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Bruce Pearl wants men’s college basketball to switch to quarters over halves: ‘Just like everybody else’

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It’s the offseason for college basketball, but that doesn’t mean there hasn’t been any controversy. In particular, there’s been a growing debate surrounding playing two halves or four quarters. Now Auburn Tigers head coach Bruce Pearl has joined the conversation, sharing his thoughts.

While being interviewed by Andy Katz on The Sideline, Pearl shared that he prefers quarters over halves. After all, that’s how the game is played at every other level.

“Quarters,” Bruce Pearl said. “Just like everybody else.”

Pearl didn’t expand on his reasoning beyond that. Part of that might have been because Andy Katz asked him for a rapid-fire answer, though. Still, to his point, basketball is played in a four-quarter format in the NBA, in high school, and even in women’s college basketball. Women’s basketball made the switch back in the 2015-16 season. So, men playing two halves does remain an odd outlier.

This growing concern over halves and quarters stems from a recent NCAA press release. In it, the NCAA was announcing some changes to help with the flow of the game. Among those changes was the move to allow coaches to challenge and review out-of-bounds calls and goaltending or basket interference. However, deeper inside that press release was an interesting note about the halves and quarters format.

The NCAA has since announced that there’s been “positive momentum” toward the switch. Bruce Pearl, seemingly, is a good example of that momentum now. The NCAA Playing Rules Oversight Panel also recommended that Division I conferences actually develop a working group to provide further feedback on the option.

“In considering the decisions last month, the NCAA Men’s Basketball Committee had conversations about ways to continue this direction in the upcoming years, which includes positive momentum for moving the men’s game from halves to quarters,” the NCAA’s press release read. “The committee realizes there are hurdles to implementing the quarter format to the game, including the structuring of media timeouts to accommodate commercial inventory. The committee recommended NCAA Division I conferences create a joint working group to provide feedback on the potential change from halves to quarters.”

For many coaches, this would be a massive change. In particular, they’d have to adjust to a new system as it relates to clock management. For some, that may be more difficult than others. Still, if Bruce Pearl, who has been in college coaching since 1982 and has been a head coach since 1992, wants the change, then he is probably confident that he can adjust just fine. After a trip to the Final Four, of course, it’s easy to be confident.



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NIL free-for-all poses real threat to March Madness Cinderella teams

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Last year’s NCAA Tournament was riveting. It was thrilling. It featured a dramatic Final Four and a national championship game that wasn’t determined until the final horn.

One thing was missing from the most recent edition of March Madness, however: Cinderella.

Only one double-digit seed reached the second weekend, and nobody would ever consider John Calipari and Arkansas a version of David. The entire Sweet 16 featured power-conference schools for the first time since 1975. It was a tournament of Goliaths.

The worry is that as money for players increases in the transfer portal and name, image and likeness era, it will contribute to a growing divide between the haves and the have-nots, the big schools with money and everyone else.

“It’s definitely a little bit of a warning sign, like whoa, we might have lost what made it special,” Stanford coach Kyle Smith told The Post.

Smith was quick to note that this was just one year. It could turn out to be an anomaly. But there are reasons to believe it may become an extended trend.

The days of mid-major teams developing together over a number of years, like Cinderella Final Four teams Loyola of Chicago in 2018 and Florida Atlantic in 2023, are mostly a thing of the past.

The most outstanding player of last year’s Final Four was Florida’s Walter Clayton Jr., a former standout at Iona University. The Elite Eight also included stars who transferred from Morehead State (Johni Broome, Auburn), Florida Atlantic (Alijah Martin, Florida), Ohio (Mark Sears, Alabama), New Mexico (JT Toppin, Texas Tech), Nevada (Darrion Williams, Texas Tech), North Dakota State (Grant Nelson, Alabama) and North Florida (Chaz Lanier, Tennessee).

Top players now leave. It would be financially irresponsible not to.

Florida celebrates after defeating Houston in the national championship at the Final Four of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Monday, April 7, 2025. AP

“Where I think the current model falls short is that we have created a system where it is significantly more financially lucrative to go be the 11th or 12th man at a power-five school than to go be a mid-major star,” said Campbell coach John Andrzejek, who was an assistant on last year’s champion, Florida.

An industry source familiar with the inner workings of player salaries said that the starting point for payrolls of top 20 caliber high-major program is $10 million. That’s double what it was the previous season. Kentucky, which is ranked ninth in the Associated Press preseason poll, has a payroll of reportedly over $20 million.

Smaller schools can’t contend with that.

“It’s insane, they’re almost competing with NBA teams,” Hofstra coach Speedy Claxton said. “What are we doing here? I’m all for these kids getting some money, helping themselves out and their family out, but the numbers they’re making are outrageous. I couldn’t imagine being a millionaire on a college campus. I would lose my damn mind.”

Kentucky Wildcats forward Brandon Garrison (10) celebrates during the second half against the Georgetown Hoyas at Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center. Jordan Prather-Imagn Images

How out of whack is this system? A mid-major assistant coach said that in recruiting high school players, the kids or parents will often tell him the goal is to perform well enough at the coach’s school to advance to a higher level. Claxton will notify higher-level coaching friends about players in his league — some in his program — who could make an impact for them when they eventually transfer.

“I want to help the kids and I want to help my friends,” Claxton said.

There is no regulation. A low-major Division I assistant coach had a star freshman he was able to keep, but it was difficult. The player, his family and AAU coach were frequently contacted by people representing big schools with promises of large paydays. It started after his first big game and continued deep into the spring. The player was loyal, a rarity in the sport.

“You’re getting an education, but it’s student-professional athletes, that’s what it is now,” the assistant coach said. “It’s overseas basketball with classrooms in it.”

Lee S. Weissman

The industry source suggested one potential fix: transfer fees. If a bigger school poaches a player from a smaller school, it would cost a fixed amount, similar to professional soccer. A high-major assistant coach, speaking on condition of anonymity, doubted the power conferences would ever go for that. He suggested tweaking transfer rules, allowing one free transfer, with an exception being if a coach is fired or leaves.

“That’s the biggest thing that has to change,” the coach said. “Then the mid-major school can take a player from the bigger school and you can have him for a few years. Same thing with a mid-major star who says, ‘Hey, I’m going to wait until after my sophomore year and then I’m going to go up.’ You have to make a choice at the right time if you only get one free transfer.”

Depending on who you ask, there is a belief that the new revenue sharing model could shift this dynamic. Schools now have the option to pay their own athletes up to $20.5 million. The ones that don’t have FBS football could theoretically have an advantage, although 21 of the teams ranked in the AP preseason Top 25 come from the four conferences — the ACC, Big Ten, Big 12 and SEC — that still have big-time college football. The other four teams — Connecticut, St. John’s and Creighton of the Big East, and Gonzaga — all have significant financial might.

“This year is really something to monitor and watch closely for how wide that gap is between [the big schools and everyone else],” St. John’s athletic director Ed Kull said.

The frequency of top players transferring up has opened high school recruiting at the mid-major level, according to 247 Sports national recruiting analyst Travis Branham. Seventeen players in the 2026 top 150 are committed to schools other than the Big East and the four major football conferences, and there are still several prospects who have to commit. A year ago, it was 13.

Branham believes that the strong mid-major leagues, specifically the Atlantic 10, will soon be able to boast larger payrolls than schools from the aforementioned four big leagues because of revenue sharing.

“People are going to be shocked when they see the success coming out of the Atlantic 10,” he said. “But it’s not going to be shocking to people who understand the economics of what’s happening there.”

That, of course, remains to be seen. This coming March could tell us more.

But Claxton, the Hofstra coach, believes that major change has to occur, or the part of March that everyone loves — Cinderella — is in danger of either becoming much more rare or potentially extinct.

“The upsets occurred when us mid-majors had four-year players, people who we grew in the program, and we developed them, and you would face a younger high-major team,” he said. “That’s when the upsets happened. You’re not going to see that anymore because if we have a good freshman or sophomore, they’re not going to stay with us.”



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College Football Rankings: HERO Sports 2025 Group of Five Top 25 Media Poll For Week 11

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The Group of Five continues to be unpredictable.

Five of the top 10 teams in the HERO Sports Group of Five Top 25 media poll lost last week. Arguably the most surprising was Tulane, which was ranked second, losing to UTSA by 22 points.

But the No. 1 program remained the same, as Memphis is still at the top of this week’s Group of Five Top 25 media poll. Members of nationally-focused media outlets as well as at least one team beat reporter from every G5 conference is involved.


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Here’s how they collectively voted:

  1. Memphis (16 first-place votes)
  2. South Florida (two first-place votes)
  3. James Madison (one first-place vote)
  4. North Texas
  5. San Diego State
  6. Tulane
  7. Navy
  8. Southern Miss
  9. East Carolina
  10. Boise State
  11. Kennesaw State
  12. UNLV
  13. Western Kentucky
  14. New Mexico
  15. Old Dominion
  16. Fresno State
  17. Ohio
  18. Miami (Ohio)
  19. UConn
  20. Hawaii
  21. Troy
  22. Louisiana Tech
  23. Jacksonville State
  24. Western Michigan
  25. Coastal Carolina

RV: Toledo, UTSA, Arkansas State, Marshall, Army, Rice, Temple, Utah State, Missouri State, Buffalo, Liberty.

betmgm-sportsbook-promo-bannerbetmgm-sportsbook-promo-banner

Josh Boutwell, Troy Messenger

Michael Calabrese, Action Network

Bennett Conlin, Baltimore Sun/JMU Sports News

Ron Counts, HERO Sports

The G5 Hive

Shaun Goodwin, Idaho Statesman

Bryson Gordon, The News & Advance

Catie Harper, Daily News-Record

The Herd Bros

Greg Luca, San Antonio Express-News

Colton McWilliams, San Marcos Record

Robert Munoz, HERO Sports

Jeff Nations, Bowling Green Daily News

Marc Narducci, HERO Sports

Colton Pool, HERO Sports

Cam Robertson, Athens Messenger

Kyle Rowland, NIL Wire

Brett Vito, Denton Record-Chronicle

Seth Woolcock, BettingPros/In-Between Media



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Oklahoma State Ranked Near Bottom in NIL Budget Among Power Conference Job Openings

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If you’re wondering why Oklahoma State isn’t exactly pulling top-tier coaching interest right now, Grant Hughes of 247Sports just gave the clearest answer you’ll get. He ranked the current Power Conference job openings by NIL budget, and Oklahoma State came in second-to-last. The Cowboys were listed at $5.3 million, ahead of only Stanford.

That puts them behind everyone from LSU and Florida to Arkansas and Virginia Tech. Yes, even UCLA has more juice in the NIL department, according to Hughes. For a program that’s been in the Big 12 mix for the better part of two decades, that number should raise eyebrows. Hughes even spelled it out: “Oklahoma State’s coaching vacancy would be far more appealing if the Cowboys still had the abundant resources that were available when T. Boone Pickens was living.”

That’s not just a casual jab. It’s the reality. Pickens pumped more than $650 million into Oklahoma State during his lifetime. That included a $165 million gift to the football program back in 2006 that literally changed the trajectory of the entire athletic department. Since his death in 2019, though, things have gone quiet on the funding front, and it’s starting to show.

The Cowboys have solid facilities and a good brand in the Big 12, but in the NIL era, that’s not enough. Coaches want to know what kind of backing they’ll get when it comes time to keep a roster together or go after real difference-makers. If you’re walking into a rebuild with a middle-of-the-pack budget, you’d better have a plan. Otherwise, you’re just showing up to a gunfight with a pocket knife.

Mike Gundy saw this coming. He spent most of his final year hinting, and at times flat-out saying, that Oklahoma State wasn’t playing the same game anymore. The numbers prove he was right. Whether or not NIL was the reason for his exit, it was definitely part of the tension.

Now the Cowboys are on the hunt for a new head coach, and the budget behind the scenes is going to be a big part of that pitch. Tradition still matters. So does history. But if the checkbook can’t compete, neither can the program.





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Competing Bills Governing College Sports Draw Unlikely Backers and Familiar Battle Lines

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Competing Bills Governing College Sports Draw Unlikely Backers and Familiar Battle Lines – The Texas Lawbook



















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Penn State Turned Down Urban Meyer for Surprising Reason, Report Says

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Penn State athletic director Pat Kraft is heading into his fourth week in a national search for Penn State Football’s next head coach. Kraft has been casting a wide net in his search, showing interest in current head coaches, current coordinators, and former head coaches turned media personalities.

One of the most intriguing candidates that kept coming up in the process is former Ohio State and Florida head coach and current Fox Sports media personality, Urban Meyer.

As of last week, Kellyanne Stitts of On3 Sports reported that Meyer does not have a “desire” to return to coaching.

However, on Saturday, Kevin Borba of Athlon Sports reported that Meyer did pursue the Penn State job, before being turned down by Pat Kraft for an interesting reason.

Urban Meyer, Penn State Football
There could be mutual interest between Urban Meyer and Penn State Football. (Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images)

Despite being out of college football since 2018 and not coaching since 2021, Urban Meyer’s name has continuously been brought up each offseason because of his impressive career accomplishments.

Meyer is one of the most accomplished coaches in the history of the sport, with three national championships between two teams and the third-best winning percentage in college football history over his 17-year career. Meyer holds a 187-32 career record (.854 winning percentage) with coaching stops at Bowling Green, Utah, Florida, and Ohio State.

Urban Meyer Reportedly Spoke to Penn State About Head Coaching Vacancy

Penn State Football most recently saw Meyer during his stint at Ohio State, where he won over 90 percent of his games, including the 2014 national championship and six wins over the Nittany Lions.

As reported by Borba, on his Zach Gelb show on Audacy, Gelb reported that Meyer had “strong interest” in the Penn State job opening.

“I’m not going to crush Urban Meyer for lying when he says ‘Hey, I don’t have any interest in coaching again,’” Gelb said. “But I’ve talked to two sources and two sources told me that Urban Meyer had a great interest level in becoming the next head football coach at Penn State.”

According to Gelb, the conversations between Meyer and Penn State hit a major snag, though.

“The reasons why those talks did break down is when they got to the topic of NIL,” Gelb explained. “Which Urban Meyer has never been a head coach during the NIL era. His plan and his answers in terms of navigating those Name Image, and Likeness waters were not viewed as satisfactory enough.”

Gelb’s reporting matches the overall theme of what Pat Kraft focused on during his initial press conference regarding Penn State’s opening.

 



How Penn State’s Coaching Search is Taking Shape

Kraft noted in early October after James Franklin was fired that he was looking for Penn State’s next coach “to be able to maximize elite resources, attack the transfer portal, and develop at the highest level.”

Kraft is looking for a coach who can take Penn State to an elite level through the use of the new NIL and transfer portal rules.

Penn State Football, Pat Kraft
Penn State Athletic Director Pat Kraft is leading an expansive search for the Nittany Lions’ next head coach.

With Urban Meyer’s last stint in college coaching being before the new NIL rules, this was always a question about how well Meyer could adapt to the changing landscape of college football.

From Gelb’s reporting, it seems as though Pat Kraft was not satisfied with Meyer’s ability to adapt to this new landscape.

In his On3 interview, Meyer did name a candidate to throw his weight behind in Penn State’s coaching search. Meyer told Kellyanne Stitts during his interview that Ohio State offensive coordinator Brian Hartline is ready to be a head coach.

“I’m a big Brian Hartline fan,” Meyer noted. ‘Always have been, and he just needed the experience (as an OC).”

Hartline remains one of the top candidates on Penn State’s board as the search for James Franklin’s successor continues.

Loved this story? Get all our Penn State football coverage and insider updates first. Join our FREE newsletter — your front-row seat to the Lions.

Robert Shields
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No. 15 Alabama starts season at home against North Dakota

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Associated Press

North Dakota Fightin’ Hawks at Alabama Crimson Tide

Tuscaloosa, Alabama; Monday, 8 p.m. EST

BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Crimson Tide -33.5; over/under is 168.5

BOTTOM LINE: No. 15 Alabama hosts North Dakota in the season opener.

Alabama went 28-9 overall with a 12-3 record at home during the 2024-25 season. The Crimson Tide averaged 90.7 points per game last season, 18.1 from the free-throw line and 31.5 from beyond the arc.

North Dakota finished 6-12 in Summit League play and 2-12 on the road a season ago. The Fightin’ Hawks averaged 77.3 points per game last season, 14.6 from the free-throw line and 24.6 from 3-point range.

___

The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

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