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Boston Red Sox should just call up the prospects and let them play

John Rooke  |  Special to The Providence Journal Marcelo Mayer video heading to Boston The Boston Red Sox called up prospect Marcelo Mayer on May 24, 2025. Ryan DeSantis The Red Sox are struggling with a .500 record despite Garrett Crochet’s strong pitching performance. The team’s underperformance is attributed to a combination of injuries, lack […]

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  • The Red Sox are struggling with a .500 record despite Garrett Crochet’s strong pitching performance.
  • The team’s underperformance is attributed to a combination of injuries, lack of production from veterans, and questionable managerial decisions by Alex Cora.
  • The article also touches upon other sports news, including NIL deals, college basketball scheduling, and the NBA playoffs.

Thinking out loud…while wondering if baseball managers and diapers should both be changed regularly for the same reason…

X post of the Week, from @Jared_Carrabis: “The fact that the Red Sox are .500 (6-6) in Garrett Crochet starts when he’s rocking a 2.04 ERA takes the whole .500 Sox thing to a new level.”

Oh, and here’s another gem… Crochet has allowed six hits in the 12 lead-off at bats he’s faced in his Red Sox starts. Two of those were first-pitch-of-the-game home runs. So, it’s not just a lack of support. It’s a lack of baseball common sense.

What are we doing here? Short of letting Alex Cora go… which is unlikely thanks to his offseason contract extension…it’s time to perform a full makeover on the Boston Red Sox and figure out how to fix this mess of a season.

Cue the annual cry of “they’re ruinin’ my summah!’ And summah hasn’t even started yet.

Marcelo Mayer is predictably struggling early in the wake of Alex Bregman’s unfortunate boo-boo. Kristian Campbell’s talents are fading faster than your new pair of jeans. But the younger guys get the benefit of any doubt…because they’re young and not jaded by selfishness or mysterious injuries. At least not yet. Let’s call up the kids and let them play.

We’re past the stage of waiting on veterans to produce. By this time, they either can’t or won’t. Tristan Casas, Trevor Story, Connor Wong, David Hamilton, Rafael Devers’ aversion to picking up a glove, the entire pitching staff… sure, injuries are a factor in the lack of production, but even when healthy none of these guys carried his own load, much less that of others missing in the lineup.

And none other than Hall of Famer Jim Rice, who sits in NESN’s TV studio watching over Red Sox nation like a man who knows – he likely does – and has suggested the team stop being something they aren’t. They’ve lost their power. Play small(er) ball. Maybe a guy with his credentials should have a bit more attention paid to his observations.

Back to Devers for a moment. Please. He’s driven in some runs. But he’s coasting, because the manager ‘has his back.’ He won’t play where he’s needed, for the good of the team. And you will support that thought every time you go to Fenway.

Not for nuthin,’ but Cora is coasting, too. He’s got a head-scratcher of a decision going for him nearly every game. Pulling pitchers early. Leaving them in too long. Refusing to consider positional moves that could benefit the team. There are a hundred games left to play, but there might as well be a million.

He’s checked out. He’s trying to squeeze a square peg into the round hole in front of him.

Why is this team waiting on calling up Roman Anthony? There’s nowhere to put a guy with a near-four-digit OPS into your lineup? The best possible lineup has yet to be put in play this season by Cora and/or Craig Breslow, for one reason or another.

Here’s the SOS. Save Our Season. Call up all the kids. Let ‘em learn on the job. Let’s get a glimpse of what might still be someday, to see if they can play the game… and figure out if there is any shred of recognizable baseball intelligence still within the front office that doesn’t rely on a slide rule.

If you’re not firing the manager, and you can’t fire all the players (even if they’re deserving), that’s what’s left of our summah.

Remember this as you’re singing “Sweet Caroline” after the All-Star break at Fenway, having just paid $100 to park, $200+ for tickets and these darned Sox are already out of postseason contention.

∎And keep laughing, Yankee fan. You haven’t won anything yet. But you do have a lead over Boston. Looks like you’ll keep it, too.

∎My buddy “Big E” sez the amount of self-control it takes to NOT say what’s on his mind is so immense…he needs a nap afterward.

∎ICYMI: Big 12 schools received a record $500 million in revenue for the 2023-24 school year. But ACC schools also received all-time shares from their media contracts, placing third behind the Big Ten and SEC. As US District Judge Claudia Wilken continues to consider the NCAA House settlement, attorneys representing the NCAA have revised plans for walking back the number of roster spots per sport that could be lost in the deal. Any new plan would be optional for schools to follow. As an athlete’s eligibility expires, in some sports, those roster spots would be rolled back.

So far, the Big Ten, SEC, Big 12 and ACC have all agreed to support this “grandfathered” approach to roster limits.How big is NIL these days? The latest example is 6-9 Yaxel Lendeborg – a potential first-round NBA Draft pick – deciding to return to college to play at Michigan. He played at Alabama-Birmingham a year ago. And even the last pick of the first round is projected to sign for $14.1 million.

∎Likely not in the same financial category, but you never know… Fall River’s Joson Sanon announced he’s withdrawing from the NBA Draft and will head to St. John’s for next season.

∎Scheduling tidbits: A great idea – UConn’s men and women will face Boston College’s men and women in an Oct. 13 exhibition double-header at Mohegan Sun; the Friars will open Nov. 3 against Holy Cross, and play a second game at Mohegan Sun, against Virginia Tech… with a Hall of Fame Game already scheduled for the casino against Penn State. Kentucky will host Georgetown in an exhibition game on Oct. 30.

∎Villanova and new coach Kevin Willard will open the college season Nov. 3 against super-freshman A.J. Dybantsa and BYU… while UConn will reportedly face BYU in November at TD Garden in Boston. Creighton and St. John’s are likely headed for Vegas and the Players’ Era NIL tourney.

∎Providence head coach Kim English held a Zoom Q&A chat with PC season ticket holders and media this week – of note, Corey Floyd was considering a transfer. English told him, “no you’re not.” Sez a lot, doesn’t it? And the Friars won’t be home to open the next three years with ComiCon being held at the AMP and Convention Center.

∎Speaking of Friar hoop, Shaun Brown is the new strength and conditioning/High Performance coach for the men’s basketball team, replacing Chase Campbell who resigned last month. Brown was head strength coach at PC from 1989-92 while Rick Barnes was head coach and was also later the strength coach for the Celtics, and most recently at West Virginia.

∎First-year Bryant coach Jamion Christian has three new portal additions that will likely be leaned on, heavily, as the Bulldogs attempt to defend their America East title. Fifth year forward James Cooper, who stands 6-8, transfers from Oregon, 6-8 small forward Quincy Allen comes from Chicago State and 6-2 point guard Jayhlon Young moves to Smithfield from College Park, MD.

∎Not sure why Al Horford wants to keep playing at this stage of his life. We’ve heard what he’s said but now is as good a time to retire as any, unless he simply needs the money. Is that even possible? I will say this – for a team that will face certain challenges next season, Horford can often be a steadying presence. But is that good enough?

∎Show of hands here – who is surprised at the Knicks getting Knocked around by the Pacers in the NBA Eastern Conference finals?

∎Speaking of knocks… the Buffalo Bills get the feature slot on HBO’s “Hard Knocks” once NFL training camp rolls around. And the in-season version of the show will focus on the NFC East division, as 2025 will be the first season of a new, multi-year deal between NFL Films and HBO.

∎What’s the big deal over Patriots’ WR Stefon Diggs’ party video on a boat with some pink powder? He missed a voluntary Organized Team Activity? You knew what you were signing up for when you brought him in, didn’t you? Didn’t you?

∎Has Jordon Hudson had her 15 minutes of fame, yet? Apparently not – a quick search for North Carolina football brings up the latest in rumor and innuendo surrounding coach Bill Belichick’s girlfriend. I’ll say this – I have interest in Tar Heel football this fall for the first time. Like ever.

∎We should be so proud. Bookies.com just released a survey of the NFL’s most foul-mouthed fans… based on the profanity they’ve used on social media. It’s the only thing the J-E-T-S have been good at in more than 50 years, but Patriot fans rank fourth out of 32 teams, behind the NYJ, Eagles and Bills.

∎URI baseball is downright offensive. But that’s a good thing. The Rams’ offense was primarily responsible for Rhody winning the Atlantic-10 regular season and tournament championships, placing them in Baton Rouge, Louisiana this weekend for the NCAA regionals.

The Rams’ 3-seed in the four-team regional is their highest seed achieved in their third NCAA appearance. The offense averages better than nine runs per game and ranks in the national Top 15 in multiple categories – walks, hits, on-base percentage, runs scored, runs per game and triples.

It has been a solid spring for baseball in Rhode Island. Bryant won the America East regular-season title but lost in extra innings to Binghamton in the conference tournament championship game and missed out on the NCAAs. At the Division III level, Salve Regina and Johnson & Wales both reached the NCAA Tournament, with the Seahawks coming one win away from qualifying for a second straight World Series.

Sorry, Boston. I know Northeastern also made the NCAAs, but at least we can play baseball at a consistently high level around here. Just sayin’.

Interested in having your questions on Rhode Island sports (and yes, that includes the Patriots, Red Sox, Bruins, and Celtics) answered in a somewhat timely fashion? Think out loud and send your questions, comments, and local stories to jrbroadcaster@gmail.com. We’ll share mailbag comments right here! Join me on Twitter/X, @JRbroadcaster…and on Instagram and Threads @JRbroadcaster.



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DBR Bites #109 – Scheyer Speaks. You Should Listen.

Jon Scheyer has been talking to the media this week, at least the podcast media. He has provided some truly revealing comments about what he looks for when putting a team together and the way he constructs his ideal roster. The Duke Basketball Roundup dives into what he had to say and what it all […]

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Jon Scheyer has been talking to the media this week, at least the podcast media. He has provided some truly revealing comments about what he looks for when putting a team together and the way he constructs his ideal roster. The Duke Basketball Roundup dives into what he had to say and what it all means.

After the break, The DBR Podcast needs your help. We are conducting a survey. We want to know who your favorite Dukie is, which team you want Duke to play, which Duke team is your one true love, and how you feel about the current shape of college basketball including the transfer portal, NIL, and one-and-done. Let us know what you think. We want to see what the collective Duke community thinks about our team and our sport. We will reveal the results on a later show once all of you have had plenty of time to fill out the survey.

Make sure you’re following us! Head to our Linktree to get all our available social media and links to follow and subscribe to the show. That includes our affiliate partnerships, from Homefield Apparel (use the code DBRPODCAST to save 15% off your first order) and Fanatics to the NBA Store, NFL Shop, and even Fubo TV. And…we have some more coming! Save some cash on the latest gear or follow the Blue Devils on the go by hitting those affiliate links and it helps support the show as well. We are now on YouTube! Subscribe there, rate, and review our episodes on there and everywhere you get your podcasts. Also, follow us on Bluesky ⁠@DukeRoundup⁠!

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Kasey Kuyrkendall receives SLC’s F.L. McDonald Postgraduate Scholarship

Story Links FRISCO – For the second straight year, an East Texas A&M University student-athlete has earned the prestigious F.L. McDonald Scholarship from the Southland Conference as Lion softball player Kasey Kuyrkendall was announced as one of the winners by the conference office on Friday morning for the 2024-25 academic year.   […]

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FRISCO – For the second straight year, an East Texas A&M University student-athlete has earned the prestigious F.L. McDonald Scholarship from the Southland Conference as Lion softball player Kasey Kuyrkendall was announced as one of the winners by the conference office on Friday morning for the 2024-25 academic year.
 
Only two student-athletes across all sports and schools in the Southland receive the F.L. McDonald award, which is presented annually to one female and one male graduating student-athlete upon selection by the Southland Conference Faculty Athletic Representative Committee. The $5,000 scholarship must be applied to graduate study at an institution of the recipient’s choice.
 

Kuyrkendall (Royse City) follows Lion track & field student-athlete Colten van Voorhis, who earned the award last year, as F.L. McDonald award winners for East Texas A&M since joining the Southland.
 

A three-year member of the Lion softball team, Kuyrkendall was also a representative on the Student-Athlete Advisory Committee, the East Texas A&M Honor’s College, and the Chi Omega Sorority, throughout her Lion career, serving leadership officer roles of recruitment assistant and treasurer for Chi Omega.
 
Being chosen as the team captain for two years, Kuyrkendall appeared in 95 games over three seasons and served an internship with the athletic department during the spring semester of her senior year as well.
 

This past spring, she received her bachelors of science in sport & recreation management, graduating with a perfect 4.0 cumulative grade point average and earning Summa Cum Laude with honors distinction. Kuyrkendall was named to the President’s List in all six semesters she attended at East Texas A&M and the SLC Commissioner’s Honor Roll three times.
 
Kuyrkendall is set to begin her Master of Science in sport management at Baylor this fall, while also serving as a graduate assistant for the Baylor Athletics Ticket Office.
 
The F.L. McDonald award was established in 1996 in memory of Dr. F.L. McDonald, a former president of Lamar University and 1999 Southland Hall of Honor inductee. McDonald was serving as Lamar’s president in 1963 when the Southland Conference was established. He is considered one of the league’s founding fathers.

New Orleans’ baseball player Alexander Saunier is the male F.L. McDonald Postgraduate Scholarship award winner from the Southland this year.

 

Kuyrkendall and Saunier were chosen from a pool of fellow classmates and graduated student-athletes. Applicants must have at least a 3.75 GPA and have lettered at least two seasons at the nominating institution. Each recipient must enroll in a full-time graduate program within one year of receiving the award.

 

-ETAMU-



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Pac-12 media deal timing and quality comps to the ACC, Big 12

The Hotline mailbag publishes weekly. Send questions to wilnerhotline@bayareanewsgroup.com and include ‘mailbag’ in the subject line. Or hit me on the social media platform X: @WilnerHotline Some questions have been edited for clarity and brevity. In 2026, will the new Pac-12 be as competitive, or greater than, the likes of the ACC and Big-12? — […]

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The Hotline mailbag publishes weekly. Send questions to wilnerhotline@bayareanewsgroup.com and include ‘mailbag’ in the subject line. Or hit me on the social media platform X: @WilnerHotline

Some questions have been edited for clarity and brevity.


In 2026, will the new Pac-12 be as competitive, or greater than, the likes of the ACC and Big-12? — @eric_zetz

The Hotline has given this matter much thought recently while publishing a series of columns on the College Football Playoff controversy.

The conference hierarchy in 2026 and beyond is interconnected to any analysis of CFP access models, whether it’s the automatic qualifier format (4-4-2-2-1) favored by the Big Ten or the at-large format (5+11) preferred by the Big 12, ACC, SEC and Pac-12, as commissioner Teresa Gould said this week.

(In our view, the Big 12 and ACC have no choice but to push for 5+11, because the alternative is the end of those conferences as we know them.)

The Hotline does not believe — not for a second — that the rebuilt Pac-12 will be as competitively successful as the ACC and Big 12 in the next era. Although to be fair, those conferences are not entirely comparable, either.

If quality depth is the standard, the Big 12 is superior to the ACC. No conference in major college football can match the Big 12 for parity, which is both a blessing and curse.

But if judging by the number of championship-caliber programs, the ACC possesses a clear edge over the Big 12. It has two programs capable of winning the national title, Clemson and Florida State. Until proven otherwise, the Big 12 has none. (The last current Big 12 school to win it all was Colorado in 1990.)

Using either standard, the ACC and Big 12 are a level above the rebuilt Pac-12.

But here’s a question worth pondering: Is the rebuilt Pac-12 closer in quality to the ACC and Big 12 than the ACC and Big 12 are to the SEC and Big Ten? Which gap is larger?

That discussion also depends on the framing — on how you define the strength of a conference. We believe the flaws in the Big 12 (lack of elite programs) and the ACC (lack of quality depth) are significant enough, relative to the SEC and Big Ten, to make the topic worthy of tracking in the upcoming season.

For the rebuilt Pac-12 to be closer in quality to the ACC and Big 12 than they are to the SEC and Big Ten in a given season, two benchmarks are required:

— Boise State must be Boise State.

Conferences are often judged by the success of their top brands. If Ohio State and Michigan are both mediocre, the Big Ten will be viewed as having a subpar season. (Same with Georgia and Alabama in the SEC.)

Boise State is the rebuilt Pac-12’s premier football brand by a clear margin. The Broncos must have a Top 15/20-caliber season in order for the Pac-12’s reputation to rise.

— At least two of the following four teams also must be ranked: Washington State, Oregon State, Fresno State and San Diego State.

If the legacy Pac-12 programs flounder with the arrival of the Mountain West contingent, the national narrative won’t be, “The newcomers must be really good to outperform the Beavers and Cougars.” Instead, the narrative will be, “See, the rebuilt Pac-12 is no better than the old Mountain West.” One of them must win nine or 10 games on a consistent basis.

The Aztecs and Bulldogs will have a greater role in shaping the Pac-12’s reputation than the likes of Utah State and Colorado State because of their locations and their recent history of success — of regularly beating the legacy Pac-12 schools, cracking the Top 25 rankings and producing 10-win seasons.

Put another way: There’s a path for the rebuilt Pac-12 to be seen as closer in quality to the ACC and Big 12 than those conferences are to the SEC and Big Ten, but it hinges on the performance in non-conference games (obviously!) and which teams are leading the way.

If Boise State finishes as an 11-win Pac-12 champion, with Washington State and SDSU, for instance, both sitting on nine victories, the conference will look much stronger than it would if, for instance, Colorado State or Utah State finished on top.

That’s the nature of narratives. Brand success matters at every level of the sport.


From your standpoint, what would be the incentive for a school like UNLV to arrange (in mediation) a move to the Pac-12? Is it financial stability? Conference strength? — @BobhornOrAgcat

UNLV is contractually locked into the Mountain West, so the question is moot … unless, perhaps, the conference cannot meet its financial obligations.

The poaching penalty and exit fee lawsuits have, in total, roughly $150 million at stake. If only half that amount enters the Mountain West’s bank account, the distributions promised to the Rebels and others could be impacted.

Would that be enough to spur UNLV to leave? Would it change their legal commitment?

We don’t have clarity on those matters. (Few do.) And because neither the Pac-12 or Mountain West has signed a media rights agreement, there’s a leap-of-faith element for the Rebels with either course of action.

The Hotline’s view hasn’t changed: UNLV’s administration made an epically bad decision to remain in the Mountain West through the 2020s.

Our assumption is the Pac-12 would welcome the Rebels if they had a change of heart, but only for the right price. They are not a must-have school. There are no must-have schools remaining for the Pac-12. It secured the three it had to have (Boise State, San Diego State and Gonzaga) last fall.


Will Texas State receive a full share after this Pac-12/Mountain West mediation mess? I feel the Pac-12 has lost leverage on that front, unless North Texas or UTSA become a serious alternative. — @vince_per

We can’t answer that question without knowing, at the very least, the outcome of the mediation. How much of the $55 million owed to the Mountain West in poaching fees will the Pac-12 retain or relinquish?

And would the schools agree to use whatever pot of cash exists to lure Texas State, which would offer vital access to football-crazed Texas.

In our view, leverage remains with the Pac-12: The Bobcats would be foolish to pass on the chance to join a conference with Boise State football and Gonzaga basketball, especially when the annual media rights payments likely will triple or quadruple what they receive in the Sun Belt.

But it’s not entirely clear to the Hotline that anyone in the Pac-12 will receive a full share, at least in the traditional sense. The conference is considering a revenue distribution model that rewards and incentivizes success, much like the ACC has implemented.

Exactly how it will be structured, we cannot say.

The conference could use postseason revenue (NCAA Tournament and CFP) to fund an unequal distribution of cash. Or it could include a portion of the media rights revenue in the pot, as well.


What do you think about NIL and its impact on college football and basketball. And just a tad on the rest of the sports, too? I believe it will be the end of college sports as we’ve known it for so long. — Bo L

The impact of NIL, especially when combined with the transfer portal, has been momentous across many sports. Texas Tech’s success in softball, fueled by the arrival of million-dollar-pitcher NiJaree Canady from Stanford, is all the proof you need.

To the extent that amateurism mattered to your enjoyment of the competition, maybe this era marks “the end of college sports as we’ve known it.”

But the Hotline doesn’t know many college football and basketball fans who are no longer watching or attending  because players are getting paid.

As the late, great Chris Dufresne, of the LA Times, used to say: “Everyone has an alma mater.”

And that’s true whether your quarterback is getting $2 million in NIL or nothing in NIL.


Media deal timeline for the Pac-12? @TonyOnly_

One month after the lawsuits are resolved.

I hope that’s specific enough for you, because it’s as specific as the Hotline can possibly be.

Think about the situation from the standpoint of ESPN, The CW or Fox executives:

Why commit tens of millions of dollars over time to a conference that has two major lawsuits unresolved — lawsuits that could impact the membership structure, competitive success and overall outlook.

What if the Pac-12 and Mountain West end up with a court trial?

What if the Mountain West takes the Pac-12 to the cleaners?

We view those outcomes as extremely unlikely. But why would network executives take the chance? It would be tantamount to financial malpractice.

They want legal clarity and financial certainty.

The court-ordered stay of the poaching penalty lawsuit expires July 15, so we expect resolution to the mediation by that point. From there, the media rights piece should wrap up fairly quickly.


If the Pac-12 had played an eight-game conference schedule from 2014-23, would it have avoided the endless cannibalism and gotten a team in the playoffs consistently enough to still be around today in its original form? — Will D

Admittedly, the Hotline has not plowed through 10 seasons of data to offer a definitive answer. But our hunch is that yes, swapping a conference game for a non-conference cupcake might have resulted in the extra win for a given team in a given season and propelled the Pac-12 champion into the CFP more often than was actually the case.

Pac-12 teams participated in the four-team event in 2014 (Oregon), 2016 (Washington) and 2023 (Washington) and just missed on several other occasions.

If Stanford had played Sacramento State instead of Oregon in 2015 … if Oregon had played Idaho instead of Arizona State in 2019 … the Pac-12 might have been better represented in the CFP.

(Also, idiotic scheduling strategies, like asking teams to play Friday night road games after Saturday road games, contributed to a multi-year competitive malaise.)

Would more CFP teams have saved the conference? We aren’t so sure.

USC and UCLA likely would have left for the Big Ten anyway. And it’s unrealistic to think ESPN’s media rights offer would have been substantially higher in the fall of 2022 based on one or two additional playoff bids in the pre-COVID era.





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Where Syracuse Basketball Stands With NIL

Share Tweet Share Share Email Syracuse basketball’s roster is taking shape after the transfer portal allowed players to leave the program and new ones to jump on SU’s lineup, most of which was based on NIL, or name, image, likeness. NIL is something that the Orange struggled with last year in regards to helping athletes […]

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Syracuse basketball’s roster is taking shape after the transfer portal allowed players to leave the program and new ones to jump on SU’s lineup, most of which was based on NIL, or name, image, likeness.

NIL is something that the Orange struggled with last year in regards to helping athletes secure more money based on many factors. Hence, the lack of star-power on SU’s lineup a season ago with the exception of JJ Starling and Eddie Lampkin.

Syracuse head coach Adrian Autry admitted that his squad wasn’t as prepared last year for the NIL competition and it resulted in SU not being able to afford some players.

“I think this year with the anticipation of the revenue sharing, I thought that helped,’’ Autry said. “I think it helped everybody, but it definitely helped us.’’

With the plan, Syracuse hauled in Nait George and Nate Kingz as its two biggest transfers. George led Georgia Tech in assists last season. Kingz comes in from Oregon State.

William Kyle, Ibrahim Souare, and Tyler Betsey enter Syracuse from UCLA, Cincinnati, and Georgia Tech, respectively.

All of these transactions can be credited to SU being more prepared for the NIL situation this offseason. 

“We got who we got,’’ Autry said. “Did we beat some people? Yes. I felt like we could compete. I didn’t feel like we lost anyone because we couldn’t afford them.’’

With Syracuse taking care of things off the court and through its freshman signings, including Kiyan Anthony, the Orange should be ready to take the next level on the court next season. This season will be filled with plenty of optimism based on Anthony and company looking to take the jump and bring SU back to its past with a step in the right direction in the ACC.











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NiJaree Canady Signs New NIL Deal With Texas Tech, Topping Seven Figures Again

NiJaree Canady is getting PAID, again. PublishedJune 6, 2025 2:46 PM EDT•UpdatedJune 6, 2025 2:46 PM EDT Facebook Twitter Email Copy Link After making a ton of noise at Stanford, softball pitcher NiJaree Canady could not turn down a lucrative seven-figure contract to play for Texas Tech this season. Well, before the House settlement decision […]

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NiJaree Canady is getting PAID, again.

After making a ton of noise at Stanford, softball pitcher NiJaree Canady could not turn down a lucrative seven-figure contract to play for Texas Tech this season. Well, before the House settlement decision could be reached, the Red Raiders star has already signed a new deal for the 2025-2026 season. 

The most dominant pitcher in college softball this season, Canady has her team just one win away from a national championship, which will be played on Friday night against the Texas Longhorns. 

But before she could take the mound in Oklahoma City for Friday’s national title game, the ink has already dried on another massive contract for NiJaree Canady, thanks to ‘The Matador Club, which is the Texas Tech NIL collective. 

ESPN was the first to report her new contract. 

It’s being reported that Canady is set to earn $1.2 million for next season, as the Red Raiders took care of the new deal before the House settlement could be approved. Given that these NIL deals will be scrutinized once the new enforcement arm is created, and every NIL deal over $600 has to be submitted to a clearinghouse, it’s smart on the part of Texas Tech to get this contract finalized. 

Could the Red Raiders decide to pay her a good chunk of the contract before July 1st? It’s possible, because that date is when schools will start paying players directly, and her salary could also count towards the upcoming revenue-sharing cap. 

After losing the opening game of the championship series on Wednesday night, Texas Tech forced game three after beating the Longhorns on Thursday evening 4-3. 

If you were wondering if she would get the ball tonight, having only given up ten hits over the past two games, with thirteen strikeouts, the answer is a resounding yes. 

How about this stat. Since 2023, NiJaree Canady has thrown 927 consecutive pitches in the college world series, dating back to her time at Stanford. I’d say that’s impressive, and well-worth the money she’s earning. 

On Friday night, she will get the ball, with a championship on the line. 

Getting to Texas Tech was a process for NiJaree Canady, having been named the USA softball player of the year in 2024 at Stanford. This season, she has pitched 239 innings, and has become the most dominant pitcher on the mound in college softball. 

It was the decision by the Red Raiders NIl collective to go all-in for this season that has made the biggest difference, given that Texas Tech had only been to the NCAA Tournament six times in program history. 

After making just over $1 million this season, NiJaree Canady has certainly earned the new contract that will reportedly pay her $1.2 million next year. 

It’s starting to pay off to be really good at softball, which is a welcomed sign for all the players involved. 





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Kentucky Basketball reportedly derailed SEC’s plans to cap NIL spending per sport

Revenue sharing is coming to college sports on July 1, as long as the House Settlement is approved by a federal judge this month. That means that for the 2025-26 season, schools can divvy up a maximum of $20.5 million across all their sports. According to the biggest sports business insider, the SEC planned to […]

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Revenue sharing is coming to college sports on July 1, as long as the House Settlement is approved by a federal judge this month. That means that for the 2025-26 season, schools can divvy up a maximum of $20.5 million across all their sports. According to the biggest sports business insider, the SEC planned to put spending caps on each sport, specifically limiting men’s basketball to around $3 million, but Kentucky led the charge against it.

Ross Dellenger of Yahoo Sports was a guest on The Matt Jones Show this week and told Matt that the SEC wanted to set standards for each sport to create an even playing field once the new rev-share rules take effect. For football, the biggest revenue generator for all schools, even Kentucky, that figure was at least $13.5 million. Dellenger recalled the number for men’s basketball being around $2.8 million; that didn’t sit well with the conference’s biggest basketball blueblood, which was rumored to have spent upwards of $15 million on its roster this offseason.

“You’re not going to be surprised by this, but Kentucky did not — and some others too — but Kentucky Basketball specifically was a pretty big voice in the room to make sure that those standards weren’t set as a policy because Kentucky, obviously, wants to spend more [in basketball].”

Dellenger used South Carolina women’s basketball and Arkansas and LSU baseball as examples of other programs that didn’t want caps. There was so much dissent that the plans were shelved — for now.

“It wasn’t just Kentucky that wanted to spend more in basketball, so it raised concerns about the standards that the SEC was talking about setting…There were plenty of programs that wanted to spend more than the sort of maximum standards that the SEC was talking about doing.

“And so they kind of bailed on it for now. And I’ve quoted [SEC Commissioner] Greg Sankey in a story or two about that, about how they could come back to that, and that’s still a discussion topic, so that everybody would be on more of an even playing field.”

We don’t know how Kentucky will distribute its $20.5 million, but some schools have shared their plans. Georgia is planning to give 75% of its allotment ($15.375 million) to football, 15% ($3.075 million) to men’s basketball, 5% ($1.025 million) to women’s basketball, and the remaining 5% ($1.025 million) split across the remaining sports. Texas Tech will give 74% to football, 17% to 18% to men’s basketball, 2% to women’s basketball, 1.8% to baseball, and the rest to other sports.

At the SEC spring meetings last month, Mitch Barnhart told the Courier-Journal that Kentucky’s totals could change per year based on what each sports team needs; however, inevitably, only three or four teams will get the biggest pieces of the pie, leading to some tough decisions within the athletic department.

“You’re not gonna be able to do that beyond like three or four sports — maybe beyond two sports,” Dellenger said. “You’re not gonna be able to do it; it’s gonna be hard.”

Of course, not everyone is going to be happy with their new budgets. In Kentucky’s case, men’s basketball will get more than it would at other schools, which could eat into football’s share. Dellenger said he expects some coaches to air their grievances publicly.

“I think some of those could be fights that are taken publicly at press conferences. You can imagine in a football game, and I’m just throwing out random SEC teams, if Kentucky loses to Auburn in a football game, you can see maybe Kentucky’s coach just casually mentioning in the post-game news conference that Auburn pays its football roster $4 million more than we do.”

“That’s why the SEC had spent so much time on having the maximum sort of standard of rev-share per sport, but again, it was kind of derailed. And so now, it’s kind of anything you want.”

The next few years of college sports will be anything but boring. You can hear Matt and Dellenger’s complete conversation below.



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