NIL
Bracketology: ESPN releases way-too-early projections for 2025-2026 NCAA Tournament
The 2025 NCAA Tournament ended just three weeks ago while the tip-off to next season is still about six months out. Still, in looking ahead to the next year in college basketball, ESPN’s Joe Lunardi has released an update to Bracketology with a projected field for the 2026 NCAA Tournament. Lunardi shared that they’ll release […]

The 2025 NCAA Tournament ended just three weeks ago while the tip-off to next season is still about six months out. Still, in looking ahead to the next year in college basketball, ESPN’s Joe Lunardi has released an update to Bracketology with a projected field for the 2026 NCAA Tournament.
Lunardi shared that they’ll release an updated bracket, based on roster movement and anticipated offensive and defensive efficiency, once a month from now through October. This is the first edition of those for what the Field of 68 could look like in ’26.
Coming off a record-breaking year, in berths and finishes, by the conference this postseason, the SEC is atop the list again with 13 teams in the bracket, which would be one shy of last year’s new record. The Big Ten, who often projected to have double-digits in this last postseason before ending with eight in, is then still second with a dozen. The Big 12, ACC, and Big East are from there with eight, five, and four in respectively from those leagues.
Again, this is way, way early considering the portal and draft decisions still needing to be made going into the summer before the season begins in November. Still, here’s Lunardi’s first look at what March Madness could look like in 2026 with ten and a half months until Selection Sunday:
ESPN Bracketology: On the Bubble

Last Four Byes: Georgia, Maryland, Creighton, Miami
Last Four In: Marquette, Indiana, Ole Miss, NC State
First Four Out: SMU, Washington, Texas A&M, Nebraska
Next Four Out: TCU, Notre Dame, Clemson, Georgetown
The bubble is full of several teams who made the field or just missed out on the tournament last year. It’s also key for several of the leagues with the SEC close to adding a record-tying one with a 14th, the Big Ten nearing 14 in total as well, and the ACC having a chance at as many as eight
New coaches is also a theme among multiple of these programs. Buzz Williams at Maryland, Jai Lucas at Miami, Darian DeVries at Indiana, and Will Wade at NC State have their new teams just in the field in this projection while Bucky McMillan at Texas A&M is right there among the First Four Out.
Midwest Region – Chicago

Purdue is projected as one of the top teams for next season with the roster they’ll have for next season with Braden Smith, Trey Kaufman-Renn, and Fletcher Loyer leading their returners while they’re also bringing in Oscar Cluff (South Dakota State) from the portal and Omer Mayer from overseas. Lunardi also cited their consistency, both in seeding and in postseason finishes, as the reasoning why the Boilermakers were the No. 1 overall seed in the tournament for him.
The Midwest Region also includes five others teams that should rate highly coming into next season in Kentucky, Iowa State, Auburn, and Louisville. Oregon at No. 8 for the Big Ten vs. Oklahoma at No. 9 for the SEC as well as Creighton at No. 10 for the Big East rounds out the seeding before the mid-majors.
1. Purdue vs. 16. South Carolina State/Central Connecticut
8. Oregon vs. 9. Oklahoma
5. Louisville vs. 12. Liberty
4. Auburn vs. 13. High Point
6. Missouri vs. 11. San Diego State
3. Iowa State vs. 14. South Dakota State
7. Illinois vs. 10. Creighton
2. Kentucky vs. 15. North Alabama
West Region – San Jose

Houston still has some heartbreak coming off their loss in the national title game earlier this month in this year’s tournament. That said, the Cougars will be right back in contention next season as a No. 1 seed for a fourth-straight season here, with Emanuel Sharp, Joseph Tugler, and possibly Milos Uzan back and them bringing in Pop Isaacs (Creighton) plus the No. 1 recruiting class in the nation, for their dozenth year under Kelvin Sampson.
The West Region then has Michigan, led by a top portal class, at No. 2 and Tennessee, now since adding a trio of transfers and one of the best recruits in the country, at No. 3. Also of note here is UCLA at No. 4, Arkansas at No. 5 under John Calipari, and Kansas with a consecutive seeding as a No. 7 with the Jayhawks having lost much of their corps from the past few seasons.
1. Houston vs. 16. Southeast Missouri State
8. Vanderbilt vs. 9. Iowa
5. Arkansas vs. 12. Yale
4. UCLA vs. 13. Charleston
6. Gonzaga vs. 11. VCU
3. Tennessee vs. 14. McNeese State
7. Kansas vs. 10. Miami
2. Michigan vs. 15. Youngstown State
East Region – Washington D.C.

Duke is then projected to get a second-straight seeding as a No. 1 in the tournament. The Blue Devils are losing several lottery picks and some veteran guards but still have pieces like Isaiah Evans, Caleb Foster, Maliq Brown, and Patick Ngongba to complement the roster, now currently have a top incoming transfer in Cedric Coward (Washington State), and then have a trio of top freshman in their top-three class, the two legacy recruits in Cameron Boozer and Cayden Boozer plus Nikolas Khamenia, with enough to compete again next season.
The East Region also has Connecticut as a No. 2 seed, with the Huskies getting an additional boost this morning with the return of Alex Karaban, while Arizona is a No. 3 seed with some of their roster still intact to pair with their own top-three incoming class. Blue bloods like Michigan State at No. 4 and North Carolina as a No. 7, with an all-new roster with the Tar Heels, are also here with three teams from the Lonestar State as well, who are all dealing with some roster overhaul, with No. 5 Texas Tech, No. 8 Texas now under Sean Miller, and No. 9 Baylor.
1. Duke vs. 16. Vermont/Jackson State
8. Texas vs. 9. Baylor
5. Texas Tech vs. 12. Illinois State
4. Michigan State vs. 13. Miami (OH)
6. Alabama vs. 11. Memphis
3. Arizona vs. 14. Troy
7. North Carolina vs. 10. Maryland
2. Connecticut vs. 15. Siena
South Region – Houston

St. John’s, coming off one of their best seasons in school history, could now be even better in year three under Rick Pitino as the last of the projected No. 1 seeds for the tournament. The Red Storm did lose some notable pieces, due to eligibility or the portal, but do return Zuby Ejifor to go with six of the very best transfers in the country.
The South also has BYU, coming off a great season with two returning starters to pair with AJ Dybantsa, the No. 1 recruit in the country for 2025, and Rob Wright (Baylor) out of the portal, at No. 2 while Florida, the defending national champions, are at No. 3. This region has several of those new coaches or programs getting back into the bracket too like Eric Musselman with the Trojans at No. 4 plus DeVries and the Hoosiers as well as Wade and the Wolfpack.
1. St. John’s vs. 16. Navy
8. Cincinnati vs. 9. Georgia
5. Ohio State vs. 12. Grand Canyon
4. USC vs. 13. UC Santa Barbara
6. Wisconsin vs. 11. Ole Miss/NC State
3. Florida vs. 14. Furman
7. Mississippi State vs. 10. Marquette/Indiana
2. BYU vs. 15. Idaho
NIL
Jon Rothstein Explains How NIL Led To Kansas Basketball’s Recent Struggles
As a program, Kansas’s 2,429 college basketball wins rank first in the country. From the father of basketball himself in Dr. James Naismith, to Phog Allen, to Larry Brown, to Roy Williams, and finally to Bill Self, the city of Lawrence has been the home of some of the greatest minds the college game has […]

As a program, Kansas’s 2,429 college basketball wins rank first in the country.
From the father of basketball himself in Dr. James Naismith, to Phog Allen, to Larry Brown, to Roy Williams, and finally to Bill Self, the city of Lawrence has been the home of some of the greatest minds the college game has ever seen.
And since Self took over in 2003, the Jayhawks haven’t missed a beat – until now.
“Kansas basketball, for years under Bill Self, [was] the gold standard of college basketball,” said CBS Sports’ college basketball expert Jon Rothstein in this …
But, in the last two seasons, things have taken a turn for the worse. While 21-13 (last season) and 23-11 (2023-24 season) are hardly subpar campaigns for most schools, Kansas isn’t most schools, it’s one of the basketball schools. It’s a premier blueblood.
Unfortunately, according to Rothstein, that label doesn’t carry the weight it used to.
“Name, image, and likeness has balanced everything out. And now, all of a sudden, being a blueblood does not have the same cache that it used to when it comes to recruiting the best of the best,” said Rothstein.
“A kid can go to BYU, a kid can go to St. John’s, he can go somewhere else, and get compensated handsomely, rather than going to a blueblood. It’s not as big of a hook as it used to be.”
Self’s situation at Kansas is a prime example of just that, and Rothstein broke it down further:
“Kansas’ roughly last 20 years under Bill Self: Championships in the Big 12. One seeds and two seeds at nauseam in the NCAA Tournament. Tied for fifth (2023-2024), and then sixth last year in the Big 12 standings.”
Nonetheless, the Jayhawks are hardly falling off from their premier status. Not only did Self and his crew land the top-ranked prospect in the Class of 2025 in Darryn Peterson, but they brought back former five-star recruit Flory Bidunga, and put together a solid transfer portal class.
NIL
David Pollack Targets NIL Rookie Deals to Curb College Football NIL Chaos
Name, Image and Likeness deals have been the talk of the college football landscape since they came into the picture in 2021. Now, NIL is once again in the news with the football spring transfer window coming to a close and the recruiting cycle heating up. Georgia legend and College Football Hall of Fame linebacker […]

Name, Image and Likeness deals have been the talk of the college football landscape since they came into the picture in 2021. Now, NIL is once again in the news with the football spring transfer window coming to a close and the recruiting cycle heating up.
Georgia legend and College Football Hall of Fame linebacker David Pollack might just have the solution to fix it.
Georgia Legend David Pollack Calls for NIL Rookie Cap
Pollack shared an idea to help curb NIL concerns on his “See Ball Get Ball” podcast, calling for less money going to incoming freshmen, and suggesting a cap on how much they can make in NIL before even touching the field.
“I have a proposal to start round one. Like, again, I’m seeing all this stuff and you see all these topics, like, how do I really fix NIL? I know the number one thing that needs to be changed,” Pollack said .
“Like, if you want to start with something and change college football, and make it better and make it better for the athlete, the athlete’s future and everything about it? We need a rookie salary cap. A coming into a university salary cap. It cannot exceed X.”
The conversation arose after five-star offensive tackle Jackson Cantwell — the No. 1 overall recruit in 2026, according to On3 — committed to Miami on $2-$2.5 million deal, according to On3’s Pete Nakos. Pollack thinks it should be about more than just the dollar signs.
“NIL — name, image, and likeness. What you did on the field should dictate how much money you get paid. It should not be what you did in high school. Like, it should’t be,” Pollack said. “Not everybody comes from the same background, same stuff. I mean, there’s a lot of factors that go into that.
“Have a rookie cap. Now, you can choose the spot that’s best for you and it’s not just based on money. Here’s the thing. When you make a decision based on money and not looking towards the future, how many of those decisions have you made and you regretted? Like, a lot for me. If I’m making them just on money, I’m blinded, it’s harder. I can’t make a decision based on what’s really best for me.”
But given the precedent set over the past few years with NIL, getting change enacted will be difficult.
“You want to do something that’s really better for the players? Institute that and it immediately will get better,” Pollack said.
Pollack isn’t the only person against the current state of NIL, with Georgia head coach Kirby Smart recently voicing his concerns on how the system works.
KEEP READING: ‘Lightyears Better’ – David Pollack Expects Major Turnaround for Oklahoma in 2025
“I just want to be able to have a freshman come in and not make more than a senior and I’d like for other sports to be able to still survive. You know, we’re on the brink of probably one to two years away from a lot of schools cutting sports,” Smart said.
Fans are split on the concerns, with some believing the inability to exploit the system works against large programs — who they think have been paying players under the table for years.
College Sports Network has you covered with the latest news, analysis, insights, and trending stories in football, men’s basketball, women’s basketball, and baseball!
NIL
David Pollack Targets NIL Rookie Deals to Curb College Football NIL Chaos
Name, Image and Likeness deals have been the talk of the college football landscape since they came into the picture in 2021. Now, NIL is once again in the news with the football spring transfer window coming to a close and the recruiting cycle heating up. Georgia legend and College Football Hall of Fame linebacker […]

Name, Image and Likeness deals have been the talk of the college football landscape since they came into the picture in 2021. Now, NIL is once again in the news with the football spring transfer window coming to a close and the recruiting cycle heating up.
Georgia legend and College Football Hall of Fame linebacker David Pollack might just have the solution to fix it.

Georgia Legend David Pollack Calls for NIL Rookie Cap
Pollack shared an idea to help curb NIL concerns on his “See Ball Get Ball” podcast, calling for less money going to incoming freshmen, and suggesting a cap on how much they can make in NIL before even touching the field.
“I have a proposal to start round one. Like, again, I’m seeing all this stuff and you see all these topics, like, how do I really fix NIL? I know the number one thing that needs to be changed,” Pollack said.
“Like, if you want to start with something and change college football, and make it better and make it better for the athlete, the athlete’s future and everything about it? We need a rookie salary cap. A coming into a university salary cap. It cannot exceed X.”
The conversation arose after five-star offensive tackle Jackson Cantwell — the No. 1 overall recruit in 2026, according to On3 — committed to Miami on $2-$2.5 million deal, according to On3’s Pete Nakos. Pollack thinks it should be about more than just the dollar signs.
“NIL — name, image, and likeness. What you did on the field should dictate how much money you get paid. It should not be what you did in high school. Like, it should’t be,” Pollack said. “Not everybody comes from the same background, same stuff. I mean, there’s a lot of factors that go into that.
“Have a rookie cap. Now, you can choose the spot that’s best for you and it’s not just based on money. Here’s the thing. When you make a decision based on money and not looking towards the future, how many of those decisions have you made and you regretted? Like, a lot for me. If I’m making them just on money, I’m blinded, it’s harder. I can’t make a decision based on what’s really best for me.”
But given the precedent set over the past few years with NIL, getting change enacted will be difficult.
“You want to do something that’s really better for the players? Institute that and it immediately will get better,” Pollack said.
Pollack isn’t the only person against the current state of NIL, with Georgia head coach Kirby Smart recently voicing his concerns on how the system works.
KEEP READING: ‘Lightyears Better’ – David Pollack Expects Major Turnaround for Oklahoma in 2025
“I just want to be able to have a freshman come in and not make more than a senior and I’d like for other sports to be able to still survive. You know, we’re on the brink of probably one to two years away from a lot of schools cutting sports,” Smart said.
Fans are split on the concerns, with some believing the inability to exploit the system works against large programs — who they think have been paying players under the table for years.
College Sports Network has you covered with the latest news, analysis, insights, and trending stories in football, men’s basketball, women’s basketball, and baseball!
NIL
What Alabama football views as one of the 'beauties' of the NCAA transfer portal
Courtney Morgan views the transfer portal as both a “gift and a curse” for Alabama football. In an interview on the “All In: Alabama spring football” documentary on SEC Network, the Alabama football general manager explained the differences between the offseason heading into Year 2 of the Kalen DeBoer era and last season, saying Crimson […]

Courtney Morgan views the transfer portal as both a “gift and a curse” for Alabama football.
In an interview on the “All In: Alabama spring football” documentary on SEC Network, the Alabama football general manager explained the differences between the offseason heading into Year 2 of the Kalen DeBoer era and last season, saying Crimson Tide players now understand “what’s expected of them.”
“You got a new coach, taking over for an old coach, the expectations can get lost a little bit,” Morgan said. “There’s always a little stubbornness. I’d say the number one word is trust. I think there’s more trust in the building between the coaches and the players because we’ve been together for a year.”
That’s when Morgan brought up the transfer portal, saying it’s a tool that brings Alabama a clearer picture of team cohesion heading into 2025.
“I think one of the beauties of the portal — the portal, it’s a gift and a curse — you ultimately know the guys that really want to be here,” Morgan said.
Alabama did not lose a scholarship player to the transfer portal during the 10-day spring portal period.
Alabama gained two players through the spring transfer portal window — tight ends Jack Sammarco (West Virginia) and Brody Dalton (Troy) — along with Kam Dewberry (Texas A&M), Cam Calhoun (Utah), Dre’lyn Washington (Louisiana), Kelby Collins (Florida), Arken Anungwom (Ball State), Nikhai Hill-Green (Colorado), Blake Doud (Colorado School of Mines) and Isaiah Horton (Miami), who said the Crimson Tide “embraced me with open arms.”
“If you go to Bama, you must be something,” Horton said. “You must be one of them ones and one of those guys. Me coming here, it’s an honor. It’s an honor to play on this practice field, it’s an honor to be in this facility, it’s an honor to be around you guys because you guys have been around people that have been a part of that legacy.”
Colin Gay covers Alabama football for The Tuscaloosa News, part of the USA TODAY Network. Reach him atcgay@gannett.com or follow him@_ColinGay on X, formerly known as Twitter.
NIL
‘Noise and trash’: Miami’s Mario Cristobal shrugs off criticism, narratives about his high-priced roster
Mario Cristobal reloaded his Miami football roster with a newcomer class stacked with blue-chip transfers and recruits. Talent acquisition at that elite level comes with a hefty price tag in modern college football, and those hesitant to embrace the NIL era are often quick to criticize the programs that engage in immense offseason spending. Cristobal, […]
Mario Cristobal reloaded his Miami football roster with a newcomer class stacked with blue-chip transfers and recruits. Talent acquisition at that elite level comes with a hefty price tag in modern college football, and those hesitant to embrace the NIL era are often quick to criticize the programs that engage in immense offseason spending. Cristobal, however, brushed off the narratives that surround his highly-touted haul.
Transfer quarterback Carson Beck is the centerpiece of the roster overhaul and commanded a $4 million NIL package despite the uncertainty surrounding the health of his elbow, which he injured while playing for Georgia in the SEC Championship. He represents just one of the numerous expenditures Miami tallied in a hectic transfer portal cycle.
“I could imagine some of the things that are said out there,” Cristobal said to CBS Sports’ Josh Pate. “I don’t know what value that type of noise or people really have. Actually, I guess the value lies in the fact that you can take your son or you can take a prospect and say, ‘You see all that noise and trash? There’s an example of what’s irrelevant in life and in processes of hard work.’ That’s maybe the only value to it.”
Miami is not alone in its spending. The nation’s top programs ran up the tab on the recruiting trail in an effort to stockpile talent before the House v. NCAA settlement officially opens the door to revenue sharing and reshapes budget constraints. Indiana’s Curt Cignetti said that the most expensive rosters in 2025 cost as much as $40 million.
Ohio State last season became the face of the NIL era when athletic director Ross Bjork said the football program spent $20 million to construct its national championship roster. That figure pales in comparison to the largest payrolls ahead of the 2025 season.
“I think you can also take a parent and say, ‘Look, your son is a high-profile guy,'” Cristobal said. “‘This is great practice, because when you’re playing in college and you miss a tackle or you throw a bad pass or when you’re onto the NFL and you enter a certain city, they’re going to throw tomato cans at you at every stop they can. You have to get used to what comes with sports.’ I guess that would be the only value: practice for the future or just point out what’s irrelevant.”
Cristobal’s primary emphasis during the 2025 transfer cycle was to bolster a defense that allowed far too many explosive plays, especially through the air, en route to last year’s 10-3 record that fell short of a College Football Playoff berth. He added seven defensive backs, a pair of linebackers and a defensive lineman through the portal.
Miami also secured plug-and-play weapons to slot next to Beck on the offensive side of the ball, including speedy former BYU wideout Keelan Marion and ex-LSU veteran CJ Daniels.
NIL
Cowboy Baseball’s Smith Picks Up Pair Of Awards
IRVING, Texas – Oklahoma State’s Braylen Smith was tabbed the Big 12 Player of the Week and the Big 12 Newcomer of the Week for his performance against Arizona State on the final week of the regular season. Smith carried OSU to a series sweep of the Sun Devils as he hit .667 with three […]

Smith carried OSU to a series sweep of the Sun Devils as he hit .667 with three doubles, two home runs and six RBIs. He went 8-for-12 at the plate and also led the Cowboys with six runs, 17 total bases, two walks, a 1.417 slugging percentage and four stolen bases (4-for-4 on attempts).
A junior from Omaha, Neb., Smith hit safely in all three games and tied a career high with four hits in the second game. During one stretch over games two and three, he reached base safely in nine consecutive plate appearances, including collecting hits in seven of those at-bats with three singles, two doubles and two homers.
In the series opener, Smith delivered a three-RBI double in the second inning to push OSU’s lead to 5-1 in a game it went on to win by a 6-2 count.
The series-clinching second game saw Smith go 4-for-4 with a home run and two stolen bases; the four hits tied a career high.
Smith capped his stellar series with a 3-for-4 performance in the finale that included a double, homer and two stolen bases, including a straight steal of home that put the Cowboys up 3-1 in the fifth inning. Then, with OSU trailing 4-3 in the seventh, Smith delivered a go-ahead, two-run homer as the Pokes went on to win, 7-4.
The impressive weekend saw Smith raise his season batting average to a team-high .313, and he finished with a .343 average in conference-only games, which also led the team.
Smith’s honors marked the seventh and eighth weekly awards for OSU this season. Harrison Bodendorf tied a Big 12 record with four Big 12 Pitcher of the Week honors and also garnered a Newcomer of the Week nod, and Sean Youngerman also picked up Newcomer of the Week accolades.
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