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Buckeyes playing waiting game for elite transfer portal target Darrion Williams

April was a good month for the Ohio State men’s basketball program. After missing the NCAA Tournament for the third consecutive season, Jake Diebler and his staff set out to make sure they were able to bring back the most productive players from last season’s team and then reinforce it with experienced transfer players that […]

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Buckeyes playing waiting game for elite transfer portal target Darrion Williams

April was a good month for the Ohio State men’s basketball program. After missing the NCAA Tournament for the third consecutive season, Jake Diebler and his staff set out to make sure they were able to bring back the most productive players from last season’s team and then reinforce it with experienced transfer players that addressed weaknesses from last season.

In about a two-week span, they were able to check both of those boxes.

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From March 27 to April 15, Ohio State was able to make public the returns of Bruce Thornton, Devin Royal, and John Mobley Jr. – a trio of starters who combined to score 44.4 points per game last season. In addition, former Wright State forward Brandon Noel and former Santa Clara center Christoph Tilly both announced that they would transfer to Ohio State. That pair of frontcourt transfers combined to score 31.5 points per game last season at their respective schools.

Since then, it’s been pretty much radio silence from the men’s basketball program. Sean Stewart hit the transfer portal hours before the deadline, but the soon-to-be junior forward was not projected to retain his starting spot he had last season. His departure isn’t nothing, but it does seem negligible if Noel and Tilly prove to be as good as expected.

Ohio State’s inactivity in the transfer market over the past three weeks could be the result of an inability to “land the big one.” The Buckeyes are rumored to be on the lookout for a starting-caliber guard as well a backup center, and had been involved with multiple big-time backcourt pieces, including former Southern Illinois guard Kennard Davis Jr. and former Howard guard Blake Harper.

Davis Jr. announced last week that he would be transferring to BYU, while Harper announced that he would transfer to Creighton for the upcoming season.

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While Ohio State may have just whiffed on each of those recruits, it’s starting to look more likely that Diebler and his staff are actually waiting out another player – former Texas Tech forward Darrion Williams.

At 6-foot-6 and 225 pounds, Williams was listed as a forward on Texas Tech’s official roster but has racked up nearly 300 assists in his collegiate career and was second on TTU last season with 3.6 assists per game. He’s also a 37.9% three-point shooter and averaged 15.1 points per game as a junior. He is allegedly considering Ohio State, Kansas, and North Carolina State for next season, as well as possible other suitors that have yet to be publicly linked.

The only issue – well, the biggest issue – is that Williams is hoping that he’ll be playing in the NBA next season, not college.

Williams entered the NBA Draft on April 6, and put his name into the NCAA Transfer portal the same day. On Friday afternoon, Williams, along with 74 other players, was invited to participate in the NBA Draft Combine from May 11-18 in Chicago.

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A combine invite is promising for a player’s draft stock, and will give the two-time All-Big 12 honoree ample opportunity to improve his draft stock. At the moment, Williams is looking like a mid-to-late second round pick – Tankathon has him going 47th overall, The Athletic has him at 39, and Yahoo Sports has him pegged as the 41st overall pick.

If Williams doesn’t get a first-round guarantee from a team at the NBA Combine next week, there’s a good chance he decides to play one more year of college. He would almost be guaranteed to earn more in NIL compensation at the college level (anywhere from $2-$4 Million) than he would as a middle of the second round selection.

Last season, the 39th pick in the draft – Jaylen Wells – signed a 4-year, $7.9-million dollar deal with the Grizzlies, with an average salary of $1.9-million.

The 47th pick in last year’s draft – Antonio Reeves – signed a 3-year, $5.4-million dollar contract with the Pelicans.

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In 2023, the 47th overall pick – Mojave King – was drafted by the Lakers and traded to the Indiana Pacers, where he played a partial season for the G-League Indiana Mad Ants. The average salary for a G-League player is $40,000 If they aren’t on a two-way deal.

Ohio State has not been publicly linked with any other guards/small forwards over the last few weeks, making it seem like the program may be waiting out Williams as he goes through the draft process. On April 25, Diebler told Adam Jardy of the Columbus Dispatch that fans may need to be “prepared to wait a bit” before any more players are added to the roster.

Is this the smart move? The NBA Draft Combine ends May 18, but Williams will have until June 15 to make a decision if he wants to stay in the draft or not. The Buckeyes could come up completely empty-handed if they wait, but is Diebler flipping the old idiom and deciding that two birds in the bush is worth more than the one in his hand?

In other words – is it worth the risk of not recruiting any other starting-caliber players and selling out for someone who (statistically speaking) is more likely to end up on some other team—whether that’s an NBA or college team — come June?

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It seems like the answer to that – at least as of now – is yes. They can afford to gamble because Ohio State is returning more production from last year’s team than basically any other Big Ten program.

With Thornton, Royal, and Mobley back, Ohio State is one of just two Big Ten teams – along with Purdue – that will return at least three double-digit scorers. It’s also one of just three Big Ten teams – Purdue and UCLA being the other two – to return three of its top four scorers from a season ago.

NCAA Basketball: Colorado at Texas Tech

NCAA Basketball: Colorado at Texas Tech

If the Buckeyes wait out Williams and don’t get a commitment, they seem fairly comfortable with what they’ve assembled to this point. But adding an All-American caliber player like Williams would be a huge boost to the team and should make them a consensus top-25 squad next season, as well as a serious contender in the Big Ten.

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At this moment, it looks like if Ohio State is going to add another starter to the team via the transfer portal, it will be Darrion Williams. If that doesn’t shake out the way Diebler and his staff hope it does, many of the other available options will likely be off the board by the time he makes a decision. It looks like the coaching staff is fine with that.

And so we wait.

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McMullan Named Mississippi State Baseball Associate Head Coach

STARKVILLE – New Mississippi State head baseball coach Brian O’Connor has turned to a trusted and familiar voice as he builds his staff in Starkville.   O’Connor announced the hiring of longtime Virginia assistant Kevin McMullan as the Bulldogs’ associate head coach. Widely regarded as one of the premier assistant coaches and recruiters in college […]

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STARKVILLE – New Mississippi State head baseball coach Brian O’Connor has turned to a trusted and familiar voice as he builds his staff in Starkville.
 
O’Connor announced the hiring of longtime Virginia assistant Kevin McMullan as the Bulldogs’ associate head coach. Widely regarded as one of the premier assistant coaches and recruiters in college baseball, McMullan spent the past 22 seasons at Virginia, including the last 19 as associate head coach under O’Connor.
 
“Mac has set the standard in player development for as long as I’ve known him,” O’Connor said. “His record helping to make these young men better baseball players and better people is unmatched in college baseball. He is an elite recruiter, develops winners and brings a tireless work ethic to our program. I am very happy that Mac is coming to Mississippi State, and I am excited that it sends a powerful message about the vision we have for this program.”
 
A two-time National Assistant Coach of the Year (2009, 2024), McMullan helped guide Virginia to seven College World Series appearances and a national championship in 2015. The Cavaliers averaged 42 wins per season during his tenure, reaching the NCAA Tournament 18 times. 
 
He also oversaw one of the most productive offenses in the country over the last two decades, with Virginia leading the ACC in batting average over the past 15 years and hitting above .300 as a team in multiple seasons. In 2024, UVA ranked in the top five nationally in hits, runs, batting average, doubles, slugging percentage and on-base percentage, while belting a school-record 116 home runs.
 
Defensively, McMullan’s impact was equally strong. Virginia owns the highest fielding percentage in the ACC since his arrival (.973), with 10 of his teams finishing among the nation’s top 40 in that category. The Cavaliers eclipsed the .970 mark in fielding 16 times in his 22 years.
 
McMullan was voted by his peers as the nation’s top assistant coach in a Baseball America poll of Division I head coaches in 2012, 2017 and 2020.
 
Over the course of his 27-year college coaching career, more than 100 players under McMullan have signed professional contracts, including 52 Virginia position players drafted and 17 who reached the major leagues. That list includes Ryan Zimmerman (Washington), Mark Reynolds (Milwaukee), Joe Koshansky (Colorado), Brandon Guyer (Tampa Bay), Sean Doolittle (Oakland), David Adams (New York Yankees), Chris Taylor (Seattle), Phil Gosselin (Atlanta), Jarrett Parker (San Francisco), John Hicks (Seattle), Derek Fisher (Houston), Adam Haseley (Philadelphia), Matt Thaiss (Los Angeles Angels), Joe McCarthy (San Francisco), Pavin Smith (Arizona), Ernie Clement (Cleveland), Jake McCarthy (Arizona) and Zack Gelof (Oakland).
 
Prior to Virginia, McMullan held coaching roles at East Carolina, St. John’s and Indiana University of Pennsylvania. He also managed in the Atlanta Braves organization and played professionally in the Yankees system. A two-sport All-American at IUP, McMullan was an NCAA standout in both baseball and football.
 
“Mississippi State is a place with championship tradition, passionate fans and the resources to be elite in everything we do,” McMullan  said. “Our players, coaches and staff will work every day in a way that respects and honors that tradition and earns the opportunity to compete in front of the best fanbase in college baseball. Hail State!”
 
McMullan is a 1990 graduate of Indiana University of Pennsylvania. He and his wife, Sandra, have three children: Maggie, Emma and Jack. Their son Jack is currently baseball player at Liberty University. McMullan’s father, John, was an All-American football player at Notre Dame and played in the NFL with the New York Giants, Philadelphia Eagles and New York Titans (now the Jets).

Visit www.HailState.com for the latest news and information on the baseball program. Fans can also follow the program on social media by searching ‘HailStateBB’ on XFacebook and Instagram.

 





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College Athletes’ Voices are Valuable Missing Piece of House Settlement

The House v. NCAA settlement has yet to be approved, and it remains an imperfect solution to college sports in the NIL era. The harsh truth is that it didn’t need to be this way. Simply put, it should have taken input from college football and basketball players — those most affected by revenue sharing. […]

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The House v. NCAA settlement has yet to be approved, and it remains an imperfect solution to college sports in the NIL era.

The harsh truth is that it didn’t need to be this way. Simply put, it should have taken input from college football and basketball players — those most affected by revenue sharing.

The NCAA has consistently lost litigation due to athletes not agreeing to the set rules. It’s why the transfer portal rules were eradicated and why NIL is legal and without guardrails at present.

The need for collective bargaining and a negotiation process has never been clearer. Is there a pathway to that future without employment status for college athletes?

The settlement’s core is at odds with its claims amid roster limit issues and other changes.

Under the guise of publicity rights, athletes will sign these NIL deals directly with schools, which ultimately amount to pay-for-play.

The problem is that it limits the athletes’ opportunities to use their likeness for real endorsement deals outside of the school.

For example, a brand might conflict with the brand that sponsors the school, but the athletes won’t own their rights to do endorsements in the same way.

The athletes did not agree to these restrictions, including the compensation limits imposed by the cap and the NIL clearinghouse for third-party deals.

Jim Cavale, founder of the players association for college athletes, Athletes.org, has been working to implement a process for collective bargaining in college sports.

He views the cap on their earnings as the most contentious aspect of the settlement, given its lack of collective bargaining.

Next come the contracts where athletes are confused once they see they can’t do other NIL deals or are asked to do extra promotion for free. The coach may try to push them out, but they can’t because they’re not performance contracts.

These lawsuits will no longer target the NCAA; instead, they will target schools or even coaches, compounding the problem.

“The next frontier of lawsuits is coming directly to campus, and it’s a huge liability for everyone involved,” Cavale said.

Athletes don’t know what they’re signing up for and what they’re giving up in revenue sharing. It’s an issue that has been brought up with U.S. District Judge Wilken and the plaintiff’s attorneys, but it’s one they keep alleging isn’t pertinent to the settlement.

“They’re just trying to get an answer on the settlement, and that’s distracting them from all the other things they’re going to have to figure out next,” Cavale said. “Which are complex but yet could be simplified through taking an existing blueprint and copy and pasting it into college sports, and that’s collective bargaining.”

Athletes.org is the largest players association in the country, with 4,700 members, and their goal of collective bargaining is shared with coaches and even athletic directors.

Cavale has created a process they’ve begun to socialize with athletic directors to show them what it would be like for athletes to have a seat at the table.

“One thing that’s been encouraging about those meetings is a lot of the things that the ADs want is not far from what the athletes want,” Cavale said. “I think getting a deal done is realistic once we have those conversations.”

Cavale and his partner created a bill for their conversations in DC that shows a path for collective bargaining without employment status. He believes that route would have the best bipartisan support.

He also sees an information gap where schools and commissioners may believe collective bargaining would occur directly between the athletes and the school.

“The Atlanta Falcons players don’t collectively bargain with the Atlanta Falcons,” Cavale said. “The Atlanta Falcons players collectively bargain with the NFL.”

It’s clear that schools and athletes are lacking a vehicle to collectively bargain, and a league entity like a player’s association solves that.

The House settlement appears to have no positive impact on the state of college sports without the athletes’ input.



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What Chris Jans prioritized for Mississippi State basketball in the transfer portal

STARKVILLE — Chris Jans focused on two areas to improve Mississippi State basketball for the 2025-26 season: rebounding and 3-point shooting. Six transfers, four freshmen and one commitment from an international player later, the Bulldogs believe they accomplished that. “We needed to get bigger,” Jans said on June 5 as he enters his fourth season […]

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What Chris Jans prioritized for Mississippi State basketball in the transfer portal


STARKVILLE — Chris Jans focused on two areas to improve Mississippi State basketball for the 2025-26 season: rebounding and 3-point shooting.

Six transfers, four freshmen and one commitment from an international player later, the Bulldogs believe they accomplished that.

“We needed to get bigger,” Jans said on June 5 as he enters his fourth season as MSU coach. “We needed to get better on the glass, which is hard for me to admit because most of my teams historically have been really good in the rebounding department. We felt like we had too many games where that was maybe a difference in the win-loss column, so we tried to shore that up that way.”

Mississippi State finished 21-13 and made its third consecutive NCAA tournament but is still seeking its first NCAA tournament win since 2008.

It lost starting power forward Cameron Matthews to graduation and starting center Michael Nwoko transferred to Miami. Forward KeShawn Murphy, who was second on the team with 11.7 points per game and the leading rebounder at 7.4 per game, transferred to Auburn.

Mississippi State’s transfer class consists of two power forwards, Achor Achor and Brandon Walker, and one center, Quincy Ballard. The freshmen class, which is No. 12 in the country according to the 247Sports Composite rankings, contains two four-star centers in Tee Bartlett and Canton’s Jamarion Davis-Fleming.

Ballard, a Wichita State transfer, could fill that spot as a starting center. He averaged 10.0 points, 9.2 rebounds and 1.9 blocks per game last season. The Bulldogs were 130th in the country in rebounding percentage last season.

“With just how many ball screens are employed each and every game, and the level of what’s going on in those ball screens, having a quarterback on defense, or a goalie would be probably more appropriate, is a big advantage,” Jans said. “I’ve never felt like we’ve had that since we’ve been here, a guy that can protect the lane, protect the rim, protect some of the guys out front if they’re getting beat. Certainly not trying to put a ton of pressure or weight on his back walking in the door, but it’s a big reason why we went after him the way we did.”The return of Josh Hubbard, a two-time All-SEC guard, is a big boost for the 3-point shooting, but Mississippi State needs more consistent and efficient shooting around him. MSU shot 31.4% from 3 last season, 14th in the SEC, but on the third-most attempts at 26.9 per game.

“We thought going into the year, just to be frank with you, that we had addressed it,” Jans said. “We thought we had enough guys that could shoot the ball, and for whatever reason, as a group, we didn’t end up shooting it as well as we anticipated.”

Georgetown transfer Jayden Epps shot 34.4% from 3-point range on 154 attempts. UAB transfer Ja’Borri McGhee shot 40.8% from 3-point range, but only on 71 attempts. Arizona State transfer Amier Ali was a 32.6% 3-point shooter on 92 attempts.

Sam Sklar is the Mississippi State beat reporter for the Clarion Ledger. Email him at ssklar@gannett.com and follow him on X @sklarsam_.

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Lincoln

Hudl’s headquarters at Canopy and P streets.  Journal Star file photo Lincoln-based Hudl announced the acquisition of yet another company Wednesday, adding GPS player tracking to its tools. The sports video and analytics company acquired Titan Sports, which uses wearable technology to track players on the field with GPS. Hudl is focused on giving teams […]

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Lincoln







New Hudl building

Hudl’s headquarters at Canopy and P streets. 




Lincoln-based Hudl announced the acquisition of yet another company Wednesday, adding GPS player tracking to its tools.

The sports video and analytics company acquired Titan Sports, which uses wearable technology to track players on the field with GPS.

Hudl is focused on giving teams tools to capture and act on performance data, said Greg Nelson, a senior vice president.

“Adding Titan strengthens that mission by making verified physical data more accessible — so coaches can train smarter, get their teams game ready and help athletes track their progress and build confidence in their development,” Nelson said in news release.

Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Titan Sports was founded in 2013 and has been used by football and soccer teams in the U.S. The business’ technology uses GPS tracking, heat maps and tracks speed data.

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The acquisition is one of many Hudl has made in recent years and months.

In March, the company bought a sports software company specializing in ice hockey and basketball. And in February, the company added a volleyball analytics company.

Although Hudl already has a wearable tracker, called WIMU, the new technology will enhance Hudl’s ability to collect training and performance insights and showcase athletes through highlights and graphics, according to the release. 

Hudl plans to integrate Titan metrics alongside its video offerings.

Stephane Smith, the CEO of Titan, said the company’s mission has been to give coaches the tools to understand and apply data.

“Joining Hudl allows us to build faster, reach more teams and continue helping coaches and athletes across the globe train smarter and perform at their best,” Smith said.

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Reach the writer at nfranklin@journalstar.com or 402-473-7391.

On Twitter @NealHFranklin

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Texas Gov. Greg Abbott signs bill to amend state NIL law

After a Texas bill to amend the state’s NIL law passed the House and Senate, it headed to Gov. Greg Abbott’s desk. He signed it into law Thursday morning – paving the way for some high school athletes to sign deals. Abbott signed HB 126 into law, which allows colleges in the state to directly […]

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After a Texas bill to amend the state’s NIL law passed the House and Senate, it headed to Gov. Greg Abbott’s desk. He signed it into law Thursday morning – paving the way for some high school athletes to sign deals.

Abbott signed HB 126 into law, which allows colleges in the state to directly pay athletes in line with the House v. NCAA settlement. It also means high school athletes who are 17 and older can sign NIL deals. That’s a shift from the previous verbiage that said only college athletes in the state could do so.

Texas State Rep. Brandon Creighton sponsored the bill, filed March 10, and the state House and Senate both signed it June 1. That meant it headed to Abbott’s desk for signature, and the law took effect immediately after he signed.

Under the previous law, high school athletes were not allowed to sign NIL deals and had to wait until they got to college. The amendment changes that, setting the age requirement at 17 years old to do so.

“Unless a prospective student athlete younger than 17 years of age is enrolled at an institution of higher education, an individual, corporate entity, or other organization, including an institution to which this section applies, may not enter into an arrangement relating to the athlete’s name, image, or likeness with the athlete or with an individual related to the athlete by consanguinity or affinity,” the law states.

Texas’ new NIL law also comes ahead of the landmark House settlement, which is set to usher in the revenue-sharing era in college athletics. Schools will be able to directly pay athletes up to $20.5 million in 2025-26, the first school year of the 10-year agreement, and the law allows schools to participate in rev-share.

The previous version of the law said institutions could not “provide or solicit a prospective student athlete of an intercollegiate athletic program at the institution with compensation in relation to the prospective student athlete’s name, image, or likeness.” The amended law eliminated that language, meaning universities can directly pay athletes.

At Texas, athletics director Chris Del Conte announced plans to fully fund every sport by maximizing roster limits that would be put in place by the House settlement. Additionally, he said the school is raising football season ticket prices by $13 per game to help defray the extra costs.

“I’m going to alter the season ticket price … to help defray the cost of what we’re doing,” Del Conte said during his annual town hall in February. “I’m doing this, y’all, because I’m trying to maintain the very best athletic program in the country.

“I hope that you think the value we provide you on game day with all the things that we’re doing – whether it’s Bevo’s Blvd., the concert, everything that we do – we’re trying to create incredible value to say thank you. But more importantly, for you to understand what we’re trying to do.”



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Cliff Godwin exposes tampering across college baseball: ‘We have proof’

The transfer portal has only been open for a few days in college baseball but already the accusations are flying. On Thursday, East Carolina coach Cliff Godwin accused coaches at Power Four schools of tampering with his players. East Carolina finished its season over the weekend, coming up a little short in the Conway Regional […]

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The transfer portal has only been open for a few days in college baseball but already the accusations are flying. On Thursday, East Carolina coach Cliff Godwin accused coaches at Power Four schools of tampering with his players.

East Carolina finished its season over the weekend, coming up a little short in the Conway Regional final against Coastal Carolina. And now Godwin is having to battle illegal contact.

“Our system is so BROKEN!” Godwin wrote on Twitter. “We have coaches at P4 schools texting our players directly who are not in portal! And we have proof!”

Cliff Godwin didn’t provide proof immediately, though his original tweet was still very fresh at the time of this writing. So it’ll be interesting to see if he opts to lay everything bare on social media at some point.

Even if he doesn’t, Godwin has been vocal in the past about the potential pitfalls of NIL and the transfer portal. In conjunction, the two can be especially disruptive for a coach at the non-power-conference level.

“I don’t like the portal and NIL together because it’s become a corrupt business,” Godwin said in January 2024. “So people are cheating. And I’m not perfect. I’m not saying that. But that’s not why that was created.”

As of Wednesday morning, there were more than 2,700 Division I baseball players in the transfer portal, according to On3’s Pete Nakos. So the problems aren’t going away any time soon.

Cliff Godwin outlines issues with NIL

The East Carolina coach has been blunt about how he feels about NIL, too. In short, he thinks its a system ripe for abuse. He even called it ‘pay for play.’

“They kept saying it’s not pay for play,” he said. “Well guess what it is? Pay for play.”

Even though NIL has impacted the way rosters are built at times, that hasn’t changed anything for Godwin’s approach at ECU. But balancing that can be challenging, and when NIL comes into the picture, Godwin admitted that jealousy can play a role, too. That only becomes more challenging when considering college baseball teams only have so many scholarships (currently) to distribute across a much larger roster.

“I’m all for rewarding our guys who have been in our program and have done the things the right way, from Trey Yesavage to Justin Wilcoxen to Joey Berini,” Cliff Godwin added. “I think it’s also worth mentioning that Joey Berini has never received a cent of baseball scholarship money since he’s been at East Carolina because we only have 11.7 (scholarships). [Wilcoxen] has only received scholarship this year in his fifth year. Guys that have grinded, that have developed with our coaching staff, that means something to me, because that’s what this place was built on. Now I still want them to be able to make some money if that is available. And so those guys were able to get some money, but it also creates jealousy.

“I asked Trey Yesavage this summer, ‘Does NIL create jealously?’ ‘100 percent Coach.’ So that’s another thing we have to navigate. But I’m all for helping the returners. I can’t foresee Coach Godwin offering any recruit any amount of money because that is going to take away from the culture that we have in the locker room. A lot of coaches talk about it. And I’m not sitting up here saying that we have the best culture in the country, but it means something to me to have culture. And you can’t sustain success the way we do if you don’t have great culture within that locker room.”

On3’s Jonathan Wagner also contributed to this report.



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