Connect with us

NIL

Cameron Brink Net Worth and WNBA Salary

Cameron Brink’s rookie contract with the Los Angeles Sparks is just one part of her growing financial portfolio. In addition to her salary, Brink has signed several notable endorsement deals with brands like New Balance and SKIMS, helping to increase her wealth. Exploring Cameron Brink’s LA Sparks Salary Brink, the number two overall pick of […]

Published

on

Cameron Brink Net Worth and WNBA Salary

https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0omNCF_10rrucpz00

Cameron Brink’s rookie contract with the Los Angeles Sparks is just one part of her growing financial portfolio.

In addition to her salary, Brink has signed several notable endorsement deals with brands like New Balance and SKIMS, helping to increase her wealth.

Exploring Cameron Brink’s LA Sparks Salary

Brink, the number two overall pick of the 2024 WNBA draft, signed a four-year rookie contract with the Sparks worth $338,056.

Her annual salaries under this contract tally up to $76,535 in 2024, $78,066 in 2025, $85,873 in 2026, and $97,582 in 2027.

Per Ryan Stano of SI , Sparks was more than comfortable with how her salary has been structured with the Sparks. She said, “That is good money. That is a salary that we work very hard for.”

Nicolas Vega of CNBC also mentioned that she saves most of her earnings to ensure a better lifestyle in the future. She saved 90% of her rookie earnings.

Brink said in the interview: “I would love to spend more, but I definitely know the importance of saving and putting away that nest egg for me later in life. You only play basketball for so long. I’m definitely trying to capitalize on the money I’m making now.”

Inside Brink’s Brand Endorsement Deals & Net Worth

Brink’s earnings are not entirely dependent on the WNBA. She has inked several brand deals to supplement her primary source of income.

Brink’s net worth is estimated to be around $2 million in 2025 per SI , reflecting her multifaceted career both on and off the basketball court.

In August 2023, she became the first-ever female basketball player to sign with New Balance. As part of that partnership, Brink has featured in several high-profile campaigns.

Her most notable campaign was for the NB Academy Collection, which includes the Hesi Low v2 sneakers . She also launched the Fresh Foam BB v3 basketball shoes during the NBA All-Star Weekend in San Francisco.

She also collaborated with Urban Outfitters in September 2022 through an NIL partnership facilitated by the sports marketing NIL agency Postgame. The collaboration was part of their “Make Your Mark” back-to-school campaign, which had 29 NCAA Division I athletes from various sports and institutions, including Brink from Stanford Women’s Basketball.

During this campaign, she made a TikTok video with the caption “UO haul/ GRWM! Obsessed with these pieces and can’t wait to rock them this fall.”

She also partnered with SKIMS in 2024 as part of a multi-year collaboration between the brand and the WNBA.

Per On3’s Pete Nakos, she also inked an NIL deal with RITZ Crackers. She was among 16 elite college basketball players — eight men and eight women — selected to promote RITZ’s new Toasted Chips flavors: Sweet Habanero and Honey BBQ.

Late last year, she made an endorsement deal with Urban Decay and became their brand ambassador. She usually promotes their top-of-the-line products like the 24/7 Glide-On Eye Pencil and All Nighter Setting Spray.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

NIL

Amid North Carolina NIL Spending Rumors, Basketball HC Hubert Davis Faces Huge Expectations

A recent report from Inside Carolina set off alarm bells among college basketball fans when it claimed that North Carolina had allocated an astonishing $14 million to its basketball program. Even considering the NCAA’s new reality — full of massive NIL contracts, transfer portal decisions, and the upcoming result of the House vs. NCAA lawsuit […]

Published

on


A recent report from Inside Carolina set off alarm bells among college basketball fans when it claimed that North Carolina had allocated an astonishing $14 million to its basketball program.

Even considering the NCAA’s new reality — full of massive NIL contracts, transfer portal decisions, and the upcoming result of the House vs. NCAA lawsuit — this sum far exceeds what many expected.

Basketball Insider Says 2025 is the “Ultimate ‘No Excuse’ Year for Hubert Davis”

In the Inside Carolina reports, writer Greg Barnes explained that multiple sources have confirmed that the North Carolina Tar Heels have spent over $14 million in NIL deals for next basketball season.

College basketball analyst Tim Donnelly was surprised by the report. The host of “The Drive” on 99.9 The Fan, he stated that Davis is at a crucial moment in his leadership of the Tar Heels.

“This is the ultimate ‘no excuse’ year for Hubert Davis,” Donnelly explained. “This is the ultimate no-excuse year for the brain trust that is running UNC basketball right now.”

He continued, “With great money comes great responsibility,” he added. “If you give a coach $14 million to put together a roster and the roster is not stellar at the end of the year, you look at that coach and you go, ‘I don’t know if I’m ready to give you $14 million again.’ Right?”

Donnelly shared his vision for the future of Davis and his team after receiving $14 million.

“If you give a coach $14 million and they come back the next year and say, ‘Hey, I need another 14, $15 million,’ ‘Hey, what’d you spend the last 14 on?’”

“You better have a trophy, you better have something worth, you better have a long run into the NCAA tournament, cuz if not, I’m not giving you more money… You better win with $14 million, is what I’m saying, you better win with $14 million.”

RELATED: Analysts ‘Miffed’, Fans ‘Betrayed’ by Ven-Allen Lubin’s Decision to Transfer from North Carolina to NC State

According to the report, the $14 million sum is nearly triple what UNC Basketball spent last season.

The report also states that the expenditure includes adding six new players, including Montenegrin guard Luka Bogavac, guards Kyan Evans and Jonathan Powell, and center Henri Veesaar.

While massive NIL deals aren’t a new phenomenon in the world of college sports, this investment into Carolina basketball is a big move, considering they are also seemingly going “all in” on Bill Belichick and the football team.

College Sports Network has you covered with the latest news, analysis, insights, and trending stories in college footballmen’s college basketballwomen’s college basketball, and college baseball!



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

No. 1 College Basketball Recruit AJ Dybantsa Receives Massive $4.1 Million NIL Update

No. 1 College Basketball Recruit AJ Dybantsa Receives Massive $4.1 Million NIL Update originally appeared on Athlon Sports. BYU Cougars signee AJ Dybantsa is one to watch for as he enters college basketball next season. As a high school recruit, he was a five-star and rated as the No. 1 player in the class of 2025 […]

Published

on


No. 1 College Basketball Recruit AJ Dybantsa Receives Massive $4.1 Million NIL Update originally appeared on Athlon Sports.

BYU Cougars signee AJ Dybantsa is one to watch for as he enters college basketball next season. As a high school recruit, he was a five-star and rated as the No. 1 player in the class of 2025 (On3 Sports).

Advertisement

Back in December, the 6-foot-9 small forward announced his commitment to BYU, choosing the Cougars over three of college basketball’s biggest names: UNC, Kansas and Alabama.

Meanwhile, on Thursday, Dybantsa saw a significant jump in his On3 NIL valuation—up $274k to a total of $4.1 million.

We are living in a new era of college sports, with the leading beneficiaries being the players and the schools with big-market athletic programs. Including his landing of brand deals with Nike and Red Bull, Dybantsa is on a contract with BYU to receive over $7 million this season, according to Adam Zagoria of the New York Times.

The Cougars have emerged as an NIL juggernaut, especially after the hiring of head coach Kevin Young back in April. Young, in fact, was reportedly one of the biggest reasons Dybantsa elected to take his talents to Provo, Utah.

Advertisement

“A lot stood out during my visit,” the Massachusetts native said on ESPN’s “First Take.” “Obviously, coach Kevin Young’s there. My ultimate goal is to get to the NBA, and he coached my favorite player of all time, Kevin Durant.”

BYU Cougars signee AJ Dybantsa (3).Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

BYU Cougars signee AJ Dybantsa (3).Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

When asked who he models his game after, Dybantsa listed household names like Tracy McGrady and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, the current front-runner for finals MVP (-550, ESPN Bet).

“KD, my favorite player, I take a lot from his game, but I don’t think I play like him,” Dybansta added. “I think he really one of one… I play like a mix of Tracy McGrady and Shai.”

Related: BYU Basketball moves up in ESPN’s early top 25 preseason poll

This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 5, 2025, where it first appeared.



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

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 […]

Published

on


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.

 





Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Louisville NIL collective 502Circle to transition into marketing agency ahead of new era

502Circle will use relationships with sports agencies like CAA, Klutch Sports Group and Excel Sports Management to continue assisting Louisville coaches with roster construction.If the House settlement goes through, the NIL market will be more heavily monitored by a clearinghouse. All deals exceeding $600 will have to be reported to and pass through the clearinghouse.Since […]

Published

on

Louisville NIL collective 502Circle to transition into marketing agency ahead of new era


502Circle will use relationships with sports agencies like CAA, Klutch Sports Group and Excel Sports Management to continue assisting Louisville coaches with roster construction.If the House settlement goes through, the NIL market will be more heavily monitored by a clearinghouse. All deals exceeding $600 will have to be reported to and pass through the clearinghouse.Since 502Circle became the official collective of Louisville Athletics in 2023, five U of L sports teams have rose to, returned to or maintained national relevance. “We freaking crushed it.”A previous version of this story incorrectly detailed the operating structure for 502Circle beginning July 1. 502Circle will continue to operate independently of the University of Louisville. 502Circle, the official collective of University of Louisville Athletics since 2023, will be turned into a marketing agency to help support Cardinals sports, president Dan Furman told The Courier Journal.

Furman said his group will use relationships with agencies like CAA, Klutch Sports Group and Excel Sports Management to continue assisting Louisville coaches with roster construction. Otherwise, 502Circle will lean into its creative content arm, Floyd Street Media, and local business partnerships to help athletes grow their brands and maximize earning potential outside of revenue-sharing contracts with U of L, which are scheduled to start July 1.

“I still think the functionalities are gonna be pretty similar,” Furman said of pre- and post-July 1 502Circle. “It’s just gonna have more layers to it.”

This move is being done in anticipation of schools being allowed to pay college athletes directly. The House v. NCAA settlement, which received preliminary approval from Judge Claudia Wilken in October, would provide $2.8 billion in back damages to athletes who could not profit off their name, image and likeness between 2016 and Sept. 15, 2024 and bring revenue sharing to college sports starting July 1 with a projected cap for 2025-26 of $20.5 million per school.

“The contracting party with these athletes, as Dan talked about, has been 502,” Andrew Brandt, strategic advisor to Louisville Athletics and former Green Bay Packers vice president, told The Courier Journal. “That’s what we have, and we respect that, and are continuing that through July 1. From that point on, it’ll be more of a marketing-focused agency along with Floyd Street Media to make sure we’re providing the best opportunities outside of the rev-share agreement for our players. 

“… We’re confident that role can be filled here by the collective, which may again turn into a different name or different type of entity going forward.”

Louisville athletics director Josh Heird has “a lot of confidence” that Wilken will approve the agreement, but she has yet to issue a decision since the final approval hearing April 7. Should Judge Wilken deny the settlement, U of L will likely pay athletes anyway as permitted by Kentucky Senate Bill 3

“That’s probably the path we would go down,” Heird told The Courier Journal at ACC spring meetings last month. “Just from the standpoint of the more control you can have of the situation, the better. It’s been a little bit disjointed with outside entities, collectives, doing things. So I would presume that’s the road we would go down.”If the House settlement goes through, the NIL market will be more heavily monitored by a Deloitte-operated clearinghouse called “NIL go.” All deals exceeding $600 will have to be reported to and pass through the clearinghouse starting three days after the settlement is approved. The clearinghouse is intended to assess athletes’ fair market value.Officials from Deloitte have been sharing data with athletics directors and coaches over the last month or so, including: Those numbers are a far cry from the millions collectives have reportedly spent on athletes over the last four years or so. Restricting compensation in this way feels, to some, like a step backward.Louisville is adjusting by further emphasizing partnerships with businesses based in Louisville (like Buffalo Construction, The Galt House, L&N Federal Credit Union, Tom Drexler Plumbing, Angel’s Envy and Glow Brands) and upping athlete deliverables.

“(The clearinghouse) won’t necessarily impact how we spend,” Furman said. “It’s gonna impact how we operate. So we’ll just have to be more diligent with the reporting process. We’ll have to be more diligent with the deal structure. Like, make sure that what the athlete is doing for the money is more elaborate.”

Since 502Circle became the official collective of Louisville Athletics in 2023, five U of L sports teams have rose to, returned to or maintained national relevance.

Cardinals volleyball played for a national championship in 2024. Baseball will play in its first super regional since 2022 this weekend after missing three of the last four NCAA Tournaments. Football, men’s basketball and women’s basketball are all in ESPN’s way-too-early preseason top-25 polls.

As the revenue-sharing era of college sports looms, schools across the country are still trying to figure out what it’ll look like. But 502Circle and the University of Louisville have experience navigating uncharted territory en route to success.

“We freaking crushed it the last few years,” Furman said. “Like, has it been rocky? Yeah, 100%. Everyone’s trying to figure out the rules, trying to figure out what’s going on. But, golly, have we crushed it.”

Reach college sports enterprise reporter Payton Titus at ptitus@gannett.com, and follow her on X @petitus25.

Continue Reading

NIL

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. […]

Published

on


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.



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

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 […]

Published

on

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_.

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending