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Central Michigan University

CLEVELAND, Ohio – Central Michigan Softball had their name on five spots in the post-season awards for the 2025 season.   Carly Sleeman and Mackenzie Langan were honored as First Team All-MAC members after stellar years in MAC play.   Sleeman ends her regular season as a sophomore posting an impressive .390 batting average which […]

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CLEVELAND, Ohio – Central Michigan Softball had their name on five spots in the post-season awards for the 2025 season.
 
Carly Sleeman and Mackenzie Langan were honored as First Team All-MAC members after stellar years in MAC play.
 
Sleeman ends her regular season as a sophomore posting an impressive .390 batting average which is 15th best in the conference. Sleeman posted high offensive numbers all season for the Chippewas, including 30 hits in MAC play, four doubles, nine home runs, 27 RBI and slugged .792 across 25 games played.
 
Against Bowling Green this season, Sleeman charted her 48th RBI of the 2025 year – the best in a single season in program history.
 
In MAC play, Sleeman threw four runners out who attempted to steal on her, holding her opponents to just nine stolen bases across 25 games. Three of the four runners caught by Sleeman had been caught one time in the entirety of the 2025 season – by the Chippewa catcher.
 
In twelve different MAC games, there was not one runner who even attempted to steal on Sleeman.
 
The last Chippewa catcher to earn first team honors was Masion Kalina in 2018.
 
Mackenzie Langan emerged as not only a strong arm for the Chippewa squad, but also as a perennial arm in the MAC. Langan boasts a 2.03 ERA in conference play which is second best in the conference through the 25 games played for CMU.
 
Langan collected nine wins in her 10 games started for CMU through MAC play with 65.6 innings pitched, allowing just 61 hits, good for 10th best in the conference. The junior struck out 53 conference foes, 11 of which were strikeouts looking. Holding her opponents to just a .241 batting average, Langan truly emerged as one of the best in the MAC earning her first team honor.
 
Langan is the first pitcher for CMU to be named First Team All-MAC since Grace Lehto earned the honor in the 2023 season.
 
Earing Second Team All-MAC honors were sophomore Grace Koenig and freshman London Williams.
 
Koenig, who earns the spot as a third baseman for the Chippewas hit .364 in MAC play, with 24 hits, 16 runs scored, five doubles, a triple and a home run with 13 RBI.
 
The last third baseman to earn a post season honor for CMU was Amy Hudson in 2008.
 
Serving as the designated player for CMU all season, freshman London Williams has already established herself as one of the greats in Chippewa softball from an offensive standpoint. Williams posted a .338 batting average in conference play with 27 hits, six doubles, seven home runs.

Williams’ offensive numbers were not only impressive on the Chippewas’ team, but also throughout the MAC.

 

Of all players, Williams ranked in the top 25 in seven categories through MAC play – the most by any freshman in the conference. Williams total for home runs, slugging percentage, OPS, walks and hit by pitch totals, doubles, on-base percentage and runs scored rank her in that top 25.

 

Her batting average and total number of hits rank her in the top 30 in the conference.

 

These numbers earned Williams not only a Second Team All-MAC honor, but also a spot on the All-Freshman team.

 

Three CMU Softball players have ever tagged a spot on either First or Second Team All-MAC and a spot on the All-Freshman team in the same season: London Williams (2025), Allison Curtis (2016) and current assistant coach for CMU, Brittini Merchant (2008).

 

Maddison Diekman also earned a spot on the All-Freshman Team after her standout year at the plate and defensively. Starting every MAC game as the Chippewa shortstop, Diekman boasted a .957 fielding percentage with 32 putouts, 34 assists over 69 chances.

 

At the plate, Diekman served as both the leadoff and in the nine-hole for CMU in her freshman season.

 

Diekman posted a .302 batting average in conference play, charted 16 hits, three doubles with eight RBI. Diekman also drew eight walks for CMU with four stolen bases.

 

The two earning the honor marks the first time in program history that the Chippewas have had two freshmen named to the All-Freshman team, with 12 total honorees in program history. Most recently when Carly Sleeman earned the honor in the 2024 season.

 

Team 47 will start the Mid-American Conference Tournament on Wednesday, May 7th in Akron, Ohio. The Chippewas enter the tournament as the No. 3 seed and will face NIU, the No. 6 seed for their first game.

 

For the latest news and updates on CMU Softball, follow the team on X (@cmusoftball) and Instagram (@cmichsoftball).

 

 



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Boogie Fland shocks college basketball with NIL power move

Boogie Fland isn’t just running it back. He’s cashing in. After testing the NBA Draft waters, the former McDonald’s All-American stunned the college basketball world by announcing his return—not to Arkansas, but to Florida. And while his decision boosts the Gators’ title odds, it also signals a seismic shift in college sports: NIL is now […]

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Boogie Fland isn’t just running it back. He’s cashing in.

After testing the NBA Draft waters, the former McDonald’s All-American stunned the college basketball world by announcing his return—not to Arkansas, but to Florida. And while his decision boosts the Gators’ title odds, it also signals a seismic shift in college sports: NIL is now the game within the game.

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According to CBS Sports, Fland is set to receive a reported $2 million NIL package, placing him among the highest-paid college athletes in the country. That figure isn’t just headline-worthy—it’s history-making. For Florida fans, it’s a statement that the Gators are not just building a contender, they’re building a brand.

Fland, a 6-foot-3 guard, averaged 15.1 points and 5.7 assists in just 18 games last season before a hand injury cut his year short. Despite limited action, his efficiency and poise on the court caught national attention—and apparently, deep-pocketed NIL investors too.

Mar 20, 2025; Providence, RI, USA; Arkansas Razorbacks guard Boogie Fland (2) controls the ball during the second half against the Kansas Jayhawks at Amica Mutual Pavilion. Mandatory Credit: Eric Canha-Imagn ImagesEric Canha-Imagn Images

Mar 20, 2025; Providence, RI, USA; Arkansas Razorbacks guard Boogie Fland (2) controls the ball during the second half against the Kansas Jayhawks at Amica Mutual Pavilion. Mandatory Credit: Eric Canha-Imagn ImagesEric Canha-Imagn Images

Now paired with Ivy League standout Xaivian Lee, Florida’s backcourt suddenly looks like one of the most dynamic in the country. Head coach Todd Golden, fresh off an NCAA Tournament title, isn’t just stacking talent—he’s stacking momentum. Fland’s NIL deal confirms what many suspected: Florida isn’t rebuilding. They’re reloading.

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The implications are massive. Fland’s return to college over a potential pro payday reflects how NIL has shifted the power dynamic. With millions on the table and prime-time exposure in a major conference, elite players like Fland no longer have to choose between the spotlight and the salary.

Expect the O’Dome to be buzzing this season—not just with fans, but with scouts, brands, and cameras.

Boogie bet on himself. Florida just made sure he got paid.

Related: Former NBA veteran takes over at Notre Dame in historic NIL move

Related: NFL QB sends strong message after losing NIL millions



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Rachel Roupe pushing Liberty softball to new heights

In today’s age of college athletics with the transfer portal and NIL, it is becoming increasingly unusual for a college athlete to stay their entire career at one school. Factor in one of the top athletes in the country competing at a non-Power Four program and it is virtually unheard of for them to not […]

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In today’s age of college athletics with the transfer portal and NIL, it is becoming increasingly unusual for a college athlete to stay their entire career at one school. Factor in one of the top athletes in the country competing at a non-Power Four program and it is virtually unheard of for them to not flirt with the transfer portal and a potential big pay day. The expectation is for the athlete to chase the money and spotlight playing at a name-brand school brings.

Enter Rachel Roupe. The Liberty outfielder was a top recruit from Sharpsburg, Maryland in high school, ranked as a top 100 national prospect by Extra-Innings Softball. She committed to and signed with Liberty and head coach Dot Richardson out of high school. As her career progressed, it would have been easy, even expected, for the all-star to test the transfer portal waters, but she elected to stay with the Flames and continue to push the program to new heights.

Roupe attended some of Liberty’s camps while she was younger, and the Liberty coaching staff immediately saw the talent she had. She had opportunities to play for other schools throughout the recruiting process in high school, but Roupe was focused on Liberty and wanted to play for the Flames.

“There were other schools pursuing me, but I wasn’t pursuing them that much,” Roupe said of her recruitment. “I really wanted to come here.”

Originally recruited as a pitcher, Roupe switched to an outfielder late in her high school career, a spot that has stuck through her college career. She has been a starter in right field since she arrived on campus as a freshman in 2022. She earned D1Softball.com National Freshman of the Week honors late in her first season. She would be named second-team all-conference and named to the ASUN All-Tournament team while helping the Lady Flames to the ASUN Championship and a win over Georgia in Regional play. It was the first of four Regional appearances for Roupe and Liberty.

As a sophomore, she took another step being named first team all-conference and earning National Player of the Week during the season. She finished the year batting .317 with nine doubles, two triples, 15 home runs, 50 RBI, and 41 runs scored. Roupe and the Lady Flames received an at-large bid into Regional play where Liberty would take down No. 2 national seed UCLA. Roupe scored both Liberty runs in the 2-1 victory, including her iconic slide in the 7th to score the winning run.

Last year, Roupe and the Lady Flames won CUSA in their first year in the new league and came just one out from eliminating Georgia and winning the Athens Regional. She batted .362 with 17 doubles and 17 home runs to go along with 42 RBI and 48 runs. A now four-time all-conference outfielder, including three straight first team selections, and 2025 CUSA Player of the Year, Roupe saved her best season for last. She has set Liberty program single season marks in home runs and RBI this season.

This past weekend in the College Station Regional, Roupe refused to let her team be eliminated. She had multiple highlight reel plays from her position in right field. She also hit three home runs in the two games on Sunday in the Regional Final against No. 1 Texas A&M. Her grand slam in the first game Sunday gave the Flames a 6-0 lead and felt like at the time it was the punctuation mark on the way to making history and reaching the Super Regionals. That was before the Aggies made a comeback and forced a winner-take-all Game 7 Sunday night. Roupe hit two home runs in the Liberty win, including a three-run shot in the sixth inning that proved to be the difference maker.

“The legacy was so evident,” Richardson said of Roupe following her performance in College Station this past weekend. “For her to have the two home runs she did set the tone. When you have a talented athlete like Rachel Roupe who is locked in, it is historic. That’s what happened, history was made because she lifts up other players on the team.”

Roupe ranks first or second on nearly every offensive statistical category in the Liberty career annals including home runs, total bases, extra base hits, walks and RBI. She’s been to four NCAA Regionals and now prepares to compete in Liberty’s first ever Super Regional. Roupe and the Lady Flames will take on No. 16 Oregon in the best of three Super Regional series beginning Friday night at 10 p.m. from Eugene, Oregon. Two more wins and Roupe will be able to finish her storied Liberty career in the Women’s College World Series.

“She is a pathfinder. She is a pioneer,” said Coach Richardson of Roupe. “That’s what puts a program on the map. She could be anywhere, and she is making her statement here. Right away I knew she was a player I wanted to coach. She is a great role model. That is why I’m so excited for her, proud of her, because she is going to shape the lives of so many people. Young girls look up to her. She is deserving of it. It’s not just on the field; it is off it. She is a superstar.”

Earlier this week, Roupe was named to the Softball America All-American Team as a second team selection. Roupe was one of only three players selected to the first or second team from a non-Power Four conference team. Just a few hours later she was drafted by the Florida Vibe, a professional softball team based out of Bradenton, Florida. Current Liberty head coach Dot Richardson will serve as the Vibe’s head coach beginning this year while former Liberty players Emily Kirby and Kara Canetto play for the Vibe.

Roupe did not chase the money. She did not chase the limelight. Instead, she did the opposite. She stayed true to her commitment to Liberty and Dot Richardson. She sought to bring other top talent from around the country to join her and help build the Flames into that household softball name.

“When God gives you something good, you don’t have to go searching for better,” Roupe said. “The grass isn’t always greener. I’ve heard crazy stories from girls that come from those schools that are here now. It’s like why would I leave what I have now? To have the confidence that my coaches have in me as a player, that is a goal that most players want in their life when they get in a program that trusts them and are going to let them work through kinks or things that aren’t working out. I know they have my back. They’re going to keep putting me in the situation until I succeed. They’ve trusted me. They’ve believed in me, that alone was enough for me to stay.”

When she finally hangs the cleats up for the final time during her playing career at Liberty, she will leave a lasting legacy. Roupe will be a no doubt first ballot Hall of Famer for Liberty Athletics. She will forever be known as one of the greatest to ever suit up for Liberty softball. She will always be linked to the first team to ever reach the Super Regionals. Rachel Roupe. An all-time Liberty great.



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NCAA Postseason Priority Ticket Requests Available

Story Links MORGANTOWN, W.VA. – As the West Virginia University baseball team continues to stay in the hunt for the 16th NCAA Tournament bid in program history, the Mountaineer Ticket Office has made online NCAA postseason tickets requests available, should the Mountaineers be selected to host an NCAA Regional, May […]

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MORGANTOWN, W.VA. – As the West Virginia University baseball team continues to stay in the hunt for the 16th NCAA Tournament bid in program history, the Mountaineer Ticket Office has made online NCAA postseason tickets requests available, should the Mountaineers be selected to host an NCAA Regional, May 30-June 2 and/or Super Regional, June 6-9 at Kendrick Family Ballpark.

All 2025 WVU Baseball season ticket holders can now log in to their account at WVUGAME.com to request priority postseason tickets. Due to the NCAA required ticket allotments for the participating teams, season ticket holders may request up to six (6) Regional all-session tickets and up to four (4) Super Regional all-session tickets from May 19 through May 21, with seat locations subject to availability. Seat locations are subject to change from the regular season and will be filled with the best available ticket locations (reserved seat or standing room only) based on MAC priority. MAC members who are not season ticket holders may request tickets from May 22 through May 25 at 5:00 p.m., pending available inventory. These requests can be made by logging into their account at WVUGAME.com, navigating to “Event List” under the “Buy Tickets” tab, then selecting “Baseball” and “Baseball Post-Season Tickets.” Additional non-season ticket requests are subject to availability and will be evaluated based on MAC annual membership levels and the priority points ranking within each level.

The priority deadline for season ticket holders to request Regional and Super Regional tickets is Wednesday, May 21 at 5:00 p.m., while the deadline for MAC members to request Regional and Super Regional is Sunday, May 25 at 5:00 p.m.

Ticket options and prices for Regional all-session passes are listed below:

  • Reserved All-Session – $90
  • Standing Room Only All-Session – $72

Ticket options and prices for Super Regional all-session passes are as follows:

  • Reserved All-Session – $60
  • Standing Room Only All-Session – $45

All-session packages will include tickets for all games played at the ballpark (including Monday if necessary). All priority ticket requests will be allocated with the best available section based on MAC annual membership level and priority points. If tickets are not available at the price level requested, tickets will be allocated at the next highest price level. Ticket inventory is limited, and requests are not guaranteed.

Parking passes will be available for $20 per day by advance request. All requests are subject to availability and will be evaluated based on MAC annual membership levels and priority point rankings within each level.

Fans will only be charged for their ticket request if WVU is selected to host that round. All tickets will be e-mailed to the customer e-mail address provided during the request.

Information on any available general public ticket sales through the Mountaineer Ticket Office will be released upon the completion of the priority ticketing process. 

  

Tickets for full-time WVU students will be available on game day at the Kendrick Family Ballpark ticket windows. Tickets will be free for WVU students with a valid student ID only to games that WVU plays in. Students from other participating schools presenting a valid student ID from their institution can purchase a $15 general admission/standing room only ticket at the Monongalia County Ballpark ticket windows on game day.

 

 



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Top-ranked Georgia commit signs NIL representation deal with Rosenhaus Sports

Georgia Bulldogs defensive line commitment Seven Cloud has been committed to Georgia since Dec. 2024. Cloud is the nation’s top-ranked junior college prospect. The 6-foot-4, 300-pound defensive lineman plays JUCO for Butler Community College in El Dorado, Kansas. Cloud is from Atlanta, Georgia, and played high school football for McEachern High School. He’s ranked as […]

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Georgia Bulldogs defensive line commitment Seven Cloud has been committed to Georgia since Dec. 2024. Cloud is the nation’s top-ranked junior college prospect. The 6-foot-4, 300-pound defensive lineman plays JUCO for Butler Community College in El Dorado, Kansas.

Cloud is from Atlanta, Georgia, and played high school football for McEachern High School. He’s ranked as a three-star recruit, but could provide an immediate impact as a member of the class of 2026. Cloud posted 5.5 sacks and 48 tackles during his first season with Butler in 2024.

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Now, Cloud has signed a name, image and likeness representation deal with Rosenhaus Sports, which could be a sign indicating that his recruitment is changing or that he’s looking to maximize his NIL earnings.

Georgia recently had a major recruiting miss with the No. 1 recruit in the country, Jackson Cantwell, who committed the Miami Hurricanes. Cantwell was also represented by Rosenhaus Sports and sports agent Drew Rosenhaus.

Despite Cloud closing his recruitment in April, it still appears that he’s considering other options. Cloud has upcoming official visits with South Carolina, Florida State, LSU, North Carolina and Georgia, per 247Sports.

This article originally appeared on UGA Wire: Top UGA commit signs NIL representation deal with Rosenhaus Sports



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Longshore and McKnight: College Sports Commission attempts to restore balance, transfer portal diminishing fan enthusiasm for recruiting, and more…

On today’s episode of Longshore and McKnight, John and Barry wade into the looming transformation of college athletics governance, discussing a proposed College Sports Commission drafted by power conference officials to curb state-level NIL law circumvention. Barry McKnight noted the urgency: “It’s got to happen sooner, much than way later,” as July 1 looms for […]

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On today’s episode of Longshore and McKnight, John and Barry wade into the looming transformation of college athletics governance, discussing a proposed College Sports Commission drafted by power conference officials to curb state-level NIL law circumvention.

Barry McKnight noted the urgency: “It’s got to happen sooner, much than way later,” as July 1 looms for implementation tied to the House settlement. The proposed commission would require schools to waive legal rights and comply with unified rules or face exclusion from NCAA membership, aiming to restore competitive balance and enforceable standards amid concerns that college sports are becoming unsustainable.

Catch live episodes of Longshore and McKnight daily on YouTube, Spotify, and on Yellowhammer News🎙️🔊

The show also tackled skyrocketing college football ticket prices, dwindling fan enthusiasm for recruiting, and the future of Auburn athletics. Brian Matthews of AuburnSports.com joined the show, citing how NIL and the transfer portal have “taken away some of that interest” from traditional recruiting excitement. Matthews praised Auburn’s roster rebuild and forecasted an 8–9 win season is critical for Hugh Freeze to avoid fan unrest. Alabama and Auburn baseball postseason hopes, NFL scheduling quirks for the Jaguars, and even Charles Barkley’s NIL skepticism rounded out the show.



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College football CEO another NCAA failure waiting to happen

JD Vance fumbles Ohio State title trophy at White House event Ryan Day and the Ohio State Buckeye’s football team were honored at the White House for their 2024 national championship victory. Let me try and understand this, because I’m a little fuzzy after decades of deceit and distrust.   It now appears that college […]

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Let me try and understand this, because I’m a little fuzzy after decades of deceit and distrust.  

It now appears that college football is headed toward the implementation of a commissioner, a czar of sorts who will control enforcement and whose rulings will be final.

Unless, of course, you want to head to arbitration.  

A commissioner, or CEO or whatever you want to call him or her, whose office will control oversight of all things NIL and declare what deals are within fair-market range. 

In a free-market economy.

A commissioner who, despite this brand new power and influence given to them by university presidents (see: fox, meet henhouse), will have zero – and when I say zero, I mean zero – control over player movement. 

The most pressing problem for which there is no legal answer, short of players becoming employees and collectively bargaining.

A commissioner who will be paid a boatload of cash to do, in theory, what current NCAA president Charlie Baker should’ve been doing all along — if given the opportunity.

Apparently, a man who ran one of the largest state budgets as governor of Massachusetts needs another multimillion dollar salaried colleague to pull college sports from its self-induced mess.

I have no doubt this, too, will be a resounding success. That’s sarcasm, everyone. 

Want to blame someone for this never-ending, unwieldy morass? Blame the eggheads at the very top of the food chain. 

The same university presidents that have no business sticking their noses in the business of college sports, but do so, anyway. Why, you ask? 

Because the last thing they need is for athletics to encroach onto academics, for athletics to need financial support from the university. Most university presidents are hired for fundraising first, and everything else second. 

That everything else doesn’t include paying for athletics.

So don’t blame SEC commissioner Greg Sankey, or Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti for the ills of college football. They’re doing what their respective university presidents – their bosses who sign their paychecks – tell them to do. 

The same university presidents who have lost in nearly every single legal case brought against their association of schools.

What’s constantly lost in these inevitable screwups is the NCAA is nothing more than a conglomeration of 300-plus university presidents, each with egos the size of Desmond Watson. These presidents vote each other and their subordinate athletic directors into various committees and subcommittees that eventually decide Boise State will be placed on probation for buying a recruit a bagel.

Or that North Carolina won’t be placed on probation because years of fake classes to keep athletes eligible were – and I still can’t believe I’m writing this – also available to the rest of the student population.

So excuse me if I’m a little hesitant about this latest iteration of change from a group of men and women at the highest level of higher education. The same group that not long ago swore up and down there would never be “second semester” football.

Now the College Football Playoff ends in late January, well into the second semester. And competes for television ratings against the big, bad NFL ― a losing proposition by anyone or anything that has tried.

The same university presidents who not long ago swore up and down that pay for play would never work for any number of reasons, the least of which was Title IX. There’s no way to pay men to play, and then pay women equally, they declared. 

Women, they said, deserve the same opportunities as men. 

Now we’re days away from a U.S. District judge potentially signing off on the House case – another devastating loss for the sharp legal minds at the NCAA – and more than $2 billion in back pay for former student athletes, complete with a future revenue sharing plan that will give nearly 90 percent of a salary pool of $20 million-23 million to football and men’s basketball.

But buddy, you better believe they have it figured out this time. This new commissioner or CEO or czar will solve all problems.

There’s no chance he’ll strike down an NIL deal because it isn’t fair, and the NCAA – or whatever they’ll eventually call the elite football-playing schools – won’t be sued and lose again.

Look, I have no law degree, but I did pay attention in college during ECON 101. The market dictates what services are worth.

Not some doofus plopped into a position by 300-plus university presidents, whose sole purpose is to protect their own asses at all cost. 

Yeah, this new CEO will be a resounding success. 

Matt Hayes is the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports Network. Follow him on X at @MattHayesCFB.





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