NIL
Bol, Ingebrigtsen, Manuel and Gout announced for Ostrava
Global senior champions Femke Bol and Jakob Ingebrigtsen, plus rising stars Lurdes Gloria Manuel and Gout Gout, have been announced for the Ostrava Golden Spike, a World Athletics Continental Tour Gold meeting, on 24 June. World 400m hurdles gold medallist Bol will contest the 400m at the Golden Spike, where she will be joined by […]


Global senior champions Femke Bol and Jakob Ingebrigtsen, plus rising stars Lurdes Gloria Manuel and Gout Gout, have been announced for the Ostrava Golden Spike, a World Athletics Continental Tour Gold meeting, on 24 June.
World 400m hurdles gold medallist Bol will contest the 400m at the Golden Spike, where she will be joined by her new training partner Manuel, the world U20 champion who was born in Ostrava.
Dutch star Bol set a world 400m short track record of 49.17 indoors last year and has an outdoor best of 49.44, while Manuel set a Czech U20 record of 50.59 at last year’s Golden Spike and improved to 50.52 at the European Championships.
The meeting record of 49.67 has stood since 1983.
Norway’s Ingebrigtsen will return to race in Ostrava for the first time since 2020, when he won the 1500m in 3:33.92. Since then, he has become a multiple world record-holder, two-time Olympic champion and two-time World Championships gold medallist.
The distance he will race this time at the Golden Spike is to be confirmed.
Australia’s Gout is set to make his European professional debut when he races the 200m in Ostrava. The 17-year-old clocked 20.04 in December to break the long-standing Oceanian record and also improve Usain Bolt’s world age-16 best.
He more recently ran a wind-assisted 19.84 (2.2m/s) to win the Australian title in Perth. Bolt’s Golden Spike record of 19.83 was set in 2008.
They will be joined in Ostrava by Czech athletes including sprinters Karolina Manasova, Lada Vondrova, Tereza Petrzilkova and Milan Scibrani, hurdler Nikoleta Jichova, high jumper Jan Stefela and shot putter Tomas Stanek.
NIL
Tennessee athletic director Danny White wants to see college athletes become employees
Tennessee found itself in the spotlight — and in the NCAA’s crosshairs again — this month when Gov. Bill Lee signed a bill that would essentially allow Tennessee, Memphis, and Vanderbilt to not have to abide by the new revenue-sharing rules and ultimately continue NIL collective payments. That caused a response from the NCAA. Tennessee […]

Tennessee found itself in the spotlight — and in the NCAA’s crosshairs again — this month when Gov. Bill Lee signed a bill that would essentially allow Tennessee, Memphis, and Vanderbilt to not have to abide by the new revenue-sharing rules and ultimately continue NIL collective payments. That caused a response from the NCAA.
Tennessee has (essentially) responded to that response.
Conference leaders want their members to sign “membership agreement” contracts to eliminate future lawsuits and allow the new rules coming with the College Sports Commission to become enforceable. Tennessee athletic director Danny White went on record later in the week after the new leadership plan was leaked to state that he would rather see a different route taken in college athletics.
“It’s a real issue, we could go on and on about what we need,” White said. “But I’ll say it, we’ve got a camera on us (but) I don’t really care at this point: collective bargaining (CBA) is the only solution.”
That belief is in direct opposition of what the NCAA — and its leaders — have wanted to do. For months, SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey, NCAA President Charlie Baker, and multiple other administrators have made multiple trips to Capitol Hill to ask for antitrust support once the House v. NCAA settlement was passed and revenue-sharing would arrive in college athletics. However, eliminating blatant pay-for-play from collectives is seemingly a top goal along with not making athletes employees for the leaders in college athletics. Sankey has even publicly discussed wanting to specifically avoid making athletes employees of universities
White believes the opposite.
Throughout the entire NIL era, Tennessee has had some one-on-one battles with the NCAA after pay-for-play scandal that costed head football coach Jeremy Pruitt his job before NIL became legal in college athletics. The NCAA tried to make quarterback Nico Iamaleava ineligible before the 2024 season because Tennessee fought back with lawyers and state legislation to get the NCAA to back off. Now Tennessee is fighting back again.
Expect Danny White to be a popular figure at next week’s SEC Spring Meetings in Destin. We are still waiting on the settlement to pass so we can officially enter this new era, but Tennessee is already trying to change the rules before the rules are established.
It is possible that White might not be wrong here. The big antitrust problem that keeps putting college athletics in court could be eliminated with a negotiated CBA, but as with everything in this evolving world, it’s a bit complicated.
NIL
Why not more 3-pointers? One of many ‘poor coaching’ examples Mark Pope plans to fix in year two
If you think Mark Pope did a ‘poor coaching’ job in his debut season at Kentucky, you’re crazy. So, yes, Mark Pope, you’re crazy. Entering year two in Lexington, Pope sat down with KSR to talk through what went well for the Wildcats and what needs to change as he pushes the program closer toward […]

If you think Mark Pope did a ‘poor coaching’ job in his debut season at Kentucky, you’re crazy. So, yes, Mark Pope, you’re crazy.
Entering year two in Lexington, Pope sat down with KSR to talk through what went well for the Wildcats and what needs to change as he pushes the program closer toward championship contention — the only goal that matters every season for the blue and white.
“We failed at our job last year,” he said — despite tying an all-time college basketball record for most top-15 wins while leading Kentucky to its first Sweet 16 since 2019.
Agree to disagree, Coach, but I get it. You understand the assignment of hanging banners every season and the Wildcats did not hang a banner his first season. It’s a black and white conversation you’re not willing to budge on. Fair enough.
Let’s talk through some of the things that didn’t work, then, reasons Kentucky did not win a championship. Why did the Wildcats only shoot 25 3-pointers per game after entering the season wanting to take 30, if not 35? They were top-30 in efficiency from deep, but barely top-70 in terms of volume despite boasting a top-five scoring offense?
“It was poor coaching,” Pope said.
The tone was lighthearted in a self-deprecating way, joking that for all of the team success they found together, being five 3-point attempts short of their preseason goal each game kept them from taking things to another level. It wasn’t the only thing and he was pleased with the team’s identity overall in year one, but it helped show how far away they are from being where he wants to be.
It’s five attempts on the surface, but so much more when you dig deeper.
“I’m still really disappointed with that this year, it still eats at me a little bit, like, ‘Ah!’ We couldn’t quite get there,” Pope said. “I was really proud of the product our guys put on the floor last year, and I thought — with all things considered, I was really proud of it.
“We have so much room to grow, we have so much more to do, we left so much on the table. We weren’t quite the team that I envisioned us being when we’re great.”
Plenty led to that nit-picky shortcoming beyond coaching and he wishes those circumstances were different, but that’s what the offseason is for. You build upon what worked in year one — again, plenty did work — while fixing what didn’t.
“Part of it was injuries, part of it was coaching, part of it all the things, part of it newness, part of it roster construction. It was all little pieces of it,” Pope said. “I’m super proud of what the guys did, I think it’s incredible. It was a really amazing journey, but you go through that and you’re like, ‘Man, we weren’t even close to what we’re supposed to be and what we’re aiming to be.’ I think that gives you great hope for what we can actually be.”
It’s part of a greater point he was trying to make, obsessing over ways to put a winning product on the floor capable of hanging banners. They were close in year one, but not close enough with those tiny details separating Kentucky from championship status.
Pope feels he’s found some of those answers to last year’s problems.
“It’s all built into it. We think we have some answers for when some things go wrong this coming season. You learn and you grow and you get better, right? That’s what we’re going to do,” he said. “With all that said, we talked about all the continuity issues and everything else, but I do think we learned a lot last year.
“I think we grew a lot last year as a staff, I think we grew as a team.”
While there were things that didn’t work in year one — at least at the level Pope demands — there were others that did, allowing the team to make history and push past the opening weekend for the first time in a half-decade. Putting together a tight-knit group that prioritized team goals over individual success is something he strived to do in his second offseason as head coach.
That worked then, now and always, Pope believes.
“Dealing with the changes, what we also learned was just how massively important it is for our guys to get to know each other and love each other,” he said. “As a basketball player, the only reason you’re here is because you’re completely obsessed with your own personal development and growth. You can’t get to Kentucky without being crazy, selfishly obsessed with yourself and how you grow — because that’s what it demands. It’s this personal sacrifice here that is so huge.”
Not saying individual success isn’t important — you don’t come to Kentucky if you’re not focused on developing individually and using the platform in the right way to skyrocket into superstardom — but team goals are the difference in getting there.
Take Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, for example. Would he become Kentucky’s first-ever NBA MVP if he didn’t lead the Oklahoma City Thunder to a No. 1 seed, now just six wins away from a world championship? Losers can produce and make a lot of money, but winners can reach legendary status.
There’s a healthy way of doing both.
“We’re not living in la-la-land where guys are going to completely divorce themselves from their own ambitions, but what we’re trying to do is build a place where you’re going to go achieve your own ambitions by becoming the greatest teammate ever and loving your guys more than you could possibly imagine,” Pope said. “This actually is, by definition — here and in the NBA — a team sport. It’s about a team.
“Our guys being so good at doing that last year was what helped us survive all the stuff that that kind of went into the season.”
Pretty good insight for a bad coach.
NIL
Rece Davis reveals the ‘dumbest thing we do’ with College Football Playoff
The expanded College Football Playoff was a hit in Year 1, but there’s a myriad of changes coming for Year 2 and beyond. ESPN’s Rece Davis has his focus on an area that many people wouldn’t have circled though. The College GameDay host took issue with the way the national title game is categorized. For […]

The expanded College Football Playoff was a hit in Year 1, but there’s a myriad of changes coming for Year 2 and beyond. ESPN’s Rece Davis has his focus on an area that many people wouldn’t have circled though.
The College GameDay host took issue with the way the national title game is categorized. For example, last season’s championship showdown was called the 2025 College Football Playoff National Championship, but it was the finale for the 2024 season. Davis wants to see that rectified in the future.
“The dumbest thing we do with the College Football Playoff is play the 2024 season and then call it the 2025 College Football Playoff [National] Championship. I have to do those wrap-up shows, where we go back through the Playoff and do the intros, they always say it. I refuse to say it that way,” Davis adamantly stated, via the latest episode of the College GameDay Podcast.
“I will say College Football Playoff [National] Championship for the 2024 season, because that’s how you organize it in your mind when you’re thinking about the championships. There’s the answer. I mean, you don’t have to use the Roman numerals if you don’t want to. Use Helvetica font, I don’t care what you do. Just do it something where it’s consistent and everybody understands what year it is, or what season it represents.”
If you couldn’t tell, it’s the football offseason, so there’s going to be some off-the-wall topics that pundits like Davis nitpick. While this doesn’t feel like too big of a deal to some, it’s obviously something that’s weighed heavy on his mind throughout the last couple of months.
As Davis awaits change on that front, the Playoff will look different in 2025 and beyond. After a bit of controversy in Year 1, the system will adopt a straight-seeding model for this coming season.
This comes following criticism of seeding in last year’s CFP. Under the seeding model used last season, the top-four ranked conference champions earned a bye week. The remaining teams were seeded in the order that the selection committee had ranked them. However, that ended up with teams ranked lower by the selection committee getting the bye ahead of teams ranked higher.
Of the four teams that earned the bye last season, none were able to win their first game. That included ninth-ranked Boise State and 12th-ranked Arizona State. It also included the top-two ranked teams in Oregon and Georgia.
As you can tell, the College Football Playoff is ever-changing, so perhaps Rece Davis will get his wish. Last season’s iteration was a resounding success, and we can’t wait to see what’s in-store for an encore.
NIL
Fashion Icon Karl Kani Enters NIL Era with First
The streetwear pioneer partners with Overtime Sports Management Group to sign high school basketball standout King Kendrick, marking a new chapter at the intersection of sport, fashion, and culture. SAN FRANCISCO – May 24, 2025 – PRLog — Karl Kani made history designing for the biggest names in hip-hop and being the first non-sportswear brand […]

SAN FRANCISCO – May 24, 2025 – PRLog — Karl Kani made history designing for the biggest names in hip-hop and being the first non-sportswear brand seen on NBA courts. Now he’s making history again.
In a first for the Kani brand, the designer has signed a state champion high school athlete, known as King Kendrick, to an NIL deal in partnership with Overtime Sports Management Group (OSMG).
King Kendrick brings a fluid, ambidextrous game to basketball that is already drawing attention. In a recent press conference at All-Star weekend, Kyrie Irving mentioned Kendrick by name and spoke about how the next generation of players will need to be truly ambidextrous to compete at the highest level.
To create the visuals for the King x Kani “90s Kid” campaign, Kani brought in celebrity photographer Carell Augustus, author of the Black Hollywood Book project, to showcase classic and exclusive looks at the intersection of sport, fashion, and culture.
Karl Kani will serve as Investor, Mentor, Stylist, and Creator. This partnership marks a new chapter in how athlete identity is built and expressed.
Photos: (Click photo to enlarge)
Source: OSMG West
Read Full Story – Fashion Icon Karl Kani Enters NIL Era with First-Ever Athlete Signing: King Kendrick | More news from this source
NIL
The Athletic updates Florida Gators' standing in its college football top 25 ranking
It has been almost a month since the college football transfer portal closed to new entrants, but since then, there has still been a fair amount of movement in the NCAA’s de facto free agency system. Of course, there are still over three months before the opening kickoff of the 2025 campaign, but that has […]

It has been almost a month since the college football transfer portal closed to new entrants, but since then, there has still been a fair amount of movement in the NCAA’s de facto free agency system.
Of course, there are still over three months before the opening kickoff of the 2025 campaign, but that has never slowed down the sports media when it comes to their preseason predictions. Among those who have updated their initial numbers is The Athletic’s Stewart Mandel, who recently ranked the top 25 college football teams after the spring transfer portal window.
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Thanks to a strong finish to the 2024 season, led by quarterback DJ Lagway and steered by coach Billy Napier, the Florida Gators find themselves among the preseason top 25 for the first time in a few years. However, there was not much activity in Gainesville during the portal window, which led to a drop in the Orange and Blue’s ranking, falling from No. 11 to No. 12.
Here is what Mandel had to offer on the topic.
12. Florida (Previous: No. 11)
Familiar faces: QB DJ Lagway, RB Jadan Baugh, C Jake Slaughter, DE Tyreak Sapp, DT Caleb Banks
Notable spring additions: None
“Billy Napier only took five transfers between the winter and spring windows and expects major contributions from his freshman class,” Mandel begins.
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“Early enrollee WR Dallas Wilson set a Florida spring game record with 10 catches for 195 yards. While the talented Lagway is the biggest reason for so much optimism around the Gators, they’ll also be strong in the trenches. Slaughter, OT Austin Barber, Sapp and Banks are all garnering early first-round NFL draft buzz.
The Athletic’s college football top 25 after spring
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Texas (Too-early 2025 ranking: 2)
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Penn State (Previous: No. 1)
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Clemson (Previous: No. 5)
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Ohio State (Previous: No. 6)
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Notre Dame (Previous: No. 3)
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LSU (Previous: No. 4)
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Georgia (Previous: No. 7)
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Oregon (Previous: No. 8)
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Miami (Previous: No. 15)
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Alabama (Previous: No. 14)
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Florida (Previous: No. 11)
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BYU (Previous: No. 10)
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Oklahoma (Previous: No. 25)
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Texas A&M (Previous: No. 17)
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Illinois (Previous: 12)
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South Carolina (Previous: No. 16)
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Indiana (Previous: 20)
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Texas Tech (Previous: NR)
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Michigan (Previous: 18)
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Baylor (Previous: 19)
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Louisville (Previous: No. 22)
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Auburn (Previous: NR)
Follow us @GatorsWire on X, formerly known as Twitter, as well as Bluesky, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Florida Gators news, notes and opinions.
This article originally appeared on Gators Wire: Florida Football: The Athletic’s top 25 ranking has ranked Gators here
NIL
Vanderbilt baseball
Matthew Polk of Vanderbilt baseball is entering the transfer portal, he said in an Instagram post May 24. Polk played for the Commodores from 2022-24, serving as a starter in the outfield in 2023 and 2024. However, he wasn’t with the team for the 2025 season, though he remained at Vanderbilt to finish his degree. […]

Matthew Polk of Vanderbilt baseball is entering the transfer portal, he said in an Instagram post May 24.
Polk played for the Commodores from 2022-24, serving as a starter in the outfield in 2023 and 2024. However, he wasn’t with the team for the 2025 season, though he remained at Vanderbilt to finish his degree. He dealt with a knee injury that caused him to miss most of the fall workouts.
In three seasons, Polk hit .295 with 25 doubles, 10 home runs and 13 stolen bases.
Polk will be a graduate transfer.
He is the first player to announce his intention to transfer from Vanderbilt this offseason, as the portal window does not open until June 2 for undergraduates. The Commodores have added commitments from two graduate transfers who will join the program for the 2026 season: infielder Max Jensen of Cornell and pitcher Jacob Faulkner of Princeton.
Aria Gerson covers Vanderbilt athletics for The Tennessean. Contact her at agerson@gannett.com or on X, formerly Twitter, @aria_gerson.
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