INDIANAPOLIS — Indiana Fever star Caitlin Clark slapped the court with both hands and started gesturing in her side’s direction after forcing a 5-second call near the end of Tuesday’s practice.
NIL
Caitlin Clark gears up for 2nd WNBA season with Fever
INDIANAPOLIS — Indiana Fever star Caitlin Clark slapped the court with both hands and started gesturing in her side’s direction after forcing a 5-second call near the end of Tuesday’s practice. It was only Day 2 of training camp, yet this is what Clark has yearned for these past seven months — going back to […]

It was only Day 2 of training camp, yet this is what Clark has yearned for these past seven months — going back to work with a new coach, a revamped roster and even higher expectations in her second WNBA season.
After leading the Fever to their first playoff berth in eight years, winning the league’s Rookie of the Year Award, being named Associated Press 2024 Female Athlete of the Year and Time magazine’s 2024 Athlete of the Year, Clark returned to Indianapolis a stronger, wiser player, more determined to win the championship that eluded her in college.
“It was an adjustment sure, because I was so used to playing minutes for, well, basically a year of my life. That’s all I did,” Clark said. “So the rest was good. I thought it was going to feel long and it really didn’t. We were in here all the time. But that rest aspect, just getting my body where it needed to be and really on things I needed to work on was super important. But I’m ready to compete again.”
People are also reading…
It was a well-deserved vacation for perhaps the busiest player in women’s basketball.
She capped her final college season by playing a 39-game schedule while leading Iowa to a second straight national championship game. One week after losing to South Carolina, the Fever drafted her No. 1 overall and 13 days after that, training camp opened.
Following a brief preseason, Clark made her regular-season debut May 10. That started a grueling 42-game grind during which the Fever overcame a 1-8 start to finish 20-20. Then they were swept out of the playoffs.
The only real stoppage for Clark during that 81-game, 10 1/2-month span was the monthlong Olympic break.
Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark plays against the Dallas Wings in the second half of a WNBA game on Sept. 15 in Indianapolis.
Clark’s impact
Clark turned sellouts at college and WNBA games into the norm as she found her every move scrutinized on social media. Fans complained she was being treated poorly by the league’s older players and some even argued the physical play was racially motivated. Her friendships and relationships became all the rage, and nothing seemed to be off limits.
But Clark never complained, never bowed to the pressure and used this seven-month break to focus on being herself. She completed one bucket list item — attending the final round of The Masters earlier this month — and had her college jersey retired. She attended a Taylor Swift concert, an NFL game with Swift and, of course, Pacers games.
Now, though, she sounds refreshed as she sings the praises of a veteran team full of title dreams and championship resumes from coach Stephanie White to teammates Natasha Howard and 37-year-old DeWanna Bonner.
And the early returns seem to show the personalities are a perfect match.
“Everything is just absolutely good,” All-Star guard Kelsey Mitchell said. “It feels fresh. It feels kind of like when you take your clothes out of the dryer. It just feels different and it feels good because we have new leadership.”
The Indiana Fever’s Caitlin Clark, of Team WNBA, is introduced prior to a WNBA All-Star game against Team USA on July 20 in Phoenix.
It’s not just the overhauled roster, either.
Mitchell, one of the few holdovers left from last season, also sees a different version of Clark, one showcased in a photo posted on social media last month.
“From a physical standpoint, her strength and her ability to make plays that people don’t think about — that skip pass from here to here,” Mitchell said. “A person of her caliber, it seems small but it’s going to help her go from having 10 assists to 12. And then after that the professional learning, watching film, knowing what you need.”
Just the thought of an improved Clark this season could make opponents jittery.
Clark led the Fever in minutes (35.4 per game) and steals (1.3), shared team scoring honors with Mitchell (19.2 points), and broke the WNBA’s single season mark for assists with 337.
Not bad for a rookie trying to fit in and find her way.
But the intensity and passion Clark plays with, even in practice, seem to have her more comfortable playing the leading role from the start of this season, too.
“She doesn’t waste reps and she literally embodies the value that how you do anything is how you do everything — whether it’s a ball-handling drill or a shooting drill or setting screens,” White said. “She approaches it with such a discipline that she doesn’t waste time, and I appreciate that.”
Clark, meanwhile, is just focused on winning games.
The Fever will play at her alma mater and Notre Dame in the preseason, with the real tests set to begin with Indiana’s season opener May 17 at Chicago and her old rival, Angel Reese. And you can bet, Clark will be just as eager to celebrate then as she was in practice.
“Don’t get me wrong, I love basketball, like that’s one of the most fun things in the world,” she said. “We had a great year and eventually getting away from that, I came to a point where I was itching to get back in here after like a month. So I’m happy to be back.”
Caitlin Clark, Angel Reese, and other athletes who are raising the sponsorship bar in women’s sports this year
10. Deja Kelly
Follower growth 2023-2024: 450,000
League: NCAA Basketball
Age: 22
Deja Kelly played NCAA college basketball for the North Carolina Tar Heels for four seasons and transferred to Oregon this year. Her star power on the court has earned her sponsorships from Dunkin’ Donuts and Tommy Hilfiger, where she was the first college athlete to sign a deal with the clothing brand. In July, she was invited to the White House for a celebration of Black women in sports.
9. Hailey Van Lith
Follower growth 2023-2024: 500,000
League: NCAA Basketball
Age: 22
Hailey Van Lith now plays for the Texas Christian University Horned Frogs, but previously played guard for the Louisiana State University Tigers women’s NCAA basketball team for three seasons. She has more than a million followers on Instagram and over 400,000 on TikTok, NIL deals worth nearly $700,000, and she has collaborated with Apple in social media posts this year.
8. Michelle Wie West
Follower growth 2023-2024: 600,000
League: Ladies Professional Golf Association
Age: 34
Now-retired professional golfer Michelle Wie West is no newcomer to the professional sports scene and the top-dollar deals that come with it. At age 10 she became the youngest person to earn a spot in the U.S. Women’s Amateur Public Links and was the youngest person to qualify for an LPGA event in 2003.
Wie West blogs about food under the cleverly named handle @whatdowieeat. She also has a designer line of jewelry with e-commerce jewelry brand Wove, which fans have spotted on Taylor Swift. Wie West has notched sponsorships from Nike and others over the years and is now involved in investing and entrepreneurship.
7. Kelley O’Hara
Follower growth 2023-2024: 750,000
League: National Women’s Soccer League
Age: 36
Kelley O’Hara plays defender for the U.S. National Women’s Soccer team and New York and New Jersey’s Gotham FC. The Olympic gold medalist and two-time Women’s World Cup champion announced her retirement in May of this year. Her final regular season with the NWSL will end in November. She was one of the first female athletes ever sponsored by athletic wear icon Under Armour.
6. Caitlin Clark
Follower growth 2023-2024: 900,000
League: WNBA
Age: 22
WNBA rookie Caitlin Clark may be one of the most talked-about athletes in the world. Her mere presence on the court has translated to broadcast viewership growth for both the NCAA and WNBA.
While at the University of Iowa, she had the fourth-largest NIL deal size among all eligible college athletes at $3.1 million and the most sponsorship deals of any other woman in NCAA basketball. Earlier this year, she inked an eight-year, $28 million deal with highly coveted sponsor Nike that far surpasses her annual salary of $76,000 from the Indiana Fever.
5. Jordyn Huitema
Follower growth 2023-2024: 1,100,000
League: National Women’s Soccer League
Age: 23
Jordyn Huitema is another one of the several National Women’s Soccer League players to make the top 10 ranking for social following growth in the past year. Huitema plays forward for the Seattle Reign as well as the Canada Women’s National Soccer Team. Huitema has 1.4 million followers on Instagram and another 1.3 million on TikTok where she shared a brand sponsorship with New Balance earlier this year.
4. Kerolin Nicoli
Follower growth 2023-2024: 2,900,000
League: National Women’s Soccer League
Age: 24
Brazilian native Kerolin Nicoli plays forward in the National Women’s Soccer League for the North Carolina Courage. The athlete was a member of the Brazilian women’s team in the 2024 Paris Olympics. She was named league MVP in 2023.
3. Flau’jae Johnson
Follower growth 2023-2024: 2,300,000
League: NCAA Basketball
Age: 20
Rapper and NCAA basketball star Flau’jae Johnson recently released an album inspired by her unique life as a performer and basketball player. The now-WNBA rookie went by the nickname “Bayou Barbie” in her previous role on the LSU women’s NCAA basketball team, but was unable to trademark it due to Mattel’s rights around the Barbie name.
The rising star’s business sense and growing personal brand are apparent in her estimated $1.2 million in sponsorship deals with companies like Powerade and Amazon.
2. Olivia Dunne
Follower growth 2023-2024: 2,400,000
League: NCAA Gymnastics
Age: 21
Olivia Dunne, better known as Livvy Dunne, is an American college gymnast who boasts a following of more than 13 million combined across Instagram and TikTok, where she shares brand-sponsored posts backed by athleisure brand Vuori and others. Dunne was thrust into virality last summer when TikTok user @h00pify shared a video about how she was “rizzed” up by Baby Gronk, which captured the world’s attention for weeks.
Now competing for Louisiana State University in NCAA gymnastics while pursuing a communications degree, she notched a Southeastern Conference championship win for the Tigers in the 2023-2024 season.
1. Angel Reese
Follower growth 2023-2024: 5,300,000
League: WNBA
Age: 22
She’s only in her first year with the WNBA, and Angel Reese already finds herself on 98.9% of fantasy WNBA rosters in ESPN’s fantasy women’s basketball. The 6’3″ power forward for the Chicago Sky made the WNBA All-Star team as a rookie. She’s racked up sponsorship deals with PlayStation, Wingstop, Coach, Amazon, and others.
Story editing by Carren Jao. Additional editing by Kelly Glass. Copy editing by Kristen Wegrzyn. Photo selection by Clarese Moller.
This story originally appeared on Collabstr and was produced and distributed in partnership with Stacker Studio.
Caitlin Clark, Angel Reese, and other athletes who are raising the sponsorship bar in women’s sports this year
In a year where two of the most prominent leagues for women’s sports shattered attendance and viewership records, the brightest stars are cultivating burgeoning audiences on social media—audiences that those players can now leverage for lucrative sponsorship deals as early as their college years.
Collabstr analyzed data from SponsorUnited to rank the athletes in women’s sports whose social followings grew across all platforms the most over the last year. The report analyzes social media engagement on Instagram, TikTok, X (formerly Twitter), and Facebook from January 2023 through February 2024. Overall, the athletes tracked by SponsorUnited shared more branded posts on Instagram than any other social platform.
The boom in audiences and the easing of name, image, and likeness rules to allow college athletes to accept sponsorships have made collegiate and professional athletes a hot commodity for brands looking to get their names in front of their fans. Sponsorship deals for women in the top five professional sports leagues grew 10.5% on average over the year, according to SponsorUnited.
A couple of the athletes who have racked up the largest audience gains on social media have transitioned from collegiate to professional leagues this year, carrying more eyeballs into leagues that have historically lagged behind men’s leagues in public interest and sponsorship dollars.
Superstar rookies Angel Reese and Caitlin Clark both clocked some of the largest social media following gains over the year ahead of making their debuts in the Women’s National Basketball Association. The star power of players like these has the attention of those at the topmost rungs of the organization.
“I think fans are finally knowing where to find us,” WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert said in a news conference prior to the July All-Star Game tipoff. “And I think this rookie class has brought a lot of attention and is lifting all of our games and all of our players.”
Reese and Clark are just a few of the young, talented athletes in women’s sports whose fan bases have been shifting from television to social media apps over the past year—and translating into high-paying sponsorship deals.
NIL
Why Penn State’s Stars Turned Down Big NIL Money—and What James Franklin Revealed Behind the Decision
In a college football era where star players are lured by massive NIL (Name, Image, and Likeness) deals, Penn State’s biggest names are making headlines for a very different reason. Drew Allar, Nick Singleton, and Kaytron Allen have chosen loyalty over lucrative offers—let’s explore what drove these standout athletes to stay with the Nittany Lions. […]

In a college football era where star players are lured by massive NIL (Name, Image, and Likeness) deals, Penn State’s biggest names are making headlines for a very different reason. Drew Allar, Nick Singleton, and Kaytron Allen have chosen loyalty over lucrative offers—let’s explore what drove these standout athletes to stay with the Nittany Lions.

Adam Breneman Spotlights How James Franklin’s Culture Is Winning Over Penn State’s Stars
Recently, analyst Adam Breneman took to Instagram to share a revealing excerpt from his interview with Penn State head coach James Franklin. The post quickly gained traction, sparking conversations across college football. Breneman highlighted how, despite the ever-growing influence of NIL money and the transfer portal, Penn State’s stars have chosen to stay in Happy Valley.
The Instagram post, which drew from Breneman’s “Next Up” show and the must-watch YouTube interview “The James Franklin Interview Every Penn State Fan Needs to Hear”, underscored Franklin’s culture-first philosophy.
Rather than focusing on financial incentives, Franklin has built a program centered on genuine relationships, trust, and personal growth. This approach, Breneman notes, is what keeps top talents like Allar, Singleton, and Allen committed to the Nittany Lions.
Franklin’s message is clear: Penn State is about more than just football- it’s about transformation. “I care so much about the kids, and their journey, and their experience… I still want it to be as transformational as we possibly can be here at Penn State,” Franklin said. This commitment to his players’ holistic development is resonating, even as rival programs dangle bigger paychecks.
The Power of Relationships Over Riches
For Franklin and his staff, success isn’t measured by the size of NIL deals but by the strength of the Penn State community. Every player on the roster, according to Franklin, is likely walking away from some amount of money. Yet, they remain because they value the unique experience and camaraderie that Penn State offers.
This culture-driven approach is rare in today’s college football landscape. While other programs overhaul rosters with transfers and chase the next big NIL signing, Franklin’s selective strategy and focus on continuity have fostered loyalty. Players like Allar, Singleton, and Allen aren’t just staying for another season—they’re investing in their growth as athletes and people.
Players consistently describe Franklin’s personal investment in their lives. Linebacker Kaveion Keys shared, “He’s going to recruit you different. He’s going to send you posts, quotes every day. He’s not going to stop calling, texting you, just seeing how you’re doing and just checking in on you. And that’s all that matters.”
KEEP READING: ‘It Feels Wrong’—Why Insiders Are Suddenly Putting James Franklin’s Penn State at No. 1, and Not Ohio State
Penn State’s ability to retain its brightest stars in the face of big-money offers is a testament to James Franklin’s culture-first vision. In an age where college athletes are often treated like commodities, Franklin’s commitment to relationships and transformation is proving to be Penn State’s greatest asset.
NIL
Cowgirl Softball advances to NCAA Regional final with record-setting offensive explosion
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – A 12-run third inning catapulted the No. 24 Oklahoma State softball team to a record-setting 16-8 win over Indiana in an elimination game played at Bogle Park Saturday. All 12 of OSU’s runs in the third came before the first out was recorded to set an NCAA Tournament record. It was […]

All 12 of OSU’s runs in the third came before the first out was recorded to set an NCAA Tournament record. It was the fifth-highest single-inning scoring output for any team in NCAA Tournament history and the most for OSU in any inning of any game since a 14-run inning against Omaha in 2018.
The Cowgirls’ total of 16 runs against the Hoosiers Saturday established a new school record in an NCAA Tournament game and OSU’s 18 hits set a season high and was just two short of the school record for any game.
The win advanced the Pokes (35-19 overall) into tomorrow’s regional final against Arkansas. The Cowgirls will need to beat the homestanding Hogs twice. The first game is scheduled for 3 p.m., with the if-necessary game starting shortly after its conclusion.
Additionally, the win was Kenny Gajewski‘s 400th as OSU’s head coach.
Indiana (34-20) got on the board with a pair of runs in the first inning, but the Cowgirls went on to claim their 13th win of the season in a game in which they trailed by two or more runs. Every OSU starter scored at least one run in the game, with Megan Delgadillo scoring three and Amanda Hasler, Rosie Davis, Tia Warsop and Rachael Hathoot scoring two apiece.
Hathoot set a career high with four hits in the game, with Delgadillo, Davis, Karli Godwin, Warsop and Audrey Schneidmiller adding multi-hit performances of their own. In a game loaded with offensive explosiveness, Hasler’s third-inning grand slam was the biggest blow of them all. It was her 16th home run of the year and OSU’s first grand slam of the season. It was the Cowgirls’ first grand slam in an NCAA Tournament game since 2022. Hasler’s slam was followed immediately by a home run from Davis just two pitches later.
RyLee Crandall picked up the win for OSU to improve to 7-4 on the year. Indiana was forced to make five pitching changes in the game, with Brianna Copeland (18-10) saddled with the loss.
For season-long coverage of Oklahoma State Softball, visit okstate.com and follow @CowgirlSB on X and @osusoftball on Instagram. For tickets, visit okstate.com/tickets
or call 877-ALL-4-OSU.
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | R | H | E | L | ||
Oklahoma State | 0 | 1 | 12 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 16 | 18 | 1 | 7 | |
Indiana | 2 | 0 | 0 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 8 | 10 | 0 | 3 |
WP: Crandall (7-4); LP: Copeland (18-10); SV: None
HR: OSU – Davis (9), Hasler (16)
HR: IU – None
Duration: 2:36; Attendance: 2,932
NIL
Ole Miss Softball Takes Down Grand Canyon 7-4 in Tucson Regional
TUCSON, Ariz. – The No. 17 Ole Miss softball team exploded for five runs in the fifth inning to rally and defeat No. 23 Grand Canyon, 7-4, and advance to the winner’s bracket in the NCAA Tucson Regional. Aliyah Binford went 3-for-4 with three RBI, while Ashton Lansdell launched a home run and delivered stellar […]
TUCSON, Ariz. – The No. 17 Ole Miss softball team exploded for five runs in the fifth inning to rally and defeat No. 23 Grand Canyon, 7-4, and advance to the winner’s bracket in the NCAA Tucson Regional.
Aliyah Binford went 3-for-4 with three RBI, while Ashton Lansdell launched a home run and delivered stellar defense to power the Rebels (38-17, 11-13 SEC) past Grand Canyon (46-7, 21-2 WAC) to victory.
The Rebels earned their first NCAA Tournament win since 2023 and improve to 7-2 all-time in NCAA Regional opening games.
The Rebels were held scoreless though the first four frames as the Lopes mounted a 3-0 lead, looking to extend the nation’s longest-active win streak at 23 games.
However, Lansdell sparked the comeback with a leadoff homer in the fifth.
Following some timely hitting from Angelina DeLeon and Jaden Pone, Lair Beautae delivered an RBI single to make it 3-2.
After a steal by Addison Duke, the Rebels used strong baserunning to pounce on a wild pitch and tie the game at 3-3.
Binford was next to the plate and delivered the go-ahead hit, placing a single through the left side for a 4-3 advantage.
Lexie Brady took over from there, driving in Binford with an RBI double off the right field wall to make it 5-3.
GCU threatened with two on and nobody out in the sixth and cut one from the Rebel lead, but Brianna Lopez limited the damage with an inning-ending strikeout.
Lopez finished the day after going 6.1 innings, allowing just three earned runs and striking out three to secure her fourth consecutive 100-strikeout season.
Nevertheless, Binford got it right back and more with a two-RBI single in the bottom half of the frame. Binford was set up by hits from DeLeon and Taylor Malvin, who each tallied two-hit days.
The Lopes had one last chance with a runner on third and one away in the seventh. Lansdell stepped up to deliver her second, game-changing play, as she made a spectacular diving catch and touched third upon landing for a game-ending double play.
The Rebels will take on host and national No. 13 seed Arizona on Saturday at 3 p.m. CT. The game will be televised on ESPN.
The 2025 NFL Draft Recap: Ole Miss Sees Multiple Rebels Selected
Ole Miss Lands Commitment From Sought-After Transfer Safety
Super Bowl Champion, Ole Miss Star Wide Receiver AJ Brown Earns Prestigious Honor
Follow Zack Nagy on Twitter: @znagy20 and Ole Miss Rebels On SI: @OleMissOnSI for all coverage surrounding the Ole Miss program.
NIL
Norman Regional Weather Delay: When Boston U. vs. Omaha game will resume
Saturday’s game between Boston U. and Omaha entered a weather delay in the third inning. It’s the second game of the day in the Norman Regional of the 2025 NCAA softball tournament, and it is set to resume at 7:05 p.m. ET. At the time of the delay, the two teams sat at a 0-0 […]

Saturday’s game between Boston U. and Omaha entered a weather delay in the third inning. It’s the second game of the day in the Norman Regional of the 2025 NCAA softball tournament, and it is set to resume at 7:05 p.m. ET.
At the time of the delay, the two teams sat at a 0-0 tie with one out in the top of the third inning at Love’s Field in Norman. Players then returned to the field for warmups at about 6:45 p.m. ET ahead of a 7:05 p.m. ET restart.
Omaha and Boston University lost their opening matchups in the Norman Regional, leading to the matchup in an elimination game. The Terriers suffered a run-rule loss against host Oklahoma while the Mavericks came up short in a 1-0 thriller against Cal.
Oklahoma and Cal got things started Saturday in Norman Regional action, and the Sooners’ offense broke out in a big way. Kasidi Pickering led the way with six RBI, including a grand slam as part of a six-run sixth inning for OU, as the Sooners pulled off a run-rule victory over the Golden Bears to advance to the Regional Final.
In addition to the grand slam, Pickering also had a solo home run to her name in addition to an RBI hit. Her approach at the plate paid off in a big way and has OU on the verge of another Super Regional berth.
“So she is just an easy watch, you know? Just really sees the ball well,” Oklahoma coach Patty Gasso said after the game. “She’ll identify balls and strikes very easily. You can hear it. But her hands are quick and her body is strong, and it looks, like you said, very simple. It does.
“It looks very easy, but she definitely works on it, hits a lot on her own. I know Gabbie does as well, and it takes that kind of effort and commitment and I think swinging so much, that’s why it looks easy because she does it so much.”
Boston U. and Omaha is the second game of the day at Love’s Field. The winner will advance to take on Cal in another elimination game afterward with a spot in Sunday’s Regional Final against Oklahoma on the line.
NIL
Kansas State University
CINCINNATI, Ohio – Behind five scoreless innings from Tazwell Butler and five runs batted in by David Bishop, K-State set a school record for most conference wins in a season en route to a 9-5 victory against Cincinnati Saturday afternoon at UC Baseball Stadium. With the win, the Wildcats (31-23) finish the regular season […]

With the win, the Wildcats (31-23) finish the regular season with a winning record for the sixth consecutive year, that includes a 17-13 mark in Big 12 play. The Cats’ 17 conference wins are the most in school history, breaking the previous record held by the 2013 team.
“Guys played well in a pressure situation, you always love to see that,” seventh-year head coach Pete Hughes commented. “They set the tone early. They didn’t let the first two games in the series beat them today, and we took the momentum right from the beginning of the game and kept it in large part by great offensive efforts, by Seth Dardar and David Bishop.”
Bishop, a native of Marietta, Georgia, achieved his career day with a three-run blast in the second – his fourth homer of the year. The senior first baseman ended the day going 2-for-5 with five RBI and two runs scored.
In addition to Bishop, seven other players contributed to the Wildcats’ 12 hits. Dardar posted a three-hit day (3-for-4) to pace the offense, that included his 12th homer, while Maximus Martin was 2-for-4 with two runs scored. The 1 through 4 spots in the lineup combined to hit .412 (7-for-17) with four RBI.
“Tazwell Butler was our MVP today. He settled in with a lead, let people make plays behind him, and got some strikeouts. He was our MVP today,” added Hughes.
Butler (1-1) was awarded his first victory at K-State, after firing five scoreless innings in relief of starter Lincoln Sheffield. The Sandy Springs, Georgia product limited the Bearcats (31-23, 16-14 Big 12) to just two hits in his 15th outing of the season.
K-State now turns its efforts towards the Phillips 66 Big 12 Baseball Championship at Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas, starting Wednesday, May 21. The single-elimination championship field of 12 will be announced at the conclusion of the conference’s final game on Saturday.
HOW IT HAPPENED
K-State jumped on the board in the first, as Keegan O’Connor drilled a two-out double off the wall in right field to drive in Martin from second.
The Wildcats continued to put pressure on early, exploding for five runs in the second.
Dee Kennedy was hit by a pitch to lead off the inning, followed by catcher Bear Madliak’s bunt for a single, before the duo each advanced 90-feet on a wild pitch. With runners in scoring position, Bishop doubled into right center to extend the lead, 3-0.
A sacrifice bunt moved Bishop to third, until Shintaro Inoue lifted a ball deep into left field, allowing Bishop to score.
Maximus Martin singled up the middle and came around the bases in the next at bat, as Dardar hit a towering shot off the basketball arena in right field to hand the Wildcats a 6-0 lead.
In the third, AJ Evasco and Dee Kennedy each walked and moved into scoring position with a sacrifice bunt from Madliak. With one out, Bishop belted his fourth homer of the year out to left center, making it a 9-2 ball game.
The Bearcats chipped away at the Cats’ lead, tallying a run in four of the first five innings to pull the score within four, 9-5.
Butler relieved Sheffield in the fifth and inherited a runner on first with no outs. The right-hander retired 11 consecutive batters to preserve the four-run lead.
INSIDE THE BOX
- K-State scored nine runs on 12 hits, committed no errors, and left eight runners on base.
- UC scored five runs on 11 hits with one error committed and six men left stranded.
- Eight players contributed a hit with three recording multiple.
- Dardar went 3-for-4 with two RBI and a run scored, followed by Bishop and Martin each with two hits.
- Bishop drove in a career-high five RBI, highlighted by a three-run homer in the second.
- Dardar and Bishop each homered, marking K-State’s 28th game hitting two or more.
- Sheffield was tagged for five earned runs on nine hits in his four innings.
- Butler fired five scoreless innings in relief, allowing just two hits and striking out five to earn the win (1-1).
- K-State scored all nine runs in the first three innings.
- Schultz (0-2) took the loss, surrendering five earned runs in 1 2/3 innings.
- Niehaus led UC’s offense, going 3-for-4, while Sefcik drove in a team-high two RBI.
TEAM NOTES
- The Cats’ 17th Big 12 victory marks the most conference wins in a season in school history.
- With the win, K-State tied the all-time series 3-3, while it was the Cats’ first win in Cincinnati.
- K-State has homered in 39 of 54 games this season, hitting multiple in 28 of those (25-3).
- The win marked the first regular season finale victory since 2017.
NIL
Breaking News: NiJaree Canady Signs $1 Million NIL Deal
By Jayden Mount via Extra Inning Softball, 16h ago NiJaree Canady Lands Record-Breaking New Partnership NiJaree Canady has officially changed the landscape of college softball. In 2025, she signed the sport’s first-ever $1 million NIL deal , aligning with The Matador Club and launching new branded apparel. The record-setting agreement puts Canady at the top […]

NiJaree Canady Lands Record-Breaking New Partnership NiJaree Canady has officially changed the landscape of college softball. In 2025, she signed the sport’s first-ever $1 million NIL deal , aligning with The Matador Club and launching new branded apparel. The record-setting agreement puts Canady at the top of the NIL charts and signals a major shift in what’s possible for women’s sports. This player spotlight breaks down Canady’s journey, what NIL means for softball, her record deal, the impact she has made at Texas Tech, and why this deal matters. Want access to more exclusive athlete stories and rankings? Become a…
Read more at Extra Inning Softball
-
College Sports3 weeks ago
Duke basketball's Isaiah Evans on 2025 NBA Draft early entry list
-
Fashion2 weeks ago
How to watch Avalanche vs. Stars Game 7 FREE stream today
-
High School Sports1 week ago
Web exclusive
-
Sports1 week ago
Princeton University
-
Sports1 week ago
2025 NCAA softball bracket: Women’s College World Series scores, schedule
-
Motorsports1 week ago
Bowman Gray is the site of NASCAR’S “Advance Auto Parts Night at the Races” this Saturday
-
NIL2 weeks ago
2025 Big Ten Softball Tournament Bracket: Updated matchups, scores, schedule
-
Motorsports2 weeks ago
MOTORSPORTS: Three local track set to open this week | Sports
-
NIL1 week ago
Patty Gasso confirms Sophia Bordi will not finish season with Oklahoma softball
-
Motorsports2 weeks ago
$1.5 Billion Legal Powerhouse Announces Multi-Year NASCAR Deal With Kyle Busch