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Can UMass sell hope? Why college football’s losingest program believes it can win

AMHERST, Mass. — It’s three hours before the spring football game, and tailgates have already started popping up. Kirt LaFrance unfolds his camping chair on a strip of grass. Bob Casaceli stirs a pot of chili and plops sliders on the grill. Country music blares across the parking lot. The Easter weekend crowd is predictably […]

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AMHERST, Mass. — It’s three hours before the spring football game, and tailgates have already started popping up.

Kirt LaFrance unfolds his camping chair on a strip of grass. Bob Casaceli stirs a pot of chili and plops sliders on the grill. Country music blares across the parking lot.

The Easter weekend crowd is predictably small — 228 fans in the bleachers at kickoff. But the despair from another losing fall subsided months ago, and winter, at last, has melted away. White magnolias are blooming, red buds are poking through branches and the football team has a new head coach.

Hope springs eternal. Even at UMass.

Since moving up from the Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) to the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) in 2012, the Minutemen have been, by far, the worst program. Their 26-122 record (.176 winning percentage) in 13 seasons is almost one victory per year below the second-worst team, Kansas. Their scoring differential (minus-2,467 points) is 400 points worse than the Jayhawks, 600 worse than New Mexico State and 800 worse than UConn and UTEP.

“We’re a joke,” said Corey Schneider, a co-founder of the Minutemen’s now-disbanded football NIL entity, The Midnight Ride Collective.

Schneider hears the punchlines nearly every time he introduces himself as a UMass graduate. One of the school’s most prominent sports alumni, ESPN writer Dan Wetzel, has quipped about merging rosters with UConn. A YouTuber who has visited nearly every FBS stadium dubbed UMass’ venue the worst in the country in a video viewed more than 3 million times.

Quinton Sales just shakes his head. As one of the captains during UMass’ FCS-to-FBS transition, he knew his team would ache through the program’s inevitable growing pains. But growing pains require growth, not double-digit losses to Buffalo and Northern Illinois like he withstood 12 years ago.

“No reason to be this bad for this long,” Sales said. “No reason.”

The explanation goes beyond the typical problems of losing programs: poor quarterbacking (UMass hasn’t had a passer with 10 touchdowns in a season since 2018), bad coaching hires (first-time flops Charley Molnar and Walt Bell, unsuccessful retreads Mark Whipple and Don Brown, who was fired last November), lackluster recruiting (one class ranked in the top 105 of the 247Sports Composite) and the instability of five coaching changes in 15 years. Deeper woes require deeper roots.

The trouble began, according to interviews conducted by The Athletic with more than a dozen UMass stakeholders, when a sliding FCS program jumped to the sport’s highest division without a plan, in a move its chancellor said might not last. The flagship university of the state with the nation’s highest median household income gave its front porch a bare-bones budget that made a future NFL head coach one of the lowest paid assistants in the nation. The Minutemen started from behind and never caught up.

Most losses by FBS teams since 2012

Team Wins Losses W% Avg. margin

26

122

.176

-16.7

38

117

.245

-13.4

44

110

.286

-10.5

46

107

.301

-10.2

46

105

.305

-12.1

51

103

.331

-7.6

44

103

.299

-11.2

56

102

.354

-6.4

54

102

.346

-10.2

50

102

.329

-9.2

63

102

.382

-8.1

When UMass prioritized the other revenue sport, men’s basketball, it doomed football to the purgatory of independence and years of laughers against Penn State (63-0) and Pitt (51-7), FIU (44-0) and Toledo (55-10) and even FCS programs Southern Illinois (45-20) and Maine (35-10).

“Frankly,” said booster Marty Jacobson, whose name adorns the football performance center and press box, “a lot of us are tired of losing.”

And they’re starting to do something about it.


The potential for disaster was evident long before the jokes. The proof rests near the back of a nondescript box in the tallest building on campus.

It’s part of a task force report submitted to UMass’ chancellor in 1996 as the school considered moving its up-and-down program to Division I-A, now called FBS:

If a decision is made to implement the move to IA, the move will most likely meet failure without full support of all parts of the University including: academic, student, administrative, and staff.

James Madison supported its move to the FBS in 2022; according to figures submitted to the U.S. Department of Education, the Dukes entered the Sun Belt with the largest athletic budget in the conference. They are 28-9 over three seasons. Georgia Southern supported its jump, too; its students preemptively approved a $75 semester fee to fund a potential bump up and have watched their Eagles become a regular bowl team. Liberty started with the sixth-highest football budget ($22.9 million) in the Group of 5 and has never had a losing FBS season.

UMass didn’t want to listen. The prescient warning was cut from the task force’s final version and is buried on the last page of a minority report, now housed in the W. E. B. Du Bois Library’s archives.

Though the Minutemen did not leap to the FBS then, they probably would have been better off if they had. Their athletic department was still buzzing after John Calipari led the men’s basketball team to that year’s Final Four, and football was about to peak by winning the 1998 FCS national championship and playing for another in 2006.

“If you had the right people in place with the right forethought, I think it would have been a home run,” said ESPN analyst Rene Ingoglia, UMass’ All-American running back in 1994-95. “They went the opposite way.”

When a football-only invitation to the Mid-American Conference came in 2011, the Minutemen weren’t ready. On the field, UMass didn’t move up with the momentum or roster depth of James Madison (a perennial FCS power), Appalachian State (a regular FCS playoff team) or Sam Houston (two years removed from an FCS title). The Minutemen went 23-22 over their final four FCS seasons.

Off the field, UMass had not sufficiently prepared to join the highest division. The necessary support was missing. Schneider, then a recruiting/operations intern, said it felt like the Minutemen were simply in the FCS one day and the MAC the next because he witnessed so little build-up.

“I would say that I think the institution as a whole and the athletics department were surprised by the level of investment and commitment it took to be relevant in the Football Bowl Subdivision,” said athletic director Ryan Bamford, who took over in 2015.

Though the school increased its football expenses by almost $2.2 million from 2010-12, UMass started from behind. In Year 1, its $750,000 assistants salary pool was seventh-lowest nationally and third to last in the MAC (ahead of only Kent State and Bowling Green), according to USA Today’s database. The next year, it was $200,000 behind FBS startup Georgia State. By 2015, the total coaching salary pool was $1.43 million — ahead of only Buffalo in the MAC and almost $1 million behind P.J. Fleck’s Western Michigan staff, according to the Knight-Newhouse database.

“I think the truth and the reality is that there wasn’t a ton of investment and resources at the time when that transition was made,” said former UMass tight end Adam Breneman, now a Front Office Sports podcast host and analyst for CBS Sports and Yahoo. “When you have position coaches making under $100,000 a year, you’re not going to be able to keep anybody in college football if they’re good.”


UMass is 0-14 against teams from the SEC since 2012. (Eric Canha / Imagn Images)

UMass’ all-time leading passer, Liam Coen, earned significantly less than that in 2014. His starting salary ($64,500) made him the lowest-paid quarterbacks coach in the FBS, according to USA Today’s database. Coen left his alma mater after two seasons to become an FCS coordinator at Maine. He developed into one of the hottest names in the NFL’s last coaching cycle and is now the first-year head coach of the Jacksonville Jaguars.

Other facets were similarly behind. Media guides list only four new staffers during the 2011-12 transition: a recruiting grad assistant, an assistant strength coach, an academic counselor and administrative assistant. Even with the additions, the Minutemen still had four fewer support staffers (11) than MAC colleague Northern Illinois.

UMass didn’t break ground on a football operations center until two years after the FBS move was announced. Sales and his teammates trained for a higher level of competition in the same weight room with the same strength coach.

“It just felt like a different mission in the same room,” Sales said.

UMass since its FBS jump

Season Record Scoring Off Scoring Def Wins

2024

2-10

110th

125th

Wagner, Cent. Conn. St.

2023

3-9

96th

133rd

Merrimack, Army, New Mexico St.

2022

1-11

131st

104th

Stony Brook

2021

1-11

126th

130th

UConn

2020

0-4

127th

122nd

2019

1-11

118th

130th

Akron

2018

4-8

35th

127th

Liberty, UConn, Charlotte, Duquesne

2017

4-8

47th

93rd

BYU, Maine, App. St., Ga. Southern

2016

2-10

110th

108th

Wagner, FIU

2015

3-9

108th

92nd

Buffalo, EMU, FIU

2014

3-9

78th

105th

Ball St., EMU, Kent St.

2013

1-11

123rd

98th

Miami (OH)

2012

1-11

124th

121st

Akron

The school’s on-campus home, McGuirk Alumni Stadium, was nearing 50 years old and didn’t have the press box or other infrastructure required to support a high-level program. The Minutemen chose to relocate games two hours southeast to the Patriots’ stadium in Foxborough.

The move was intended to reacquaint the program with Boston-area alumni while playing in one of the finest venues in the country. At the time, then-athletic director John McCutcheon called Gillette Stadium the football team’s home “for the foreseeable future.” Fourteen years later, Bob McGovern calls the decision a “disaster.”

“You ripped the team away from its fan base,” said McGovern, a 2005 UMass graduate who covered the program for the Maroon Musket.

Attendance figures reflected that. UMass’ average crowd (10,901) was fourth-worst in the FBS in 2012. The finale against Central Michigan drew an announced attendance of 6,385, meaning more than 90 percent of the 68,000-seat stadium was empty. UMass stayed in Foxborough the next season and continued playing select games there until 2018.

Football never got full support from academics, either. The faculty senate formed a committee to scrutinize the FBS budget and discuss alternative uses for the new expenses. If the program needed a vote of confidence after a 1-11 inaugural FBS season, then-chancellor Kumble R. Subbaswamy chose not to provide one.

“It’s a very easy matter,” he told The New York Times in 2012, “to one day say we won’t do it anymore.”


Though the school never pulled the plug on football, UMass’ powerbrokers pulled back during a fork-in-the-road moment a year and a half later.

A clause in its deal with the MAC essentially gave the school two options: become a full-time member of the conference or leave. Full membership would stabilize a 2-22 FBS program but push its men’s basketball program away from the Atlantic 10, a strong mid-major league that was poised to earn a record six bids in the upcoming 2014 NCAA Tournament (including UMass).

“At the time,” Jacobson said, “we looked at ourselves as a basketball elite.”

So UMass prioritized basketball, forcing football into independence. Difficulties swelled.

Seven years after the FBS transition, eight of the 10 on-field assistants made less than $90,000. A director of player personnel made less than $30,000 in base pay. A director of football operations earned less than $40,000.

UMass lagged behind in everything from dorms to travel, one former assistant said. The difference between UMass and Conference USA felt bigger than the difference between Conference USA and the SEC.

“It was frustrating to get blamed as a coach when everybody in the building knows it’s a resource issue, not a coaching issue,” said the former assistant, granted anonymity in exchange for his candor. “You’re really resourced like an upper FCS team.”

Lacking conference TV revenue, UMass helped fund the program by loading up on paycheck games against power-conference opponents — 19 of them over eight seasons as an independent (excluding the 2020 season that was shortened by COVID-19). The Minutemen lost them all by a combined score of 842-287. In 2016, UMass played Florida, Boston College and Mississippi State in the first four weeks and traveled to South Carolina in October.

“How do you expect to survive a season doing that?” asked Scott Woodward, a staffer from 2015-18 and backup quarterback on the 2006 FCS finalists.

Independence brought other challenges; there’s a reason Liberty, Army, BYU and New Mexico State have all joined leagues since 2022. Inconsistent schedules made it hard to forge rivalries or build rapports with regular officiating crews. Game-planning was trickier without common opponents to study or previous years to reference. With no real independent peers — Notre Dame is in a class by itself, and UConn’s football budget is 69 percent larger — there are no helpful comparisons. No best practices in staffing or infrastructure, no barometers to measure yourself against.

“It’s no-man’s land,” Bamford said, “and it’s lonely.”


The early-bird tailgaters never got much company outside McGuirk Alumni Stadium before last month’s spring scrimmage. The vibe before kickoff was relaxed enough that a woman could walk her dog behind the goalpost not long before kickoff. A stadium pulse video board graphic tried to enliven an audience of empty bleachers. Students had cleared out for the long holiday weekend, but that didn’t stop the farmers’ market from drawing a comparable crowd at the downtown common.

This isn’t a punchline. It’s the reality of a program that went 18-82 as an independent and, as new head coach Joe Harasymiak said, has left its fans “beat down for so long.”

It’s also a reality the Minutemen are confronting.

“We couldn’t keep doing the same thing and expecting different results,” Bamford said.


New UMass coach Joe Harasymiak has been an assistant at Minnesota and Rutgers since leading Maine to the FCS semifinals. (Kevin R. Wexler / USA Today Network)

Shutting down the program was never an option, Bamford said, regardless of how many times outsiders asked him about it. Neither was dropping back to FCS. In addition to damaging UMass’ brand, it would have hurt the institution’s bottom line; the school’s contribution to football is $2.5 million less in the FBS than FCS.

Bamford spent years searching for a football-only spot in a conference, but nothing materialized. UMass’ two viable considerations were full-time membership in Conference USA or the MAC. That meant revisiting the basketball-or-football debate at a campus where you’ll still find Marcus Camby jerseys (even at the spring football game).

Though football is the premier program at most schools, the Camby-Calipari basketball heyday remains UMass’ most prominent athletic success (the 2021 men’s hockey national title is up there, too). March Madness still gives mid-major schools a path to national relevance in a way MACtion does not, which is something broadcaster Josh Maurer said the school must consider.

“UMass has been that school in the past, and I don’t think it’s impossible to think that they can be again in the future,”  said Maurer, the “Voice of the Minutemen” from 2008-18.

The Minutemen considered it, then rejected it. A decade after prioritizing basketball at football’s expense, they made an about-face.

As bad as the football program has been, the sport’s national popularity still gives it the most upside as a university marketing tool. UMass’ neighbor, UConn, was similarly dreadful (4-32 from 2018-21) but won the Fenway Bowl last year. If the Huskies can play postseason football and make the NCAA tournament in basketball and hockey, why can’t the Minutemen be at least competent in all three? Why can’t UMass become competitive in the fluid MAC, which has had five different champions in the past five seasons?

Besides, focusing on basketball ignores how much the hoops landscape has changed. UMass’ glory days are almost 30 years in the past. The program hasn’t made the March Madness field in 11 years, and power conferences are squeezing out mid-majors. This season’s Atlantic 10 was, like the MAC, a one-bid league.

“We’re kind of leaning into being more of a football school,” said Patrick MacWilliams, the founder and director of The Massachusetts Collective, a hoops-first entity that absorbed football NIL late last year. “I think every school across the country is leaning that way, too.”

Whether UMass succeeds depends on how strongly the program is receiving the full support necessary to avoid more failure.

There are early reasons for optimism. Instead of entering the MAC with one of the smallest budgets, the Minutemen will rejoin with a financial advantage. Harasymiak will be among the MAC’s highest-paid coaches (average salary over five years: about $1.4 million). The overall coaching pool salary, Bamford said, will be the highest in the conference by about half a million dollars. UMass’ NIL budget — $2 million this season, $3 million next — is more than six times what it was in 2024 and expected to be tops in the MAC. The Minutemen launched a new fundraising initiative, the Script U Scholarship Society, to gear up for the revenue-sharing era expected to begin this year. Their 10-year-old football building is in the middle of a $2 million locker room renovation, and Harasymiak has revamped the nutrition program while hiring about 25 of the 30 football staffers.

“Those things don’t happen overnight,” Bamford said, “but that lack of success helped us go make the case (for change).”

Changing the biggest eyesore — a 17,000-seat stadium supporters concede is decades behind the times — won’t happen overnight, either. But the renderings sitting on Bamford’s desk show upgrades are a priority. The Minutemen are considering a short-term fix ($10 million in cosmetic renovations) while the university pursues a nine-figure public-private partnership to overhaul the venue and surrounding area.

“I’ve got to put asses in the stadium first,” Harasymiak said. “You’ve got to get people to come. That’s my job.”

Though none of UMass’ last four coaches won more than three FBS games in a season, Harasymiak has a profile that makes sense. The 38-year-old led another program in the region, Maine, to its first FCS semifinal appearance in 2018, then did more with less as the coordinator of top-20 defenses at Rutgers and Minnesota. He went to school 30 miles south at Springfield College and has recruited the East Coast for years. He’s embracing UMass’ reputation as a top-30 public institution by mining the nearby Ivy League in the transfer portal.

Most importantly, he has help. Harasymiak sensed it during the interview process when the athletic director, trustees and school chancellor who was inaugurated last year stressed how important it was to finally get football right.

“I knew that I wouldn’t be fighting alone,” Harasymiak said.

Even with that backing, the fight won’t be easy. There were more signs on campus for an undergraduate research conference than the spring game. A nonconference schedule set to lighten in future years has trips to Iowa and Missouri this September. Getting New England fans excited about playing directional schools in the Midwest will be a challenge. The stain of a dozen dreadful seasons won’t fade easily.

But look past the gravel road behind the Spartan home of UMass football, and you can envision a path toward respectability. There are buds of hope poking through at the worst program in the country.

“I say this kind of jokingly, and I’ve said this to a lot of people,” MacWilliams said. “We can’t get worse.”

(Top photo: Todd Kirkland / Getty Images)





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Florida Gators share statement on House v. NCAA settlement ruling

A new era of collegiate athletics will begin this summer after a landmark ruling on Friday. Following some significant changes in recent years with NIL, portal windows, unlimited transfers and conference expansion, the NCAA will now institute revenue sharing in July and phase in roster limits. Judge Claudia Wilken approved the deal between the NCAA, […]

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A new era of collegiate athletics will begin this summer after a landmark ruling on Friday. Following some significant changes in recent years with NIL, portal windows, unlimited transfers and conference expansion, the NCAA will now institute revenue sharing in July and phase in roster limits.

Judge Claudia Wilken approved the deal between the NCAA, its major conferences and lawyers representing all Division I athletes. The House v. NCAA settlement ends three separate federal antitrust lawsuits and will pay $2.776 billion in back damages over the next 10 years to athletes who competed at any time from 2016 through present day.

Beginning July 1, schools will be able to share $20.5 million with student-athletes. Football is expected to receive 75%, followed by men’s basketball (15%), women’s basketball (5%) and the remainder of sports (5%). The amount shared in revenue will increase annually during the decade-long deal.

Florida Gators athletic director Scott Stricklin released a statement Saturday on the House v. NCAA ruling.

“The University of Florida Athletic Association welcomes the recent court ruling allowing schools to directly share revenue with student-athletes. This decision marks an important step forward for college athletics, and we remain committed to supporting Gator athletes on and off the field. Beyond financial opportunities, the UAA will continue to provide world-class training, academic support, and career development to help our Gators succeed during their time at UF and well beyond.”

Roster limits, NIL clearinghouse

Roster limits are also set to be introduced. According to On3’s Pete Nakos, Wilken recently pushed back on the limits automatically being put in place, stating that the House v. NCAA settlement would not move forward if roster spots were not grandfathered in. NCAA and power conference attorneys, along with plaintiffs’ attorneys, agreed on a plan to phase in roster limits.

Under the plan, athletes who were cut from rosters will be eligible for reinstatement at schools’ discretion. It also permits athletes who leave or are not retained by their current school to keep grandfather status at a new school. Proposed rosters include football (105), men’s and women’s basketball (15), baseball (34), men’s and women’s soccer (28), softball (25) and volleyball (18).

The settlement also imposes new restrictions on college sports. An NIL clearinghouse will be established, titled “NIL Go” and run through Deloitte. All third-party NIL deals of $600 or more must be approved by the clearinghouse. If not approved, the settlement says a new third-party arbiter could deem athletes ineligible or result in a school being fined. 



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NCAA President, College Sports Commission urge new era in college athletics with House Settlement

The brand-new College Sports Commission, formed to be launched simultaneously upon U.S. District Court Judge Claudia Wilken’s long-awaited approval of the House Settlement, revealed on Friday night that it intended to begin its oversight of Name, Image and Likeness deals immediately. Meanwhile, NCAA President Charlie Baker heralded Wilken’s final approval as a pathway to change. […]

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The brand-new College Sports Commission, formed to be launched simultaneously upon U.S. District Court Judge Claudia Wilken’s long-awaited approval of the House Settlement, revealed on Friday night that it intended to begin its oversight of Name, Image and Likeness deals immediately.

Meanwhile, NCAA President Charlie Baker heralded Wilken’s final approval as a pathway to change.

“Approving the agreement reached by the NCAA, the defendant conferences and student-athletes in the settlement opens a pathway to begin stabilizing college sports,” Baker wrote in an open letter.

With Baker’s letter released almost exactly as the College Sports Commission revealed Major League Baseball executive Bryan Seeley as its CEO, it’s hardly happenstance that the CSC declared it intended to begin review of all NIL deals worth more than $600 today.

The organization posted the following on its now-public website:

“Starting June 7, 2025, NCAA Division I student-athletes must report third-party Name, Image and Likeness (NIL) deals with a total value of six hundred dollars ($600) or more in the aggregate. The College Sports Commission will utilize NIL Go, an online portal built with assistance from Deloitte, to determine whether third-party NIL deals are made with the purpose of using a student-athlete’s NIL for a valid business purpose and do not exceed a reasonable range of compensation. Additional guidance on third-party NIL deal reporting will be provided to student-athletes as their institutions are onboarded to NIL Go.”

Additionally, the CSC notes to visitors of its website that “It’s a new day in college sports. Schools across the country are now able to revenue-share directly with student-athletes.”

A Harvard Law School graduate who had spearheaded oversight matters for Major League Baseball, Seeley issued the following statement Friday night:

“I look forward to implementing a system that prioritizes fairness, integrity, and opportunity,” Seeley said, “while preserving the values that make college sports unique,

“I am energized by the work ahead and excited to begin building out our team.”

The group further declares, “College sports have a clear path forward toward a bright and stable future.”

Baker’s full letter is available via this link or below: 



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Five Huskies On Inaugural Opening Day AUSL Rosters

Story Links SEATTLE – Ali Aguilar, Jadelyn Allchin, Sis Bates, Victoria Hayward and Baylee Klingler are on opening day Athletes Unlimited Softball League (AUSL) rosters as the league begins its inaugural season today.   Aguilar and Hayward will compete for Talons, Bates with Volts and Klingler with Blaze. Allchin is […]

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SEATTLE – Ali Aguilar, Jadelyn Allchin, Sis Bates, Victoria Hayward and Baylee Klingler are on opening day Athletes Unlimited Softball League (AUSL) rosters as the league begins its inaugural season today.
 
Aguilar and Hayward will compete for Talons, Bates with Volts and Klingler with Blaze. Allchin is a reserve player and will open the season on the Talons. Washington is one of five programs with five or more players on a roster joining UCLA (7), Florida (6), LSU (6) and Oklahoma (5).
 
The Talons open the season versus the Bandits at noon PT on MLB.com in Rosemont, Illinois. Volts and Blaze open their seasons at 4:30 p.m. PT on MLB Network in Wichita, Kansas.
 
Major League Baseball announced last week that they will be investing in AUSL. In addition, ESPN Networks will broadcast 16 games throughout the season on ESPN2 and ESPNU, five games will be featured on MLB Network and all remaining games can be streamed for free (no subscription required) on MLB.com, MLB.tv and the MLB App.
 
AUSL will make a stop in Seattle later this summer as Bates’ Volts takes on Klingler’s Blaze July 11-13 at Husky Softball Stadium. Tickets are on sale now for the three-game series.
 
Throughout the 2025 season, AUSL will visit 10 cities before the teams will move to a home base in 2026. The league runs from June 7 through July 23 with the Championship Series taking place July 26-28 in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. To view the entire schedule, click here.
 
For more information on the UW softball team, follow @UWSoftball on X and Instagram.
 





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The Approval of Direct Pay

OAKLAND, Calif. – June 6, 2025, will be a day to remember for college athletics. After months of anticipation and many pauses in The House v. NCAA lawsuit, U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken, approved schools to begin paying their players directly, starting July 1. Wilken finalized a revenue-back pay settlement case that challenged long-standing NCAA rules […]

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OAKLAND, Calif. – June 6, 2025, will be a day to remember for college athletics. After months of anticipation and many pauses in The House v. NCAA lawsuit, U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken, approved schools to begin paying their players directly, starting July 1.

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Wilken finalized a revenue-back pay settlement case that challenged long-standing NCAA rules on player compensation. The decision will not only change how college athletes are paid moving forward, but will also provide $2.8 billion in back pay to those who missed out on earning opportunities between 2016 and September 15, 2024, before NIL rights were fully recognized.

With this new era, a few things are expected to change starting next month. So, what does it mean for schools being able to pay their players directly? Athletes will be paid for things like jersey sales, video game appearances, social media promotions, and more. Yes, athletes have been paid for these things, but through partnerships, sponsors, and NIL deals, not directly through their respective school due to them banning athletes from earning money this way.

Additionally, each school can pay up to $20.5 million per year to its athletes. That figure is capped at 22% of certain sports revenue and is expected to increase annually over the time of the 10-year agreement.

Even though a yearly pay will be given to schools to distribute among their athletes, this does not mean athletes will no longer be able to make money from their name, image, and likeness through third parties. Should athletes choose to make additional earnings from a third-party entity, like a business, brand, booster or collective, they must submit to the new Deloitte-run NIL clearinghouse for legitimacy.

With this revenue-sharing plan, scholarships will also change. Previously, the NCAA set scholarship limits for each sport. Now, those limits are being replaced by roster caps, meaning schools will decide how many players are on a team rather than how many scholarships can be given.

This change could allow schools to offer more scholarships overall, with a predicted estimate of 115,000 additional scholarships being given across Division I programs. However, there’s concern that some teams might shrink their rosters, affecting walk-ons or high school recruits.

To help ease the transition, the settlement allows schools to protect certain athletes already on the roster or those who were promised a spot. These athletes are called “Designated Student-Athletes,” and schools have the option to exempt them from the new limits – though it’s not mandatory.

To ensure this new system is under control, the Power Five conferences announced the creation of the College Sports Commission, a new organization responsible for making sure schools follow the rules. The commission will investigate violations, mange penalties, and handle disputes. Bryan Seeley, has been named the commission’s first CEO. Seeley was previously a Major League Baseball executive and federal prosecutor.

For now, all decisions have been made final, but there is major pushback, and some groups who objected to the ruling could file appeals, but they only have 30 days to do so.


Want to know more about the recent approval? Read this article!

Greg Byrne Announces Tide will Fund Revenue Sharing 

Alabama Evens up the Series Against Florida in 9-6 Game Two Win

Alabama survives Florida’s ninth-inning comeback attempt to even the series and force a rubber-match game three. 

Gallery Credit: Micah Nichols

 





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UCLA Catcher Hits the Transfer Portal

UCLA softball will have yet another role to fill in the offseason, as freshman catcher Maggie Daniel has announced she will enter the transfer portal. Daniel made 30 starts behind the plate for the Bruins. She had 204 putouts,14 assists, and a 1.000 fielding percentage. On the offensive side, Daniel held a.194 batting average in […]

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UCLA softball will have yet another role to fill in the offseason, as freshman catcher Maggie Daniel has announced she will enter the transfer portal.

Daniel made 30 starts behind the plate for the Bruins. She had 204 putouts,14 assists, and a 1.000 fielding percentage. On the offensive side, Daniel held a.194 batting average in 61 at-bats with seven runs and 10 hits to go along with six RBIs and two home runs.

UCLA finished its season with a 55-13 overall record. losing to Tennessee 5-4 on a walkoff in the ninth inning.

Daniel is the third Bruin to enter the portal following Kaitlyn Terry and Addisen Fischer

She confirmed the decision on social media Friday afternoon expressing her grattitude for an incredible freshman season, but is looking for a new home.

Daniel will have three seasons of eligibility remaining.

More News: UCLA Pitcher Addisen Fisher Joins Transfer Portal

More News: UCLA Starting Pitcher Kaitlyn Terry Hits Transfer Portal

More News: NiJaree Canady Signs Second Seven-Figure NIL Deal with Texas Tech



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How does the approved House V. NCAA settlement affect Penn State football? | Penn State Football News

Late on Friday night, a landmark change for collegiate athletics happened. Judge Claudia Wilken approved the House V. NCAA settlement, which outlines plans for colleges to pay their current and former athletes directly for their name, image and likeness (NIL), as well as to implement new roster limits for each sport. To enforce the settlement, […]

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Late on Friday night, a landmark change for collegiate athletics happened.

Judge Claudia Wilken approved the House V. NCAA settlement, which outlines plans for colleges to pay their current and former athletes directly for their name, image and likeness (NIL), as well as to implement new roster limits for each sport.

To enforce the settlement, the College Sports Commission (CSC) was established, which will ensure there’s compliance for revenue sharing, third-party NIL deals and the roster limits. It is a separate entity from the NCAA.

This settlement will bring college football into a new era, including Penn State. Here’s more on how it will affect Nittany Lions football.

New revenue sharing

Starting July 1, colleges will have the ability to pay their players directly from the revenue it receives. Each college opting into the settlement will have an estimated $20 million salary cap to spend for all of its athletic teams, but it’s unclear exactly how much the Nittany Lions will allocate to its football program.

It is clear, though, based on current estimates by NIL-NCAA and trends that the Nittany Lions will be using most of its available money on its football squad.

New roster limit

Within the settlement, football teams of colleges opting in will have a roster limit of 105 players with no limit on scholarships. The requirement will be grandfathered in, meaning any player who would lose a roster spot because of cuts, also known as “designated student-athletes,” don’t apply towards the roster limit for the same remainder of their Division I careers as long as their school allows.

As of now, Penn State has 126 players on its roster. It remains to be seen who could receive a scholarship and who could depart the program once the Nittany Lions have to get below the limit, but regardless, James Franklin has voiced his displeasure with the new rule long before it got approved.

“I don’t want to lose any of them,” Franklin said after the Blue-White Game in April. “I’d like for these guys to stay a part of the program until they graduate. A lot of these young men chose Penn State to get their degree from Penn State and play football.”

In prior years, football teams had a scholarship limit of 85, but they could have multiple walk-on players as well. Now, the entire roster is limited to 105 players.







PSU Football vs. Minnesota, Dom DeLuca celebration

Linebacker Dominic DeLuca (0) celebrates an interception during the Penn State game against Minnesota on Saturday, Nov. 23, 2024 in Huntington Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, Minn. The Nittany Lions defeated the Golden Gophers 26-25.




If Penn State ends up using all 105 scholarships that it can use under the new ruling, stories such as linebacker Dom DeLuca going from being a walk-on to a significant on-field contributor will no longer be an aspect for the team.

The new roster limit will go into effect at the start of this season, but with current walk-ons eligible to stay under the new rules, there might not be many players departing the program.

Payouts to former athletes

In addition to the revenue sharing with current athletes, the settlement also calls for former players to receive payouts for lost NIL during their careers.

As for ex-Nittany Lions, it remains to be seen who exactly will get these payments, but any player who held a scholarship from June 15, 2016, through September 15, 2024, is eligible to receive these payments.

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‘I don’t like it at all’ | Approved House v. NCAA settlement defies James Franklin’s previous comments

College athletics has changed — stop me if you’ve heard this one before.

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