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Bulldog becomes Wildcat

Minnesota-Duluth’s Kyle Bettens goes into boards working to get possession of the puck during a game against St. Cloud State during the 2023-24 season. Bettens has become the fourth transfer this spring into the Northern Michigan University hockey program. (Photo courtesy the University of Minnesota-Duluth) Minnesota-Duluth’s Kyle Bettens goes into boards working to get possession […]

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Bulldog becomes Wildcat

Minnesota-Duluth’s Kyle Bettens goes into boards working to get possession of the puck during a game against St. Cloud State during the 2023-24 season. Bettens has become the fourth transfer this spring into the Northern Michigan University hockey program. (Photo courtesy the University of Minnesota-Duluth)

Minnesota-Duluth’s Kyle Bettens goes into boards working to get possession of the puck during a game against St. Cloud State during the 2023-24 season. Bettens has become the fourth transfer into the Northern Michigan University hockey program. (Photo courtesy the University of Minnesota-Duluth)

Main hed: Bulldog becomes Wildcats

Sub hed: Only new transfer portal player involving NMU is ex-Minnesota-Duluth forward Bettens

MARQUETTE — The NCAA transfer portal seems to be treating the Northern Michigan University hockey team a bit more fairly, or at least more predictably, this year.

PAGE 1A TEASER — Northern Michigan University’s Jakob Peterson, right, protects the puck from St. Thomas’ Quinton Pepper during their CCHA game played at the Berry Events Center in Marquette on Saturday, Feb. 22, 2025. (Photo courtesy Cara Kamps)

A year ago at this time, 14 NMU players were on their way out — or at least actively looking at the possibility — with nearly that many more jumping ship after former head coach Grant Potulny announced his resignation in mid-June.

By the time new head coach Dave Shyiak had settled into his job around the Fourth of July, he had just four players returning and had to scrounge up another two dozen young men to cobble together a roster of 28 players who played for the Wildcats last season.

While this year’s number of exiting players is nearly as high as on this date last May — it’s 13 right now — the numbers haven’t grown since the first few days the transfer portal opened for all schools on March 30.

And it will be closing in barely more than a week, May 13, to let programs stabilize their rosters.

That’s all according to the internet page maintained by Grand Forks (North Dakota) Herald college hockey writer Brad Elliott Schlossman, which The Mining Journal has relied on for its information on player movement the past two springs.

One more player — for a total of just two — of the 13 Northern players who announced for the portal has also announced a new school to play at. That is sophomore forward Matthew Romer, who had five goals and three assists for eight points last season. He’ll be going to NCAA independent Stonehill, a Massachusetts-based school that moved up to NCAA Division I in 2022.

Announcing the intention to enter the portal doesn’t necessarily mean a player is leaving, but the vast majority of those who do, at least in hockey, end up leaving their original school, according to numbers Schlossman has compiled over the past four off-seasons.

That’s the story of outgoing players. As far as incoming players go, Northern added one more since the last Mining Journal story was written around 10 days ago, which gives the Wildcats four players who are coming from other programs.

These numbers don’t include the incoming freshman class or transfers who announced during other open times for the transfer portal.

The latest addition to the NMU family is Minnesota-Duluth’s forward Kyle Bettens, who had modest numbers of one goal and five assists for six points last season.

He is from Winnipeg, Manitoba, and before Duluth played for Youngstown of the U.S. Hockey League. He’ll turn 24 years old on the Fourth of July and is listed at a robust 6-foot-3 and 233 pounds on last season’s Bulldogs’ roster.

He’ll be a senior this season after playing at least 32 games for UMD each of his three seasons there.

In addition to last season’s six-point total in 32 games, he totaled 18 points (six goals) in 36 games during the 2023-24 season and eight points (five goals) in 34 games in 2022-23.

Duluth struggled to 13-20-3 overall and 9-13-2 National Collegiate Hockey Conference records last season and has been under .500 each of Bettens’ three seasons at the Minnesota institution.

From 10 days ago, there are 13 more players — now 297 — listed in the portal across Division I college hockey, an average of a little over 4 1/2 for each of the 64 Division I hockey-playing schools.

Not surprisingly, another 44 players in the last 10 days are now listed with a destination, almost evening out the committed vs. uncommitted totals — 146 committed to a school, 153 still uncommitted.

Looking at the 31 committed players coming to CCHA schools, Ferris has the most with nine, five of them coming from recently named head coach Brett Riley’s former school, Long Island. Three of the remainder are also from East Coast institutions with the only Midwest transfer from Ohio State.

Minnesota State-Mankato has seven transfers, six of them forwards with players coming from a range of schools, including national champion Western Michigan, Minnesota-Duluth, Wisconsin and Lake Superior State, the Lakers’ departure being defenseman Jacob Conrad.

St. Thomas, which will spend one more season in the CCHA before departing for the NCHC, has five transfers, including Michigan Tech defenseman Nick Willi

ams.

After NMU’s four incoming players, Bowling Green State has two, while Tech, LSSU, Bemidji State and Augustana each have one.

Two of these transfers into the CCHA are NHL draft picks — new Mankato junior forward Jack Smith, who is coming from UMD and was a fourth-round pick of Montreal, and new St. Thomas freshman goalie Carsen Musser, who is leaving Colorado College and was a sixth-round pick of Utah.

A quick scan of the rest of Division I shows Ferris with the most incoming transfers, while RPI of the ECAC is next with eight, including Michigan Tech junior Trevor Russell.

Here is the list of NMU’s 2024-25 players who entered the transfer portal, according to Schlossman — forwards Michael Mesic, who didn’t actually play college hockey last season, Ryan Duguay, Matthew Romer, Billy Renfrew, Brendan Poshak and Colby Browne; defensemen Jakob Peterson, a Marquette native, Rasmus Larsson, a fifth-round draft pick of the New York Rangers, Will Diamond, Trevor Mitchell and Wolfgang Govedaris; and goalies Ethan Barwick and Julian Molinaro.

Journal Sports Editor Steve Brownlee’s email address is sbrownlee@miningjournal.net.

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College Football Hall of Fame adjusts eligibility criteria to induct Mike Leach

Legendary coach Mike Leach tragically passed away at the age of 61 back in 2022, his death coming ahead of Mississippi State’s appearance in the ReliaQuest Bowl vs. Illinois. That game, won by the Bulldogs with interim coach Zach Arnett leading the team to a 19-10 victory in Leach’s honor, proved to be the difference […]

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Legendary coach Mike Leach tragically passed away at the age of 61 back in 2022, his death coming ahead of Mississippi State’s appearance in the ReliaQuest Bowl vs. Illinois. That game, won by the Bulldogs with interim coach Zach Arnett leading the team to a 19-10 victory in Leach’s honor, proved to be the difference in his eligibility for the NFF College Football Hall of Fame.

Leach finished his career with a record of 158-106, good for a win rate of 59.8 percent. The cutoff for the Hall of Fame? 60 percent — one victory separating the Pirate from consideration.

That was the case, at least, leading to understandable outrage from the football community following his unexpected death. He may not have won a conference or regular season championship across stops at Texas Tech, Washington State or Mississippi State, but his status as an offensive mastermind and impact on the game popularizing the Air Raid alongside Hal Mumme — including a two-year stint at Kentucky from 1997-98 to help Tim Couch become the No. 1 overall pick in the NFL Draft — made him more than deserving.

The College Football Hall of Fame obviously agrees, altering its eligibility requirements to lower the minimum win percentage to 59.5 percent, opening the door for Leach as a potential inductee.

“The NFF is committed to preserving the integrity and prestige of the NFF College Football Hall of Fame,” NFF President & CEO Steve Hatchell said in a statement. “This adjustment reflects thoughtful dialogue with leaders across the sport and allows us to better recognize coaches whose contributions to the game extend beyond a narrow statistical threshold.”

Going into effect beginning with the 2027 NFF College Football Hall of Fame Ballot, coaches with win rates of 59.5 percent must have served as a head coach for a minimum of 10 seasons with at least 100 games and will be eligible for consideration three full seasons after retirement or immediately following retirement if they are at least 70 years of age. Active coaches will be eligible upon reaching the age of 75.

In two seasons at Kentucky, Leach helped the Wildcats set six NCAA records, 41 Southeastern Conference records and 116 school records in 22 games. UK went 12-10 in that span while earning an Outback Bowl bid in 1998. From there, he became Bob Stoops’ first offensive coordinator at Oklahoma and the rest was history, getting his first head coaching shot at Texas Tech a year later in 2000.

Now, thanks to some eligibility adjustments, he’s on his way to the College Football Hall of Fame.

We’ll be calling it the Pirate Rule until further notice. Time for the late, great Mike Leach to receive the recognition he deserves in Atlanta in 2027.



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Could agents or NIL come to high school sports?

SOUTH BEND, Ind. (WNDU) – There’s a lot that high school athletes have to deal with: schoolwork, practice, maybe going after a college scholarship. And now with the changes to Rule 19, transferring to a school that offers better opportunities “If I’m a good athlete and I want to be a part of a winning […]

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SOUTH BEND, Ind. (WNDU) – There’s a lot that high school athletes have to deal with: schoolwork, practice, maybe going after a college scholarship.

And now with the changes to Rule 19, transferring to a school that offers better opportunities

“If I’m a good athlete and I want to be a part of a winning team, I may be the best player in a local suburb, and I want to win,” says Kirk Butler, talent president for 90 Ninety One Sports Agency. “If I’m going to want to win, I may have to go to another high school to do so.”

RELATED: What is Rule 19?: A breakdown of Indiana’s new transfer rule for high school athletes

Butler is a high school sports agent that works with over 80 athletes across the country. He helps them connect with specialized trainers and interact with college coaches. Now, it’s also about connecting with high school coaches

“We can facilitate some of those connections and relationships,” Butler says. “We have a platform tool where an athlete at the high school level can upload videos and send them to prep schools, send them to colleges, send them to junior colleges, community colleges. Because they might not necessarily be able to reach a coach and say, ‘Hey, please take a look at my video.’”

With transferring comes questions about Name Image and Likeness payments. It’s not allowed right now in Indiana, but it could always change.

I asked the IHSAA’s commissioner on how they’re approaching this.

“Our philosophy is this: you can’t sell what you don’t own. You don’t own a school’s uniform. You don’t own their facility. You don’t own their name,” says IHSAA Commissioner Paul Neidig. “If a student wants to teach somebody how to shoot a basketball or hit a baseball, or a softball, with their own name and they do it on their own, that’s not necessarily something we’re going to get involved in in the future.”

RELATED: What impact could Indiana’s new transfer rule have on high school sports?

Academics sometimes feel lost in these conversations, but not for Butler.

“Having the trust in parents to say, ‘Hey listen, we know what your athlete wants,’” Butler explains. “But at the end of the day, the first word in that is student-athlete. I care about your grades first, athletics can go after.”

Because while high school athletes do have a lot to handle, school is the thing that makes everything else possible.

Refresher on Indiana’s Rule 19

Previously if a student transferred schools, they would have to sit out one calendar year and miss all three sports seasons.

Now for a first-time transfer, as long as the student isn’t a senior, they will be immediately eligible to play sports at their new school. Think of it like the transfer portal in college sports.

This rule goes into effect this Sunday, June 1, so we’ll be seeing the first students use it heading into next school year’s fall season.

There are still many moving parts within Rule 19. Our WNDU 16 Sports team will have more breakdowns and explainers throughout the week on WNDU 16 News Now and WNDU.com.



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Why does Tennessee softball wear blue? What to know about ‘Summitt Blue’ uniforms

Tennessee softball rallied after a Game 1 loss to Nebraska in the super regionals, winning Games 2 and 3 to advance to the Women’s College World Series. The No. 7 Lady Vols wore their all-blue uniforms for the series-clinching win on Sunday, setting up a first-round WCWS matchup with No. 2 Oklahoma. Tennessee might bring […]

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Tennessee softball rallied after a Game 1 loss to Nebraska in the super regionals, winning Games 2 and 3 to advance to the Women’s College World Series.

The No. 7 Lady Vols wore their all-blue uniforms for the series-clinching win on Sunday, setting up a first-round WCWS matchup with No. 2 Oklahoma. Tennessee might bring back the all-blue uniforms again in Oklahoma City, which might be unusual for some college softball fans not aware of the Lady Vols’ history.

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WCWS bracket 2025: Full schedule, matchups for NCAA softball tournament

All of Tennessee’s women’s sports programs wear “Summitt Blue” uniforms in honor of Pat Summitt, the legendary Lady Vols basketball coach.

Here’s everything to know about Tennessee softball’s blue uniforms, and how they came about:

Why does Tennessee softball wear blue?

Tennessee softball started wearing blue jerseys in 2022, as part of the “Summitt Legacy” collection of uniforms for Vols women’s sports. Lady Vols soccer, volleyball, softball and basketball all have blue uniform options.

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Lady Vols softball stepped it up in 2025, however, introducing a full blue uniform for the first time. Previously, the team wore white or orange pants with their blue jerseys.

The “Summitt Blue” collection launched in 2022 as part of the 50th anniversary of Title IX. It was then when Tennessee officially renamed the blue accents that are part of the school’s colors in honor of Summitt.

“Well, I think I finally got over the idea that we’d look like North Carolina if we wore all Summitt Blue,” Lady Vols softball coach Karen Weekly told the Knoxville News-Sentinel earlier this year. “The little touches to it, like the Summitt legacy patch on it, because Pat Summitt is a big part of our program, a big part of me and Ralph (Weekly). We wouldn’t be here, we wouldn’t have the success we’ve had here if it wasn’t for Pat Summitt.”

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Summitt coached at Tennessee from 1974-2012 and won eight national championships and went to 18 Final Fours. She was gifted the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Barack Obama and was a part of the inaugural Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame class in 1999.

Summitt retired from coaching in 2012 after being diagnosed with early onset Alzheimer’s. She died in 2016 at the age of 64.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Why does Tennessee wear blue? ‘Summitt Blue’ uniforms, explained



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Texas Tech softball’s WCWS game vs. Ole Miss in weather delay

Why Texas Tech could blow up the 2025 WCWS bracket The Oklahoman’s Jenni Carlson breaks down why Texas Tech and NiJaree Canady will be the team to break the Women’s College World Series bracket this year. OKLAHOMA CITY — The Texas Tech softball team’s Women’s College World Series game against Ole Miss has been affected […]

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OKLAHOMA CITY — The Texas Tech softball team’s Women’s College World Series game against Ole Miss has been affected by weather.

The Red Raiders and Rebels were scheduled to begin their first-round game at 6 p.m. CT, but rain began to fall around 4:30 p.m. as Oklahoma and Tennessee were wrapping up their game from the first session at Devon Park.

As of 5:50 p.m., fans were still lined up outside and the board in centerfield said lightning had been detected in the area. The Texas Tech softball X (formerly Twitter) account confirmed the game will not be starting at 6 p.m. though no other official announcement has been made.

The game is now scheduled to begin at 7:15 p.m. Central.

Stay tuned for updates as we have them.





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Kickoff times announced for Kentucky’s first three games of the season

Pull up your Google Calendars because we’ve got kickoff times for Kentucky’s first three games of the season. The SEC dropped the entire TV schedule for the first three games of the 2025 campaign. Kentucky will open the season vs. Toledo at 12:45 p.m. ET on Saturday, August 30, on the SEC Network. The next […]

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Pull up your Google Calendars because we’ve got kickoff times for Kentucky’s first three games of the season.

The SEC dropped the entire TV schedule for the first three games of the 2025 campaign. Kentucky will open the season vs. Toledo at 12:45 p.m. ET on Saturday, August 30, on the SEC Network. The next week (September 6), the Cats will host Ole Miss at 3:30 p.m. ET on ABC. On September 13, Kentucky vs. Eastern Michigan will kick off at 7:30 p.m. ET on ESPNU. The Cats have their first bye week of the season after that.

We’ll find the rest of the kickoff times out as the season goes on, typically two Mondays before each game. Here is the schedule as we know it:

  • Aug. 30, 12:45 PM: vs. Toledo | Kroger Field (Lexington, KY) | SEC Network
  • Sept 6, 3:30 PM: vs. Ole Miss | Kroger Field (Lexington, KY) | ABC
  • Sep. 13, 7:30 PM: vs. Eastern Michigan | Kroger Field (Lexington, KY) | ESPNU
  • Sept. 20: OPEN
  • Sept. 27: at South Carolina | Williams-Brice Stadium (Columbia, SC)
  • Oct. 4: at Georgia | Sanford Stadium (Athens, GA)
  • Oct. 11: OPEN
  • Oct. 18: vs. Texas | Kroger Field (Lexington, KY)
  • Oct. 25: vs. Tennessee | Kroger Field (Lexington, KY)
  • Nov. 1: at Auburn | Jordan-Hare Stadium (Auburn, AL)
  • Nov. 8: vs. Florida | Kroger Field (Lexington, KY)
  • Nov. 15: vs. Tennessee Tech | Kroger Field (Lexington, KY)
  • Nov. 22: at Vanderbilt | FirstBank Stadium (Nashville, TN)
  • Nov. 29: at Louisville | L&N Stadium (Louisville, KY)

And all of the SEC kickoff times for the first three weeks, along with a few big games later in the season, if you want to go ahead and plan your Saturdays.

Week 1: Aug. 28–31

Day Date Game Network Time (ET)
Thu 8/28/2025 Central Arkansas at Missouri SEC Network 7:30 PM
Fri 8/29/2025 Auburn at Baylor FOX 8:00 PM
Sat 8/30/2025 Texas at Ohio State FOX 12:00 PM
Sat 8/30/2025 Syracuse vs. Tennessee (Atlanta) ABC 12:00 PM
Sat 8/30/2025 Mississippi State at Southern Miss ESPN 12:00 PM
Sat 8/30/2025 Toledo at Kentucky SEC Network 12:45 PM
Sat 8/30/2025 Marshall at Georgia ESPN 3:30 PM
Sat 8/30/2025 Alabama at Florida State ABC 3:30 PM
Sat 8/30/2025 Alabama A&M at Arkansas SEC Network 4:15 PM
Sat 8/30/2025 Illinois State at Oklahoma ESPN+/SECN+ 6:00 PM
Sat 8/30/2025 UTSA at Texas A&M ESPN 7:00 PM
Sat 8/30/2025 LIU at Florida ESPN+/SECN+ 7:00 PM
Sat 8/30/2025 Charleston Southern at Vanderbilt ESPN+/SECN+ 7:00 PM
Sat 8/30/2025 LSU at Clemson ABC 7:30 PM
Sat 8/30/2025 Georgia State at Ole Miss SEC Network 7:45 PM
Sun 8/31/2025 Virginia Tech vs. South Carolina (Atlanta) ESPN 3:00 PM

Week 2: Sept. 6

Day Date Game Network Time (ET)
Sat 9/6/2025 San Jose State at Texas ABC or ESPN 12:00 PM
Sat 9/6/2025 Utah State at Texas A&M SEC Network 12:45 PM
Sat 9/6/2025 Ole Miss at Kentucky ABC 3:30 PM
Sat 9/6/2025 Kansas at Missouri ESPN2 3:30 PM
Sat 9/6/2025 Austin Peay at Georgia ESPN+/SECN+ 3:30 PM
Sat 9/6/2025 USF at Florida SEC Network 4:15 PM
Sat 9/6/2025 South Carolina State at South Carolina ESPN+/SECN+ 7:00 PM
Sat 9/6/2025 Michigan at Oklahoma ABC 7:30 PM
Sat 9/6/2025 Vanderbilt at Virginia Tech ACC Network 7:30 PM
Sat 9/6/2025 Arizona State at Mississippi State ESPN2 7:30 PM
Sat 9/6/2025 Ball State at Auburn ESPNU 7:30 PM
Sat 9/6/2025 Louisiana Tech at LSU ESPN+/SECN+ 7:30 PM
Sat 9/6/2025 UL Monroe at Alabama SEC Network 7:45 PM
Sat 9/6/2025 Arkansas State vs. Arkansas (Little Rock) ESPN+/SECN+ 5:00 PM
Sat 9/6/2025 East Tennessee State at Tennessee ESPN+/SECN+ 3:30 PM

Week 3: Sept. 13

Day Date Game Network Time (ET)
Sat 9/13/2025 Wisconsin at Alabama ABC or ESPN 12:00 PM
Sat 9/13/2025 Oklahoma at Temple ESPN2 12:00 PM
Sat 9/13/2025 South Alabama at Auburn SEC Network 12:45 PM
Sat 9/13/2025 Georgia at Tennessee ABC 3:30 PM
Sat 9/13/2025 UTEP at Texas SEC Network 4:15 PM
Sat 9/13/2025 Florida at LSU ABC 7:30 PM
Sat 9/13/2025 Eastern Michigan at Kentucky ESPNU 7:30 PM
Sat 9/13/2025 Texas A&M at Notre Dame NBC 7:30 PM
Sat 9/13/2025 Arkansas at Ole Miss ESPN or SEC Network 7:00 PM or 7:45 PM
Sat 9/13/2025 Vanderbilt at South Carolina ESPN or SEC Network 7:00 PM or 7:45 PM
Sat 9/13/2025 Alcorn State at Mississippi State ESPN+/SECN+ 6:00 PM
Sat 9/13/2025 UL Lafayette at Missouri ESPN+/SECN+ 4:00 PM

Week 7: Oct. 11

Day Date Game Network Time (ET)
Sat 10/11/2025 Oklahoma vs. Texas (Dallas) ABC or ESPN 3:30 PM

Week 10: Nov. 1

Day Date Game Network Time (ET)
Sat 11/1/2025 Georgia vs. Florida (Jacksonville) ABC 3:30 PM

Week 14: Nov. 28

Day Date Game Network Time (ET)
Fri 11/28/2025 Ole Miss at Mississippi State ABC or ESPN 12:00 PM
Fri 11/28/2025 Georgia at Georgia Tech ABC 3:30 PM
Fri 11/28/2025 Texas A&M at Texas ABC 7:30 PM



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Gators Incoming Point Guard Secures Historic Shoe Deal

Florida Gators guard Xaivian Lee on Thursday became the first NCAA NIL athlete to sign a shoe deal with an international brand, Nick De Paula reported on X.  According to De Paula, Lee has signed a multi-year signature shoe deal with Serious Player Only to become the future face of the brand. This deal includes […]

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Florida Gators guard Xaivian Lee on Thursday became the first NCAA NIL athlete to sign a shoe deal with an international brand, Nick De Paula reported on X. 

According to De Paula, Lee has signed a multi-year signature shoe deal with Serious Player Only to become the future face of the brand. This deal includes a PE shoe and apparel that launches this season with his signature shoe releasing in 2026. 

Lee is set to make a combined $6 million between Florida’s NIL collective & Serious Player Only. 

Lee joined the Gators program this offseason from Princeton. He averaged 17.0 points, 4.6 assists and 5.9 rebounds per game over his last two seasons with the Tigers and was named as a unanimous First Team All-Ivy League in the 2023-24 and 2024-25 seasons and Ivy Madness All-Tournament Team in 2024-25.

Additionally, during his time with Princeton, he recorded the first triple-double in program history. He had 18 points, 13 rebounds and 10 assists against Saint Joe’s on Dec. 3, 2024. He then recorded his second one in the second-to-last game of last season against Penn, logging 23 points, 12 assists and 10 rebounds. 

The Gators officially welcomed Lee to the program at the end of April. 

“We are elated to welcome Xaivian Lee into our program here at the University of Florida,” Golden said. “Xaivian is an electric play-maker that is an equal threat to score or facilitate off the bounce. He does a great job of leading the team, putting his teammates in position to be successful while taking great care of the basketball.”

Fans will get their first chance to see him wear the orange and blue on Nov. 3 against Arizona in Las Vegas, Nev.

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