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Charles Barkley calls NCAA a 'bunch of idiots and fools' amid current NIL landscape

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! Charles Barkley is not a fan of the NCAA’s management of NIL and the transfer portal.  Barkley, 62, didn’t mince words when talking about the current state of college basketball.  “The NCAA, they’re a bunch of idiots and fools. They have ruined the sport. I don’t know […]

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Charles Barkley calls NCAA a 'bunch of idiots and fools' amid current NIL landscape

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Charles Barkley is not a fan of the NCAA’s management of NIL and the transfer portal. 

Barkley, 62, didn’t mince words when talking about the current state of college basketball. 

“The NCAA, they’re a bunch of idiots and fools. They have ruined the sport. I don’t know how you put the toothpaste back into the tube,” Barkley said during a recent appearance on OutKick’s “Don’t @ Me with Dan Dakich.”

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Charles Barkley looks on

College basketball analyst Charles Barkley on air before the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament Final Four championship game. (Mitchell Layton/Getty Images)

Barkley isn’t opposed to college players getting paid, but has trouble making sense as to how much money players are making, and how frequently players can now switch schools. 

“This notion that you have to come up with tens of millions of dollars to pay kids to play basketball, and have them be free agents every year and transfer to another school and get more money every year. Like, we don’t even get to do that in the NBA. Can you imagine if players in the NBA got to be a free agent every year? I’m not opposed to players getting paid, I want to make that clear,” Barkley said. 

“But, this notion we gotta give college kids tens of millions of dollars a year, and basketball is the worst, because you’re only gonna get a great player for six months. I don’t even see how you’re gonna get the return on investment.”

CHARLES BARKLEY RAISES CONCERNS FOR BILL BELICHICK AS FORMER NFL COACH’S PERSONAL LIFE THRUST INTO SPOTLIGHT

Charles Barkley on court

Jan. 21, 2023; Phoenix, Arizona: Phoenix Suns former player Charles Barkley in attendance at Footprint Center. (Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports)

Barkley was asked whether he would ever donate to his alma mater, Auburn, to help its NIL fund, but the Basketball Hall of Famer would rather donate his money to more important causes. 

“I just gave 10 million dollars to HBCU’s, that stuff is way more important to me. I just gave a couple million dollars to ‘Blight’, in my hometown of Birmingham, to rebuild houses,” Barkley said. 

“That stuff is way more important to me than joining the cesspool that is college athletics. We’re such a s—– country, Dan. We have ruined college athletics, and I don’t wanna even get in that cesspool.”

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Charles Barkley at Auburn

Former basketball player Charles Barkley for the Auburn Tigers after their game against the Tennessee Volunteers at Neville Arena on March 4, 2023, in Auburn, Alabama. (Michael Chang/Getty Images)

If even the 11-time All-Star were to give money to Auburn’s NIL fund, he isn’t sure how he would get his return on investment. 

“If I give a guy three or four, five, seven, some guys are getting six, seven, eight million dollars, I’m not sure how I get my return on investment if he’s only going to be at my college for one year, and you’re probably not going to win the championship,” Barkley said.

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Former Maryland basketball star reportedly suing over canceled NIL payments

With NIL money flying and deals being broken often, it’s a wonder more lawsuits haven’t been filed by college athletes or the schools paying them. But the first such scenario at Maryland has arrived, with former star basketball player Ja’Kobi Gillespie suing for NIL payments he claims he’s owed. The Baltimore Sun’s Taylor Lyons reported that […]

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With NIL money flying and deals being broken often, it’s a wonder more lawsuits haven’t been filed by college athletes or the schools paying them. But the first such scenario at Maryland has arrived, with former star basketball player Ja’Kobi Gillespie suing for NIL payments he claims he’s owed.

The Baltimore Sun’s Taylor Lyons reported that the former Terps point guard, who transferred to Tennessee after the season, is suing Blueprint Sports — the outside company that manages much of the school’s NIL operations — because did not receive the final payments for his deal, despite that it has no clause stating the deal wouldn’t be paid out if he transferred elsewhere. He wrote: 

“Blueprint, which says on its website it works with more than 70 college athletic departments, has partnered with Maryland since 2023. The school announced a “multiyear partnership extension” with the collective last month.

Connor and Byron Gillespie told The Sun that Blueprint is refusing to honor Ja’Kobi Gillespie’s NIL contract that he signed with the collective before last season. They said the contract did not have a clause that terminated the agreement if he entered the transfer portal, which he did days after Willard left to become the coach at Villanova on March 30.”

Ja’Kobi Gillespie was one of Maryland’s best players, earning second-team all-Big Ten honors after averaging 14.7 points and 4.8 assists per game on 45.3 percent shooting overall and 40.7 percent from three. His deal was worth around $600,000 for the year, leaving an unpaid balance of $100,000, sources told InsideMDSports. Lyons reported that Blueprint offered to settle for one-quarter of the remaining amount; the company says there was a clause that negated the remainder of payments because Gillespie transferred, while the player’s camp says there was no such deal.

Byron Gillespie referenced the issue to IMS in April, when he also criticized Willard for how his departure went down.

“We were smart and our lawyer/agent kept the original contract. They added language in [after the fact], because his wasn’t like the other agreements. Most said once you enter the portal, it nulls the agreement. Ours didn’t,” he wrote in a text. 

What I’m Hearing: Early reviews of new-look Maryland basketball and the deal with Zion Elee

On Willard’s sketchy departure, he said in that April interview: “The coaching circle talks … I knew he was gone when we were in Seattle. I understand taking a job that’s better for you and your family. I just wish it didn’t come out and cause a distraction during such a great run … Over and over he told them that. [That] he was using it for leverage [to get a new deal from Maryland]. All the way ’til the last game. He told Ja’Kobi that Saturday night [two days after the Sweet 16 loss] he had decided to take it.”

The elder Gillespie told Lyons that Blueprint’s failure to pay gives credence to Willard’s complaints before he left, about Maryland not having enough NIL money. And Gillespie’s mother, Heather Johnson, told IMS: “We loved it there and I’m just so disappointed in a few different ways. Ja’Kobi did his job.”

But the best quote of the story came from booster Harry Geller, who ran the point on the basketball program’s NIL negotiations before Willard left, bout Willard and former AD Damon Evans, now both gone.

“There was always a rift,” Geller told the Sun. “Willard had an attitude about it the whole time and Damon didn’t do much to help it. The two of them went at it. They butted heads from the beginning. In the end, they both had exit strategies and Maryland got screwed.”

Geller said in an April radio interview that Maryland’s NIL budget was significant.

“We had a pretty competitive NIL, all donor-based fundraising, and I think his his biggest complaint was a lot of other schools were assisting the NIL collectives and Maryland wasn’t. They kind of left us, myself and the other guys that run and women that run the Turtle NIL and the athletic foundation, to ourselves to run it,” he said. “as far as dollars spent this year, we were probably in the lower part of the top half of the Big Ten. There was schools certainly ahead of us. Indiana spent a lot more money than we did, and look where that got them. And some schools spent less, but I would say we were probably five, six, seven in the Big Ten out of 18 schools.

“And I think Buzz is coming in into a better situation. I think he was a very good hire. He’s won everywhere he’s been. I really applauded the administration for moving quickly on it because there’s – this year is an unusual year for NIL because there, the NCAA is phasing out all collectives July 1, including ours. Until then, you have an opportunity to raise money and sort of pre-pay for next year. So the player amounts are hyper-inflated right now, and it should level off to more of a de facto salary cap next year. But I thought, and I went to the administration and said, ‘Look, if you want us to pre-spend the money next year, we only have a few weeks to do it. So you really got to get moving on this hire.’ And to their credit, they were proactive about it.”

Before you go …

— Get the latest Terps news delivered to your inbox FREE!  Sign up for our email newsletter here and stay informed on Maryland basketball, football, recruiting and every other Terps storyline. 

— Support Maryland basketball’s recruiting and player-retention efforts by joining TurtleNIL!

— Follow IMS on Facebook, Twitter, Tiktok and Instagram.

— Don’t miss any of our new video Terps content: Subscribe to InsideMDSports on YouTube and hit the notification bell so you know when new videos drop.

– Need a go-to Terps podcast? Listen to IMS Radio here, watch earlier episodes here and don’t forget to subscribe to IMS Radio on  iTunes | Spotify | Stitcher | Podbean | Amazon Music | TuneIn | Apple Podcasts





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Florida Atlantic University Athletics

BOCA RATON, Fla. – Accolades for Autumn Courtney, Florida Atlantic softball’s fifth All-American in program history, continue to pour in. On Monday, the junior pitcher was ranked No. 79 in Softball America’s Top 100 players.   Courtney is the second highest ranked player in the American Athletic Conference and 22nd among all pitchers in Division I. […]

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BOCA RATON, Fla. – Accolades for Autumn Courtney, Florida Atlantic softball’s fifth All-American in program history, continue to pour in. On Monday, the junior pitcher was ranked No. 79 in Softball America’s Top 100 players.
 
Courtney is the second highest ranked player in the American Athletic Conference and 22nd among all pitchers in Division I. Appearing in her first season with the Owls, she earned more than half of the team’s victories on the way to its second consecutive AAC regular season title. The Tappahannock, Virginia native finished with a record of 24-4, the 11th most wins in the nation, tossing 172 strikeouts, 30th nationally, and held a 2.03 ERA, 32nd in the nation. Additionally, her 3.97 hits allowed per seven innings was the fourth lowest in Division I.
 
Not only was she unanimously voted AAC Pitcher of the Year and to the All-Conference First Team, Courtney received a spot on the All-Conference Tournament team after seven strikeout performance that saw her yield just one hit and no earned runs in the AAC Semifinals. She followed this up the following week with seven more punchouts in Florida Atlantic’s 5-4 victory over Georgia Tech for the team’s first NCAA Regional victory since 2016.
 
FOLLOW THE OWLS
To follow the team socially, visit @fausoftball, or for the most up-to-date information, go to www.fausports.com.
 



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Penn State and UCLA are “making college sports history” by being the first two athletic departments to take on private capital. Icon Sportswire via Getty Images Penn State and UCLA are the “first two clients” of Elevate’s $500M college private capital fund — signing eight-figure deals with the College Investment Initiative, according to sources. Penn […]

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Penn State Nittany Lions Tight End Tyler Warren (44) runs with the ball against UCLA Bruins Defensive Lineman Siale Taupaki
Penn State and UCLA are “making college sports history” by being the first two athletic departments to take on private capital. Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Penn State and UCLA are the “first two clients” of Elevate’s $500M college private capital fund — signing eight-figure deals with the College Investment Initiative, according to sources. Penn State and UCLA are “making college sports history” by being the first two athletic departments to take on private capital, but it is “only the starting point” for the investment fund in its efforts to “provide schools with money and resources to develop revenue-generating projects” (ON3, 6/9). Schools will use the capital “for infrastructure and commercial projects ranging from modernizing venues, expanding premium seating and enhancing multimedia and digital rights and to investing in name, image and likeness platforms for athletes” (CNBC.com, 6/9).

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Ohio State launches group to support NIL opportunities

The university’s Department of Athletics and Learfield’s Ohio State Sports Properties have formed the Buckeye Sports Group. COLUMBUS, Ohio — The Ohio State University announced it’s launching a new strategic group that’s designed to support, streamline and enhance Name, Image and Likeness opportunities for student-athletes. The university’s Department of Athletics and Learfield’s Ohio State Sports […]

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The university’s Department of Athletics and Learfield’s Ohio State Sports Properties have formed the Buckeye Sports Group.

COLUMBUS, Ohio — The Ohio State University announced it’s launching a new strategic group that’s designed to support, streamline and enhance Name, Image and Likeness opportunities for student-athletes.

The university’s Department of Athletics and Learfield’s Ohio State Sports Properties have formed the Buckeye Sports Group, according to a release.

“By creating a dedicated team of NIL leaders, this strategic partnership will empower Buckeye student-athletes to maximize their brand value while competing at the highest level,” the university says.

The announcement comes after a federal judge approved the terms of a $2.8 billion antitrust settlement last week, which will allow schools to directly pay players through licensing deals.

Ohio State says a key part of the settlement is the implementation of a Fair Mark Evaluation process and a “range of compensation” designed to establish standardized benchmarks for NIL deals across sports and institutions. The Buckeye Sports Group intends to serve as a centralized hub for NIL brand deal facilitation, corporate partnerships, student-athlete storytelling and NIL support.

The Buckeye Sports Group will have access to Learfield’s Compass NIL technology to facilitate deal transactions and gain insights into student-athlete interests.

The group will support Ohio State student-athletes with a focus on three areas: deal facilitation and management, content creation and storytelling and support services.

“Ohio State has always been a leader in college athletics, and this initiative is another step forward to build upon our strong NIL foundation,” said Ohio State’s Deputy Director of Athletics Carey Hoyt. “By combining the power of our athletic brand with Learfield’s expansive network, we are creating an innovative, full-service approach to NIL that directly benefits our student-athletes.”

In a move to streamline and optimize NIL operations, the group will work to consolidate existing NIL collectives under a single marketing team. The founding members of THE Foundation and The 1870 Society, two existing NIL collectives, will remain engaged and serve in an advisory capacity to the new group.

“We’re incredibly thankful for everything our NIL collective’s leadership, businesses and donors have done to support our student-athletes,” Senior Vice President and Wolfe Foundation-Eugene Smith Endowed Athletics Director Ross Bjork said. “Their commitment has helped shape the landscape in powerful ways. As we move forward with a more unified approach, we’re excited to combine efforts and further strengthen the NIL success of our student-athletes.”

To read more about the new group, click here.



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Softball America Reveals Its Top 100 Players of the 2025 Season

The 2025 NCAA Softball season has come to an end. There are plenty of players that stood out from star pitchers to home run hitters, with plenty of names to remember. Here are the Top 100 players according to Softball America. Who were the Top 100 college softball players of the 2025 season? Find out […]

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The 2025 NCAA Softball season has come to an end. There are plenty of players that stood out from star pitchers to home run hitters, with plenty of names to remember. Here are the Top 100 players according to Softball America.

The top three players come with no surprise as NiJaree Canady, Bri Ellis, and Jordy Bahl were all named finalists for USA Softball’s player of the year.

No. 1: NiJaree Canady – P (Texas Tech)

NiJaree Canady led Texas Tech to its first-ever WCWS in school history, making it all the way to the championship series. She made quite a name for herself with both her stellar performance in the circle and her million-dollar NIL deal. Canady held a nation-leading 34 wins on the year to go along with a 1.11 ERA while pitching 240 innings on the season.

No 2: Bri Ellis- 1B (Arkansas)

Bri Ellis was first in the country in on-base percentage (.639) and was third in home runs with 26 on the year, which set a new Arkansas single-season record. She was also named Player of the Year by both USA Softball and Softball America. The Razorbacks nearly missed out on their first-ever WCWS appearance, falling to Ole Miss in Super Regionals.

No. 3: Jordy Bahl- P/UTL (Nebraska)

After transferring from Oklahoma and sitting out all of the 2024 season with an ACL injury, Jordy Bahl has put her home state back on the map. This year with the Huskers, Bahl became one of the best two-way players in the nation. She is just the fourth NCAA softball player to have hit 20-plus home runs and have 20-plus wins in the circle in a single season.

No.4: Karlyn Pickins- P (Tennessee)

Karlyn Pickins rounds out the three pitchers in the top five. Pickins had a stellar year in the circle for Tennessee going 25-10 overall with a 1.17 ERA. She pitched in 220 innings and had 297 strikeouts with opponents hitting .185 against her. The Vols season came to an end after a loss to Texas in the WCWS.

No. 5: Cori McMillan- OF (Virginia Tech)

Rounding out the top five is Virginia Tech’s Cori McMillan. McMillan had a breakout year for the Hokies leading the nation in home runs with 31 on the season. She was a Top-10 finalist for USA Softball’s Player of the Year and a First-Team All-American selection by Softball America, as well as being selected as the ACC Player of the Year in 2025.

Check out the rest of the Top 10.

No. 6: Devyn Netz- P/UTL (Arizona)

No. 7: Reece Atwood- C (Texas)

No. 8: Sam Landry- P (Oklahoma)

No. 9: Megan Grant- 1B: UCLA)

No. 10: Ella Parker- UTL (Oklahoma)

For a full list of the top 100 players visit Softball America.

More News: Texas Softball: Social Media Reacts to Longhorns’ First National Championship

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

More News: UCLA Starting Pitcher Kaitlyn Terry Hits Transfer Portal





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College sports commissioners laud $2.8B antitrust settlement, call for Congress to act

Associated Press Conference commissioners lauded a judge’s approval of a $2.8 billion antitrust lawsuit settlement as a means for bringing stability and fairness to an out-of-control college athletics industry but acknowledged there would be growing pains in implementing its terms. In a 30-minute virtual news conference Monday, commissioners of the ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, […]

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Associated Press

Conference commissioners lauded a judge’s approval of a $2.8 billion antitrust lawsuit settlement as a means for bringing stability and fairness to an out-of-control college athletics industry but acknowledged there would be growing pains in implementing its terms.

In a 30-minute virtual news conference Monday, commissioners of the ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12 and SEC renewed their call for congressional action to supplement and even codify the settlement and emphasized that cooperation at every level of college sports would be necessary to make it work.

They said it was too early to address how violators of rules surrounding revenue sharing and name, image and likeness agreements would be punished and noted newly hired College Sports Commission CEO Bryan Seeley would play a major role in determining penalties.

The new era of college athletics has arrived after U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken gave final approval Friday night to what’s known as House vs. NCAA. Beginning July 1, each school can share up to about $20.5 million with their athletes and third-party NIL deals worth $600 or more will be analyzed to make sure they pay appropriate “market value” for the services being provided by athletes.

Some of the topics addressed Monday:

Binding conferences to terms

The conferences drafted a document that would bind institutions to enforcement policies even if their state laws are contradictory. It would require schools to waive their right to pursue legal challenges against the CSC. It also would exempt the commission from lawsuits from member schools over enforcement decisions, instead offering arbitration as the main settlement option.

Consequences for not signing the agreement would include risking the loss of league membership and participation against other teams from the Power Four conferences.

Big 12 Commissioner Brett Yormark said the document remains a work in progress but that he’s gotten no pushback from his schools.

“I look to get that executed here in short order,” he said, “and know it will be very necessary for all the conferences to execute as well.”

Directives on revenue sharing

There has been no directive given to individual schools on how to determine the allocation of revenue-sharing payments, commissioners said. It’s widely acknowledged that athletes in football and basketball are expected to receive the majority of the money.

“I know for all five of us no one is forgetting about their Olympic sports and continuing to make sure we’ve invested a high level for all of our sports,” ACC Commissioner Jim Phillips said.

College Sports Commission CEO

The commissioners said Seeley, as Major League Baseball executive vice president of legal and operations, was uniquely qualified to lead the CSC, which is charged with making sure schools adhere to the rules.

“Culture doesn’t change overnight,” Seeley told The Athletic over the weekend. “I don’t expect that to happen overnight, but I do think that the schools that have signed on to the settlement want rules and want rules to be enforced. Otherwise they wouldn’t have signed on to the settlement. I think student-athletes want a different system. So I think there is a desire for rules enforcement. There’s a desire for transparency.”

Sankey said Seeley is well-versed in areas of implementation, development and adjustment of rules and in NIL disputes requiring arbitration.

Yormark said: “You want people not to run away from a situation but to run to a situation. He ran here, and he’s very passionate to make a difference and to course correct what’s been going on in the industry.”

Skepticism about enforcement

Deloitte’s “NIL Go” program and LBI Software will track NIL deals and revenue-sharing contracts, and the commissioners shot down skepticism about the ability of those tools to enforce terms of the settlement. SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey said football and basketball coaches he spoke with in February were unanimous in wanting regulation.

“They have the responsibility to make what they asked for work,” he said.

Congressional action

NCAA President Charlie Baker has been pushing Congress for a limited antitrust exemption that would protect college sports from another series of lawsuits, and the commissioners want a uniform federal NIL law that would supersede wide-ranging state laws.

“We’re not going to have Final Fours and College Football Playoffs and College World Series with 50 different standards,” Sankey said, “so that’s a starting point.”

Big Ten Commissioner Tony Petitti said the willingness of administrators to modernize the college athletics model should prompt federal lawmakers to move on codifying the settlement.

Sankey’s meeting with Trump

Sankey confirmed a Yahoo Sports report that he and Notre Dame athletic director Pete Bevacqua played golf with President Donald Trump on Sunday. Sankey said he appreciates Trump’s interest in college sports and that it was helpful to share perspectives on the path forward. Trump reportedly considered a presidential commission on college sports earlier this year.

Sankey declined to disclose details of their talks.

“I think those are best left for the moment on the golf course,” he said.

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AP college sports: https://apnews.com/hub/college-sports




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