collectives. Roster payrolls at the top programs have since escalated well beyond $20 million. Knowing the House settlement was coming, many collectives “frontloaded” payments for this coming school year so they would not be subject to clearinghouse approval.

In a series of posts on X on Thursday, Dalton K. Forsythe, director of Utah State’s Blue A Collective, criticized NIL Go for technical issues, then said, “We’re hearing from peers across the country: nearly 100 percent of collective-backed NIL deals are being denied, regardless of size or structure.”

He continued, “The College Sports Commission has taken the position that collectives cannot serve a ‘valid business purpose’ — a standard that was never clearly communicated before implementation.”

(Photo: Kirby Lee / USA Today Sports)



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UMaine hockey adds new assistant coach with NCAA championship pedigree

The University of Maine men’s ice hockey team announced a new assistant will be joining head coach Ben Barr’s staff this coming season. Rick Bennett, who led Union College to an NCAA Division I championship in 2014, is bringing more than 20 years of college coaching experience to the Black Bears bench. UMaine formally announced […]

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The University of Maine men’s ice hockey team announced a new assistant will be joining head coach Ben Barr’s staff this coming season.

Rick Bennett, who led Union College to an NCAA Division I championship in 2014, is bringing more than 20 years of college coaching experience to the Black Bears bench. UMaine formally announced his hiring Thursday afternoon.

“Rick is one the most genuine people I’ve ever met,” Barr said in a press release. “Maine Hockey is fortunate to have him on staff.”

The addition marks a reunion of sorts for Barr and Bennett, who served together as assistants at Union under then-head coach Nate Leaman. Barr followed Leaman to Providence College in 2011 and Bennett became the Union head coach.

Bennett served as head coach at Union until his resignation in 2022 after an allegation and subsequent investigation regarding his coaching style and practices. He served as an assistant coach at Quinnipiac University last season after coaching the Savannah Ghost Pirates in the ECHL, a professional developmental league for the AHL and NHL.

He joins a UMaine program that went 24-8-6 last season, the program’s best record since the 2003-04 campaign. The Black Bears finished in the top 10 of both major national hockey polls.



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Auburn will not match Alabama Football recruiting but Hugh Freeze may be right

Alabama football fans have had recent fun bashing Hugh Freeze and Auburn Athletic Director John Cohen. The pair claimed that after Aug. 1, Auburn’s recruiting success will blossom as many current commits flip from other schools. The flips will be the result of recruits learning from written offers that promised dollars may not be real. […]

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Alabama football fans have had recent fun bashing Hugh Freeze and Auburn Athletic Director John Cohen. The pair claimed that after Aug. 1, Auburn’s recruiting success will blossom as many current commits flip from other schools. The flips will be the result of recruits learning from written offers that promised dollars may not be real. Freeze stated, “We’ve got great interpretations from our administration and our legal team on what the (House) settlement really means and how we should operate, and that’s what we’re doing. And if others are operating in a manner not with that, I’m hopeful that they’ll be called out on that at some point.”

Alabama fans have good reason to scoff. Freeze and Auburn have a considerable history of rule-breaking. Auburn may have hit the brakes on college football’s spending spree because the school’s resources have been depleted. That doesn’t mean that Freeze’s and Cohen’s comments were wrong.

Freeze and Cohen are right to suggest there should be a reckoning across college football’s biggest spenders. Still, expecting clarity to happen quickly or smoothly is unrealistic. During Big 12 Media Days, multiple coaches mentioned general confusion about player compensation and the struggles of the College Sports Commission to enact enforcement measures and approve NIL deals.

Yahoo’s Ross Dellenger began the title of a recent story with “We don’t know the rules”. Dellenger was expounding on what he had heard from Big 12 coaches. Check out some comments below.

  • “We don’t know the rules. The settlement passed, but who knows what Deloitte is going to clear. Until there is clarity, you’re living in limbo.”

  • “You are seeing a lot of people lie and promise fake things.”

After talking to multiple coaches, Dellenger concluded, “Schools are making big enough contract offers to recruits that they cannot possibly remain under college football’s new compensation cap, some coaches believe. Others are guaranteeing third-party NIL deals as part of the total compensation package to athletes, something against new revenue-share rules. A few are doling out cash from their collectives to high school players in an attempt to induce their commitment, also against new rules.”

Lawyers and conference administrators are working to codify the new enforcement process. Understandably, the effort is progressing slowly. The NIL Go Clearinghouse is also lagging in approving submitted deals, with a reported 60-plus percent of deals in limbo.

Alabama Football’s Kalen DeBoer has been quiet, but other SEC coaches have not

Hugh Freeze has not been the only SEC football coach to be vocal about the problems. As reported by Dellenger, Kirby Smart stated, “Some school-affiliated booster collectives are currently compensating high school players — upward of $20,000 a month — to remain committed and eventually sign with their school.” Additionally, most NIL deals promised to recruits and transfers have not been approved by the clearinghouse.

Quick clarity on new rules, enforcement, and penalties was a pipe dream. It was always going to be a muddled situation that would take at least months to resolve. While Auburn will not suddenly zoom up recruiting rankings in August, Alabama football fans might once want to cut Freeze some slack. He was not wrong in claiming that programs are gaming the new system.



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