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Bill Belichick Breaks Silence on NIL Chaos

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. Belichick, who stunned fans by returning to the college sidelines this spring as head coach of North Carolina, didn’t mince words […]

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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.

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.





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Why Dai Dai Ames is California’s most important team transfer for 2025-26

Basketball for the Golden Bears has not been pretty in recent years as the program has been below .500 for eight consecutive seasons. Mark Madsen was seen as a very solid hire when he was brought to Berkeley in 2023 and he’s helped the program take its first step or two back towards competency. Unfortunately, […]

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Basketball for the Golden Bears has not been pretty in recent years as the program has been below .500 for eight consecutive seasons. Mark Madsen was seen as a very solid hire when he was brought to Berkeley in 2023 and he’s helped the program take its first step or two back towards competency. Unfortunately, California struggled understandably in their debut season in the ACC and life doesn’t get any easier after major losses this past offseason.

Top scorers Andrej Stojakovic and Jeremiah Wilkinson both entered the transfer portal and left the Golden Bears with major holes in the backcourt. Other talented players like B. J. Omot and Mady Sissoko won’t be back, with the top returning players being guards DJ Campbell and Rytis Petraitis. They each averaged right around 8 points per game last season, though competing in the ACC will take much more than just them back as seniors.

Looking to avoid a ninth straight season with less than 15 wins, Madsen and his staff added a few intriguing freshman but really grabbed names from the transfer portal. Among the notable additions are Chris Bell from Syracuse and John Camden out of Delaware, two players who could really see significant run in this lineup with their size and athleticism. Quality guard play comes to town in the former of Nolan Dorsey from Campbell and Michigan’s Justin Pippen, though there’s another new guard that we have our eyes on for today.

Dai Dai Ames joins the Golden Bears for his junior season after decent work as an underclassman. The 6-1 guard out of Chicago was a Top 100 recruit when he headed to Kansas State as a freshman. He started half of their games with minor production before landing at Virginia last season. Ames’ sophomore season saw him average 8.7 points and 1.9 assists per game while knocking down just under 40% of his 3-pointers in a tough season for the Cavaliers.

What makes Ames really important for the Golden Bears is his ability to run the point. Once a highly-regarded prospect, California isn’t just getting someone who can make shots but a real point guard to run the show. Like we mentioned before, this team has lost an insane amount of talent and production in this backcourt and they’ll need to lean heavily on Ames having an upstart season as a junior, albeit at his third school in three years.

After two tough seasons, Ames looks to get California out of that recent hole though the road surely won’t be easy in the ACC. There is some nice returning talent and the combination of Bell, Camden, and Petraitis is a great starting point for this team. However, if this new-look roster is going to gel better than recent Cal products then Ames needs to be a leader and efficient producer for this squad.



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Oregon’s new softball hire reveals how deep the Oklahoma pipeline runs

The Oregon Ducks are taking all they can get from Oklahoma’s college softball dynasty. Oregon announced on Wednesday that it hired OU great Paige Parker as the Ducks’ Director of Player Development. Parker will be reunited with her old OU pitching coach, Melyssa Lombardi, who is now the head coach at Oregon. “Paige was an […]

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The Oregon Ducks are taking all they can get from Oklahoma’s college softball dynasty.

Oregon announced on Wednesday that it hired OU great Paige Parker as the Ducks’ Director of Player Development. Parker will be reunited with her old OU pitching coach, Melyssa Lombardi, who is now the head coach at Oregon.

“Paige was an elite student-athlete,” Lombardi said in a statement. “Her relentless work ethic and drive to excel helped her win on the sport’s biggest stage and become a two-time national champion. She had an exceptional ability to spin the ball and compete on the mound. Having had the honor to coach her previously, I am overjoyed to now have the opportunity to work with her professionally.”

Paige Parker joining Ducks staff

Parker pitched for the Sooners in 2015-18 while Lombardi was on Patty Gasso’s staff. After 21 years on Gasso’s staff, Lombardi finally left Norman in 2018 for her first head coaching job at Oregon. Lombardi just led the Ducks to the Women’s College World Series for the first time in 2025.

While together at OU, Parker and Lombardi were part of two national championship teams in back-to-back seasons in 2016 and 2017. Parker ended her career as a four-time All-American and four-time Big 12 Pitcher of the Year.

“I couldn’t be more excited to reunite with Coach Lombardi and join her staff at the University of Oregon,” Parker said in a statement. “I’m so thankful to Coach Amy Hogue and the University of Utah for everything over the past four years — it’s been an incredible journey.

“I’m looking forward to what’s ahead at Oregon as we continue building toward something great. Competing for the Women’s College World Series year after year is the goal, and I’m all in. Getting to do it with Coach Lombardi makes it even more special.”

After her playing career, Parker started her coaching career as an assistant coach at William Jewel in 2019. Gasso then added her as a volunteers assistant in 2020 before she spent one season at Tulsa. Parker has been the associate head coach at Utah the last four seasons. At this rate, Parker will definitely be a big-time head coach one day.

Lombardi has loaded her Oregon staff with ties to OU beyond just Parker. Associate head coach Sam Marder was a volunteer assistant at OU in 2021 before Lombardi lured her to Oregon. Sydney Romero played for the Sooners and was a graduate assistant under Gasso before eventually becoming an assistant coach at Oregon.

Read more about OU softball



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FGCU Men’s Soccer Team Releases 2025 Schedule – Eagle Media

The FGCU men’s soccer team unveiled its 2025 schedule on Thursday, July 3, revealing a loaded nonconference slate and only five matches at Pickering Field at the FGCU Soccer Complex. Posting 3-7-5 and 4-10-3 records over the last two seasons, the Eagles will look to Oliver Twelvetrees to lead the program to some much-needed stability. […]

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The FGCU men’s soccer team unveiled its 2025 schedule on Thursday, July 3, revealing a loaded nonconference slate and only five matches at Pickering Field at the FGCU Soccer Complex.

Posting 3-7-5 and 4-10-3 records over the last two seasons, the Eagles will look to Oliver Twelvetrees to lead the program to some much-needed stability. They will tune up in three exhibition matches against Miami-Dade College, Nova Southeastern, and Barry before the start of the regular season.

After a three-game stand at home for exhibition matches, FGCU will play five games on the road over three weeks. The Eagles kick off their season against SIUE in Illinois on Aug. 21, before traveling west to face Utah Valley in Orem, Utah on Aug. 28. The Eagles will look to avenge a 2-0 loss against the Wolverines from last season.

The Eagles will then turn south to face the American Athletic Conference (AAC) trio of USF, Memphis and UAB.

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The first of these two games is against rivals South Florida on Aug. 31. The Twelvetrees-led team will face USF for the 17th time in program history. FGCU holds a 4-5-7 all-time record against the Bulls. Following the 2024 meeting, which ended in a 3-3 draw, this rivalry match presents an early opportunity for Coach Twelvetrees to secure a signature win.

FGCU will close out its road trip against Memphis and UAB on Sept. 6 and Sept. 9, respectively. Memphis recorded a 4-1-2 conference record in 2024, which secured the Tigers the No. 1 seed in the AAC.

After the extended road trip, the Eagles return home to host the Houston Christian Huskies for their home opener on Sept. 14. Four days later, FGCU hits the road again for a two-match road trip against cross-state rivals FIU on Sept. 18, where they will look to snap a five-match losing streak against the Panthers. The second match of the trip has FGCU facing off against Gardner-Webb on Sept. 23.

The Eagles return home to kick off ASUN conference play with a match against Stetson on Sept. 27.  that with a trip to North Florida on Oct. 4, where they look to avenge a 3-0 loss in the Semifinals of last season’s ASUN tournament to the eventual ASUN champions.

The team will take a break from conference play against the FAU Owls on Oct. 8 in Boca Raton, marking their fourth matchup against an AAC team this season. Last season, they lost to FAU, 3-0, marking the Eagles’ fourth consecutive loss in their previous six matchups against the Owls.

FGCU will play two of its final three matches at Pickering Field, hosting North Florida on Oct. 18 and Jacksonville on Nov. 1, splitting the homestand with a trip to Stetson on Oct. 25. 

An underwhelming 2024 campaign left a lot to be desired, but with the hiring of Coach Twelvetrees and the 2025 season being just a month away, FGCU has positioned itself to bounce back quickly.



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Deion Sanders Says the Quiet Part Out Loud About the College Football Playoff and NIL Spending

Deion Sanders Says the Quiet Part Out Loud About the College Football Playoff and NIL Spending originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Due to an undisclosed health issue, college football fans haven’t heard much from Colorado head coach Deion Sanders this offseason. Advertisement However, that changed on Wednesday as Sanders was on hand for the Big […]

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Deion Sanders Says the Quiet Part Out Loud About the College Football Playoff and NIL Spending originally appeared on Athlon Sports.

Due to an undisclosed health issue, college football fans haven’t heard much from Colorado head coach Deion Sanders this offseason.

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However, that changed on Wednesday as Sanders was on hand for the Big 12 Media Days in Frisco, Texas. The third-year head coach who is coming off a 9-4 season in 2024, talked about everything from Colorado’s quarterback battle, his theme music and what is going wrong with college football.

Oddly enough, while the latter may be the most complex, it was the only one for which he had a definitive answer. When asked about how NIL should be patrolled with the implementation of revenue, Sanders did what he does best, which is say what everyone is thinking but not willing to say.

“I wish it was a cap,” Sanders said. “You know like the top of the line player makes this. And if you’re not that type of guy, you know you’re not gonna make that. That’s what the NFL does. So the problem is you gotta a guy that’s not that darn good, he could go to another school and they give him a half a million dollars. You can’t compete with that, it don’t make sense…All you have to do is look at the playoffs and see what those teams spent and you understand darn near why they in the playoffs.

“It’s kind of hard to compete with somebody who’s giving $25-30 million to a darn freshman class.”

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Colorado head coach Deion Sanders speaks at 2025 Big 12 Football Media Days.Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images

Colorado head coach Deion Sanders speaks at 2025 Big 12 Football Media Days.Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images

Sanders later added that the team that pays the most will ultimately be the last team standing.

Over the past couple of years, with the evolution of NIL and the transfer portal, college football has turned into a lawless land. While some have spoken out slightly, Sanders isn’t shying away from attempting to save the sport from itself.

Related: Deion Sanders Fuels Quarterback Competition Between Kaidon Salter and Julian Lewis

This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jul 9, 2025, where it first appeared.



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Sonny Dykes: College football needs ‘adults to be adults,’ enforcement to have ‘teeth’

TCU coach Sonny Dykes knows college football needs to have adults in the room and enforce the rules, especially in the age of NIL. He referenced the new partnership with Deloitte, which is supposed to manage NIL deals across the sport. The biggest point Dykes tried to make was that college football needs parity and […]

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TCU coach Sonny Dykes knows college football needs to have adults in the room and enforce the rules, especially in the age of NIL. He referenced the new partnership with Deloitte, which is supposed to manage NIL deals across the sport.

The biggest point Dykes tried to make was that college football needs parity and that the sport is better off with it. The NFL has plenty of teams that can ultimately win it all each season and Dykes wants college football to have that ability.

“I think right now, you know, obviously college football has partnered with Deloitte, and what Deloitte is going to do in terms of assessing real NIL, and what that’s going to mean and okay, so what happens if you violate that,” Dykes said at Big 12 Media Days. “What’s going to be the cost of doing that and all the things? There’s so much passion around college football right now that you’re going to have people, you’re going to have boosters, you’re going to have fans, you can have people that you know want to break rules. I mean, that’s been part of the game of football for forever … 

“I think finally now we have a system, or we’re developing a system that is supposed to help provide some guidance in that. And my hope is that Deloitte, that they have teeth that the NCAA provides them with an opportunity, or college football provides them with an opportunity to, you know, to help manage these things, because college football is better when there’s parity. That’s what makes the NFL Great. There’s 16, 18, teams right now in the NFL that probably have a legitimate chance to go to the Super Bowl and win the championship. You know, that’s more than 50% of the league. Is that the case in college football? No, it’s certainly not.”

Dykes argued the parity movement in college football. He does not want the rich to get richer, as has happened recently in college athletics.

“And we need to have as much parity in the game as we can possibly have,” Dykes said. “And the only way that you can do that is by having revenue sharing, which we finally have, but then also controlling the NIL money that is made on top of that. So my hope is that they do that. My hope is that that system is developed at a very high level, operates at a high level, punishes people that need to be punished and results in college football becoming even better, because the game is great.” 

The game of college football is great as it is. But as Dykes pointed out, it could always be better by rectifying some holes in the machine.

“I mean, it’s a great time for the game of football right now. As I said, the players are being compensated,” Dykes said. “The players have freedom to make decisions that’s going to benefit them and their families. It’s about time that they’ve had those, it’s resulted in some awkward situations for all of us involved in the game, but I think it’s where it needs to be, and I’m really, really excited about the future of college football. 

“I really believe in the game. I believe in the players. I just, I want the adults to be adults, and I want us to operate within the framework of the rules, and I want us to do what is best for the game and what’s best for the kids and and we need to have that mentality as we move forward.”



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Kentucky RHP Jaxon Jelkin will return in 2025 after removing name from MLB Draft

After bowing out in the finals of the Clemson regional last month in the NCAA Tournament, not much has gone wrong for the Kentucky baseball program. All signs point to the Bat Cats having a very good team on the diamond in 2026. The program received some more good news on Tuesday. Right-handed pitcher Jaxon […]

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After bowing out in the finals of the Clemson regional last month in the NCAA Tournament, not much has gone wrong for the Kentucky baseball program. All signs point to the Bat Cats having a very good team on the diamond in 2026. The program received some more good news on Tuesday.

Right-handed pitcher Jaxon Jelkin will return to campus after missing all of the 2025 season with a elbow injury.

“After careful consideration I have made the decision to return to the University of Kentucky,” Jelkin wrote in a release. “My ultimate goal is to be a big leaguer and I feel my continued development by Coach (Dan) Roszel, Coach (Nick) Mingione and the entire staff is the best path to that dream. Big Blue Nation has become my home.”

The Bellevue (Neb.) West product became a star in the Omaha suburbs during his high school career. Jaxon Jelkin began his collegiate career at Nebraska in 2022 and made six appearances as a true freshman. Jelkin then transferred to South Mountain Community College where he made 14 starts (7-2, 3.81 ERA, 75.2 IP, 98 K). The pitcher was drafted by the Los Angeles Dodgers in the 14th round of the 2023 MLB Draft but decided to stay in school.

Jelkin then transferred to Houston in 2024 where he started seven games for the Big 12 program and served as a Friday night starter before suffering an elbow injury. The pitcher posted a 3.41 ERA and became a ninth-round pick of the New York Mets in the 2024 MLB Draft. However, Jelkin decided to stay in school and transferred to Kentucky.

Now for the first time in his career, Jaxon Jelkin will be at the same school in consecutive years. The veteran should be back healthy and compete for a spot in UK’s 2026 starting rotation.



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