NIL
Bill Belichick's first college try at UNC
Bill Belichick has been one of sports’ most discussed figures this spring, but little had to do with the surreal nature of a six-time Super Bowl champion head coach electing to coach college football for the first time at 73. Even less of it had to do with his new team at North Carolina. Belichick […]


Bill Belichick has been one of sports’ most discussed figures this spring, but little had to do with the surreal nature of a six-time Super Bowl champion head coach electing to coach college football for the first time at 73.
Even less of it had to do with his new team at North Carolina.
Belichick joins a rapidly changing sport and is taking over a roster ravaged by the transfer portal and NFL Draft, rebuilding on the fly and making $10 million a year to improve on the tenure of Mack Brown, his 73-year-old predecessor who went 44-33 in five seasons.
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While in the NFL, the New England Patriots coach was famously all business, but Belichick has seen his relationship with his girlfriend, Jordon Hudson, 24, become the dominant storyline since he started wearing Carolina blue.
“It’s wild, right, because the whole world is talking about it,” said linebacker Cade Law, who spent two seasons and spring practice at UNC before transferring to Memphis. “And we were in the middle of it, so everywhere you go, people are asking about it.”
Since spring practice ended April 12 with a “Practice like a Pro” event at Kenan Stadium, Belichick has been promoting his new book, during which UNC football has also come up.
“They’re so eager, they’re hungry. They have dreams,” Belichick said of the Tar Heels in an interview Friday on “Good Morning America.” “They want to be good. I want to help make them good and make them good on a good team. … I’ve learned so much being back in the college environment, whether it be recruiting, the college game, the rules, the hash marks, some strategy and just putting a team together.”
The Athletic reached out to ACC and opposing coaches about what Belichick is facing and to recent UNC transfers about their experience inside Belichick’s first college program. No current UNC players have been made available for interviews since Belichick’s arrival.
“It’s Bill Belichick. I think it’s great for college football,” said an ACC coordinator, granted, like the other coaches, anonymity so he could speak candidly on Belichick’s transition.
He said it shouldn’t appear that it’s easy for NFL coaches to come in and dominate.
“It’s really, really important for all of us who have come up in college football to kick his ass this year,” the coordinator said.
A pro mindset
NFL coaches coming to college have been rare. Even rarer, doing so by choice or, like Belichick, having held no official role in the college ranks. Jim Mora (UCLA/UConn), Lovie Smith (Illinois) and Herm Edwards (Arizona State) are recent examples of coaches who went from NFL to NCAA — with mixed results. Still more returned to the college ranks after NFL stints or have gone back and forth.
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In a February interview, UNC general manager Michael Lombardi, who worked under Belichick with the Cleveland Browns and again for three seasons in New England from 2014 to 2016, referred to the program as “the 33rd NFL team.” Belichick and company are unabashedly leaning into a professional model for his program.
The players noticed it in the form of more freedom than they were used to.
When practice was done, they could go to class if their schedule demanded. The strength and conditioning staff would spend the day in the weight room, and individual players could find time on their own schedule to get in their workout for the day. Under Brown, UNC’s offense and defense would rotate scheduled times in the weight room.
“That was cool. I thought that was fun,” said Law, who transferred in search of more playing time. “Carolina is tough academically, so you could kind of get your business going school-wise and then come in and lift whenever you want.”
Added Jariel Cobb, who enrolled at UNC early from high school and spent the spring there amid a crowd of running backs before transferring to Charlotte: “They treated us not as adults but treated us like young adults. They made sure we held ourselves accountable.”
Belichick’s staff is stuffed with pro experience. Defensive coordinator Steve Belichick was a veteran assistant with the Patriots under his father and spent last season running the Washington Huskies defense. Brian Belichick spent five seasons coaching the secondary under his father with the Patriots before taking the same job at UNC. Offensive coordinator Freddie Kitchens is a holdover from the previous staff and spent more than a decade in the NFL, including a one-year run as Browns head coach in 2019. Special teams coordinator Mike Priefer and Lombardi’s son Matt, the receivers coach, have NFL experience. Inside linebackers coach Jamie Collins is a first-year coach who played in the NFL.
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Still, UNC is not the first college program to embrace a pro mindset.
“At the end of the day, I don’t know how really different it is than what we’re all already doing,” the ACC coordinator said.
Jordon Hudson’s role
As for the hubbub about Belichick and Hudson, sightings of the much-talked-about couple inside the team facility were rare, players said. Sometimes they ate lunch together in the team facility. UNC disputed a report earlier this month that Hudson had been banned from the facility in the wake of an awkward Belichick interview with CBS in which Hudson continually interjected, fueling existing questions about her role. Belichick has said Hudson handles his promotional affairs outside of UNC football.
“Coach Belichick is all business, so he doesn’t really bring his personal life in with us,” Law said. “That’s more of that pro style, because when we had coach Brown, Miss Sally was always at the facility. That was a family thing. This was a business thing.”
Belichick has tried, rather unsuccessfully, to bring the attention back to his book and football.
“I can’t tell people anything because I didn’t know anything, either,” Law said. “(Hudson) was never there. She might have been on the fifth or fourth floor, but she had no interaction with the players or the way we did football.”
Adjusting to college
As UNC builds its roster, it faces a talent deficit between it and the top of the ACC. But it’s bolstered by Belichick’s track record of success and football knowledge.
“They’ll field a tough, schematically sound team,” the ACC coordinator said, adding he thought it would “go well.” “In college football, that’s half the battle: getting talent and playing hard.”
Belichick is taking over a defense that lost eight of the team’s top 10 tacklers, and Beau Atkinson (12 tackles for loss) left for Ohio State and Amare Campbell (10.5 TFL) for Penn State.
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Eight offensive linemen are gone, including All-American Willie Lampkin. The team’s top three pass catchers are gone, including star running back Omarion Hampton. Starting quarterback Jacolby Criswell also moved on, and Max Johnson is returning from a broken leg and didn’t participate in spring practice.
“All the marquee guys are gone,” an ACC assistant said. “They added a few guys we recruited.”
The Tar Heels tried to patch holes in the roster via the portal, adding more than 30 new players.
Former South Alabama quarterback Gio Lopez looks like the likely starter. He ran for 463 yards and seven scores last season and threw for 2,559 yards with 18 touchdowns and five interceptions. He did not go through spring ball.
They added seven offensive linemen, highlighted by Daniel King from Troy and Will O’Steen from Jacksonville State. UNC boosted its defensive front by adding Smith Vilbert from Penn State and Pryce Yates from UConn, among others.
It’s a level of turnover that happens with most coaching changes. But with unlimited transfers and name, image and likeness deals, college coaches are adjusting to balancing the reality of an entire roster of free agents every year, the ACC assistant coach said.
“You’ve gotta do a great job making sure you’re having conversations you didn’t have in the past,” he said. “You have to have in the back of your mind that other people want your players, and your players are looking at what other kids are getting across the country and entertaining it.”
Belichick, who raved about longtime quarterback Tom Brady’s film study as equal to or better than his own in his book, will also have to adjust to a roster still learning the game instead of seasoned pros. And for many players living life away from home for the first time, learning life skills can be a constant work in progress.
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“Those parents are going to want to have conversations with you. Whereas not many parents in the NFL are calling the NFL head coach saying I need to talk about my son being unhappy or he’s disgruntled or his playing time or whatever,” the ACC assistant said with a laugh. “That just doesn’t happen in that league. It’ll be interesting to see how he transitions, or maybe they just do it like the NFL and you’ll deal with the GM, and if you’re not happy, that’s how it goes.”
Belichick does inherit a schedule that works in his favor. The Tar Heels play six home games, and a seventh will be played in Charlotte against the 49ers in what could end up being a friendly road crowd. It’s likely that just one of North Carolina’s opponents — Clemson — will show up in the preseason Top 25.
Opening the season in prime time! pic.twitter.com/8SPc9L1G3a
— Carolina Football (@UNCFootball) May 13, 2025
Plus, considering all the change, preparing for North Carolina is a unique challenge in itself.
“We’ll scout some Patriots tape and Washington tape, where his son came from,” an opposing coach said.
The task ahead, though common in the transfer portal era of college football for recent first-year coaches such as Lincoln Riley at USC, Deion Sanders at Colorado and Jeff Brohm at Louisville, is new for Belichick. Last year, Curt Cignetti turned a transfer-heavy group into a College Football Playoff Cinderella at Indiana. Elsewhere, Mike Norvell leaned on transfers at Florida State for a second consecutive season and stumbled from 13-0 in 2023 to 2-10 in 2024.
“Coaching and retention in today’s game will be about the relationships you have. Even with all the money and scouting and all that, it’s still college football. It’s about you being able to develop your guys and them being comfortable being developed by you,” the ACC assistant said. “If you’re recycling every year, it’s a roll of the dice.”
With Belichick, UNC becomes one of the biggest wild cards in the sport in 2025.
“What I do know is that coach Belichick knows how to win,” Law said. “So if they don’t win, that will be surprising to me. He’s a legend.”
(Photo: Jared C. Tilton / Getty Images)
NIL
Florida high school football faces wave of transfers, sparking intense competition among schools
Florida high school football faces wave of transfers It’s a shift that’s shaking up the high school football scene. Top high school football players in Florida are increasingly transferring to schools in pursuit of better exposure, competition, and future opportunities. SANFORD, Fla. – It’s a shift that’s shaking up the high school football scene. Top […]


Florida high school football faces wave of transfers
It’s a shift that’s shaking up the high school football scene. Top high school football players in Florida are increasingly transferring to schools in pursuit of better exposure, competition, and future opportunities.
SANFORD, Fla. – It’s a shift that’s shaking up the high school football scene. Top high school football players in Florida are increasingly transferring to schools in pursuit of better exposure, competition, and future opportunities.
What we know:
Top players are changing jerseys in search of bigger opportunities.
Seminole High School quarterback Michael Clayton II, already committed to the University of Illinois, is the latest to make a high-profile move — transferring to Miami Edison for his senior season. This trend reflects the growing influence of school choice policies and lenient FHSAA transfer rules, which allow athletes to switch schools with few limitations.
What we don’t know:
It remains unclear how this increase in player movement will affect team cohesion, player development, and long-term academic outcomes. There’s also uncertainty around whether future policy changes may limit such transfers, and how coaches will continue to adapt as mobility becomes a dominant factor in high school sports.
The backstory:
Florida’s school choice policies have expanded in recent years, allowing students to attend any public school with available space, regardless of district. This has opened the door for student-athletes to choose schools based on athletic opportunities rather than residency. For football players, the goal is often to gain more playing time, better coaching, or greater visibility to college recruiters.
What they’re saying:
The high school football landscape is increasingly mirroring the dynamics of college football, where Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) deals and transfer portals have revolutionized player movement.
Some athletes transfer multiple times before graduation, reflecting a broader shift in priorities toward individual branding and competitive advantage.
“It’s gone from, you grew up in a school district, and you had to go to a school. Now with school choice, you can go to any school as long as there are seats available in that school,” Influencer Counsel Athlete Agent and Financial Advisor Dan LaForest told FOX 35 Sports.
Some athletes transfer multiple times during their high school careers.
It’s a move that makes long-term development difficult. However, with current FHSAA rules, players can move schools with little restriction.
“It’s tough on a high school coach. They have to create an environment that kids want to play. It’s not x’s and o’s anymore. I think x’s and o’s are a piece of it,” LaForest said.
STAY CONNECTED WITH FOX 35 ORLANDO:
The Source: This story was written based on information shared by the Florida High School Athletic Association, and Influencer Counsel Athlete Agent and Financial Advisor Dan LaForest.
NIL
Report: North Carolina men’s basketball NIL payroll tops $14 million
Last season, Hubert Davis made it clear changes would be coming at North Carolina. He promised to hire a general manager to help the program in the NIL and transfer portal landscape, and those investments are becoming clear. UNC’s NIL payroll is more than $14 million this year, according to a report from Inside Carolina. […]

Last season, Hubert Davis made it clear changes would be coming at North Carolina. He promised to hire a general manager to help the program in the NIL and transfer portal landscape, and those investments are becoming clear.
UNC’s NIL payroll is more than $14 million this year, according to a report from Inside Carolina. It’s part of the influx in support after the hiring of Jim Tanner as general manager and is almost triple the dollars from a year ago when the Tar Heels were the last team in the NCAA Tournament.
Tanner’s contract pays him $850,000 this year, according to the UNC salary information database. Additionally, the total compensation for the staff could be upward of $7 million, the report said. Davis also received a two-year contract extension after last season as the university started to invest in the program.
Davis was outspoken about North Carolina’s need to adapt in the changing landscape. General manager hires have become prominent across college sports, and Tanner’s NBA connections and experience as an agent are also important parts of the role. It also fits what Davis was looking for in the position.
“The old model for Carolina basketball just doesn’t work,” Davis said in February. “It’s not sustainable. It has to build out because there’s so many things in play with NIL, the transfer portal, agents, international players. You just need a bigger staff to be able to maintain things. You need a bigger staff so I can do what I’m supposed to be doing, and that’s coaching basketball.”
North Carolina will have a slew of new faces in town next season, fueled by the No. 15-ranked recruiting class in the country, according to the On3 Industry Team Recruiting Ranking. Five Star Plus+ forward Caleb Wilson headlines the group as the No. 5 overall player from the 2025 cycle, according to the On3 Industry Ranking, a weighted average that utilizes all four major recruiting media companies.
On the transfer front, the Tar Heels have five players coming in, led by former Arizona forward Henri Veesaar – the No. 25 overall player in the On3 Industry Transfer Rankings. UNC also recently landed a commitment from touted international guard Luka Bogavac as part of the roster overhaul.
North Carolina is coming off a 23-14 overall record in 2024-25 as it snuck into March Madness as the last team in the bracket. The Tar Heels won their First Four matchup against San Diego State before falling to Ole Miss in the first round.
NIL
NiJaree Canady Leads Texas Tech to First-Ever Softball National Championship Final
Over the years, college softball has produced numerous legends that have gone on to make a name for themselves in the sport, from Jennie Finch to Jessica Mendoza and everyone in between. But in recent years, former Stanford star and current Texas Tech standout, NiJaree Canady, has entered the conversation with an impressive 2025 season […]

Over the years, college softball has produced numerous legends that have gone on to make a name for themselves in the sport, from Jennie Finch to Jessica Mendoza and everyone in between. But in recent years, former Stanford star and current Texas Tech standout, NiJaree Canady, has entered the conversation with an impressive 2025 season that included another Pitcher of the Year award win adding to her already strong resume.
However, this week Canady got one step closer to reaching the pinnacle of college softball by leading Texas Tech to its first ever Softball National Championship Final with an upset win over the nation’s top team, Oklahoma. Getting the start, another dominant outing from Canady put the Red Raiders through and only two wins away from capturing the school’s first-ever softball title.
Canady pitched all seven innings, allowing five hits, two runs and a walk as she struck out eight Oklahoma batters. The only runs she gave up came in the seventh inning when she allowed a game-tying two-run home run, but thanks to a sacrifice fly from Texas Tech first baseman Lauren Allred, the Red Raiders regained the lead in the bottom half of the inning and were able take home the win.
Aside from that one homer, Canady was superb and even managed to strike out one of Oklahoma’s best hitters in shortstop Gabbi Garcia, three times. For the game, Canady threw 106 pitches and pitched her fifth consecutive complete game. At the plate though, Canady went 0-for-3 and left two runners on base.
With the Red Raiders are in the championship, Canady is needed now more than ever. Texas, a softball powerhouse, is in its second straight WCWS championship and their third in four years.
Having been one of the top teams in the nation since their first season as a program in 1997, Texas knows what it needs to do to win it all and after experiencing heartbreak during both of their championship appearances, this whole season has been about getting over the hump.
But Canady was brought to Texas Tech for this exact reason. A headlining player at Stanford, Canady received a record-breaking NIL deal for a softball player, ensuring that she would be the focal point for this year’s Texas Tech team.
The Red Raiders have a strong pitching staff that also includes Chloe Riassetto and Samantha Lincoln but when it comes to big game moments, Canady has been relied on to get things done.
The WCWS championship begins on Wednesday, June 4 and will take place at Devon Park in Oklahoma City, ending either on June 5 or June 6 depending on how the first two games play out. Each game will air on ESPN.
NIL
DOJ weighs in on NCAA eligibility lawsuit
The Department of Justice evaluated a lawsuit by Zakai Zeigler challenging the NCAA’s limit on extra-year eligibility. KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — The United States Department of Justice is weighing in on a lawsuit filed by former University of Tennessee basketball player Zakai Zeigler, who is challenging the NCAA to play for an additional year while collecting […]

The Department of Justice evaluated a lawsuit by Zakai Zeigler challenging the NCAA’s limit on extra-year eligibility.
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — The United States Department of Justice is weighing in on a lawsuit filed by former University of Tennessee basketball player Zakai Zeigler, who is challenging the NCAA to play for an additional year while collecting compensation for his name, image and likeness.
Zeigler, who recently graduated from an undergraduate program, said in the lawsuit that he plans to pursue a graduate program at UT. He is the latest in a list of college athletes filing lawsuits against the NCAA, saying he hopes to compete in his fifth year of college basketball, arguing that he has a five-year eligibility window, despite already graduating from UT’s undergraduate program.
The lawsuit argues that an “arbitrary” National Collegiate Athletic Association rule limits student-athletes to participating in four seasons of competition. It also claims the NCAA’s rule violates the Sherman Act, constituting an “unreasonable restraint of trade” because when student-athletes’ eligibility ends, they are effectively locked out of the NIL market.
The lawsuit argues that many other student-athletes compete during their fifth year of eligibility and earn compensation for their name, image and likeness while playing. The lawsuit said Zeigler’s NIL valuation for the 2025-2026 season ranges between $2 million and $4 million.
In a document filed Monday, the DOJ’s Antitrust Division submitted a Statement of Interest, stating how the Sherman Act should be applied in this case. While the federal government is not siding with either party, they are urging the court to use a rule of reason approach to determine whether the NCAA’s eligibility rule harms or helps competition in the student-athlete labor market.
The National Collegiate Athletic Association responded to the lawsuit Monday and argued that eligibility rules are non-commercial in nature and fall outside the scope of the Sherman Act.
The DOJ also noted that while some NCAA rules might have some benefits, they should be judged on their impact. The Justice Department emphasized that restrictions that limit their ability to compete or earn NIL income could be “anticompetitive,” and that the court shouldn’t assume NCAA rules are legal or illegal but examine the facts.
A hearing on that request is scheduled for June 6 in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee.
NIL
Texas freshman 3B Sam Richardson enters NCAA transfer portal
According to On3’s Pete Nakos, Texas freshman third baseman Sam Richardson has entered the NCAA transfer portal. Richardson spent just one season on the 40 Acres, being a former highly-rated recruit out of Olive Branch, MS. A loss for head coach Jim Schlossnagle just days after the 2025 season ended. Perfect Game rated Richardson as […]


According to On3’s Pete Nakos, Texas freshman third baseman Sam Richardson has entered the NCAA transfer portal. Richardson spent just one season on the 40 Acres, being a former highly-rated recruit out of Olive Branch, MS. A loss for head coach Jim Schlossnagle just days after the 2025 season ended.
Perfect Game rated Richardson as the No. 39 overall player in the 2024 recruiting class and No. 3 when looking just at third basemen. He finished at the top of his position rankings in the state of Mississippi but fell short of the same accolade overall. Richardson was No. 2 in the Magnoilia State.
Texas earned a commitment from Richardson back in Aug. 2023 before pen was officially put to paper well over a year later. However, Richardson was previously committed to play for a different SEC school — the Missouri Tigers.
Now, if Missouri (or other schools inside the SEC) is still interested, Richardson is set to be on the open market. A redshirt allows him to maintain four years of eligibility, giving the corner infielder plenty of time to develop at his next stop. A bit name as the college baseball transfer portal begins to ramp up following NCAA Tournament regionals.
More on Jim Schlossnagle’s first season at Texas
There were no doubt some positives for Schlossnagle during his first season at Texas. None bigger than winning the SEC regular season, taking down some of the conference’s top programs along the way. Schlossnagle even claimed doing so was tougher than winning the national championship.
Another highlight was Texas welcoming Texas A&M to Austin, a weekend series with a little more juice than usual. Given Schlossnagle’s departure from the Aggies a year ago, and the rivalry returning as a conference matchup, both teams were going to be amped up. Texas emerged with a three-game sweep, something Longhorn fans will not forget to mention for a long time.
Being named the No. 2 overall seed and hosting a regional in the NCAA Tournament is even something to celebrate. However, the festivities cut off pretty quickly. UTSA was able to eliminate Texas in the regional final, ending Year 1 for Schlossnagle.
The head coach will have plenty to work with heading into the 2026 season, despite some names entering the transfer portal. Texas will want the postseason results to be better though, hoping for a run toward the program’s first national championship since 2005.
NIL
Greg Sankey reveals NCAA Tournament expansion lasted ‘maybe lasted five minutes’ at SEC meetings
Last week, NCAA president Charlie Baker told reporters that the NCAA Tournament could expand to 72 or 76 teams by 2026. During an appearance on the “Dan Patrick Show,” SEC commissioner Greg Sankey revealed how his conference coaches reacted when he brought up tournament expansion. “I introduced the issue to our men’s basketball coaches, which […]

Last week, NCAA president Charlie Baker told reporters that the NCAA Tournament could expand to 72 or 76 teams by 2026. During an appearance on the “Dan Patrick Show,” SEC commissioner Greg Sankey revealed how his conference coaches reacted when he brought up tournament expansion.
“I introduced the issue to our men’s basketball coaches, which I think we’ve talked about with that group before. I would guess then, given the other issues we had on our plate, that conversation maybe lasted five minutes,” Sankey said. “My points to them were, this is still a work in progress.
“I didn’t know that there was going to be kind of a press gathering. This is not a criticism. Charlie Baker spoke about tournament expansion, I think, the day after our basketball coaches gathered. I mentioned it to our women’s basketball coaches as well briefly. It didn’t really go anywhere.”
The announcement from Baker has divided the college basketball landscape. Some fans are excited to see more teams have the chance to participate in March Madness. Meanwhile, others claim that adding teams to the historic tournament, dilutes the importance of the event.
Of course, from the NCAA’s perspective, tournament expansion is mostly about finances. More games equals more money. The NCAA Tournament last expanded in 2011 when it changed from including 64 teams to 68, with the addition of the First Four round of games.
Prior to that, the format of March Madness had remained unchanged since the 64-team field was first adopted in 1985. Greg Sankey still doesn’t know if expanding the tournament is the best move.
“We should be exploring tournament expansion. Whether or not it happens, is actually another point of evaluation,” Sankey said. “So have the conversation, deep dive, figure out if it works, practically, competitively, economically.
“I think the one issue for us is, if it is expanded, let’s pick the number of 76 and I’ll do quick math for you. So 52 of the 76 teams would be like in that traditional first round. The other 24 would play in 12 games. The 12 winners meet up with the 52. There’s your 64-team bracket, right? That’s like from my intramural director days at Utica. So I know how brackets work. What I’m really interested in, we’re interested in, is who fills those 12 games, those other 24 teams?”
Only time will tell. However, judging from Baker’s latest statements, college basketball fans might be learning more about an expanded NCAA Tournament sooner than they’d previously expected.
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