NIL
Clemson Baseball Pitchers Create New NIL Blueprint With Student
The No. 11 Clemson Tigers are preparing to face the No. 3 Kentucky Wildcats in the first weekend of the NCAA tournament after falling short in the ACC college baseball championship. That’s led to a more adversity-riddled path than a win against the UNC Tar Heels would have awarded the Tigers with a coveted top […]


The No. 11 Clemson Tigers are preparing to face the No. 3 Kentucky Wildcats in the first weekend of the NCAA tournament after falling short in the ACC college baseball championship.
That’s led to a more adversity-riddled path than a win against the UNC Tar Heels would have awarded the Tigers with a coveted top eight seed.
Two of the pitchers on staff are offering a new way for fans to engage outside of home-field advantage, as the team does not have the opportunity to host a Super Regional if they advance from the regional stages.
Clemson pitchers Aidan Knaak and Justin LeGuernic have accomplished an incredible feat in the NIL space.
Clemson Pitchers Launch First-Ever Student-Athlete NIL Brand
On Tuesday, Knaak and LeGuernic became entrepreneurs and launched their new athlete-owned brand, Cardiak Cats.
The Cardiak Cats hats are available exclusively on their website, with a limited supply of the hats running ahead of the NCAA Regional Tournament.
The limited product launch features their personally designed baseball hats that have a unique style in the spirit of their on-field personalities and fan pride.
The duo came up with the brand name in ode to the exciting, come-from-behind style of play that the Tigers are known for.
“This whole thing started with an idea during a road trip: what if we created something that really felt like us?” Knaak said in a press release. “We wanted a brand that captured the energy of playing in big moments and gave fans something authentic to rally behind.”
NIL deals can feel robotic sometimes, with star athletes pushing products they might not feel that strongly about. That can’t be said for the product Knaak and LeGuernic are behind.
“We worked hands-on with a design team to make sure every detail felt right,” LeGuernic said. “It’s about more than a hat… it’s about building something from scratch and putting our name behind it, literally.”
Most of the talk in the NIL space focuses on college football and basketball, with the upcoming House v. NCAA settlement expected to bring revenue sharing to schools with those teams prioritized.
College baseball has been lost in the shuffle, and the NIL deals aren’t as readily available or prominent for these players.
Perhaps the pitching duo has stumbled upon a new blueprint for student-athletes.
It’s the first-ever independent student-athlete-owned apparel venture in college sports, making it a historic launch for a quieter sport in the landscape.
There’s an importance in the name, image, and likeness world of knowing one’s branding and how to self-promote. The more student-athletes find avenues to innovate and become entrepreneurs, the better the state of college sports is for it.
NIL
Mississippi State announces next baseball coach shortly after season ends
Well, that didn’t take long. In less than 45 minutes after Mississippi State’s 2025 baseball season came to an end in a 5-2 loss to Florida State on Saturday night, the university announced the hiring of its next head baseball coach: Brian O’Connor. A lot will be written about O’Connor and the expectations that await […]

Well, that didn’t take long.
In less than 45 minutes after Mississippi State’s 2025 baseball season came to an end in a 5-2 loss to Florida State on Saturday night, the university announced the hiring of its next head baseball coach: Brian O’Connor.
A lot will be written about O’Connor and the expectations that await him in Starkville, but let’s get two things on record right away:
“This is a defining moment for Mississippi State Baseball,” Mississippi State Athletics Director Zac Selmon said.
There weren’t any major leaks in the Bulldogs’ coaching search, but one thing everyone knew and hoped for was that this hire would be a big one.
Nobody will ever pull off what Texas did last year in hiring its rival schools’ coach less than a few days after that coach lost a national championship game.
But what Mississippi State has done comes pretty close.
The Bulldogs will welcome a coach with 917 wins, a national championship, seven College World Series appearances (including three out of the last five), and is a three-time national coach of the year award winner.
“Brian O’Connor is one of the most respected and accomplished coaches in college baseball,” Selmon said in the official announcement. “He’s a national champion, a Hall of Famer, and a proven leader with a track record of building a championship-caliber program.”
The fact both Selmon and Mississippi State University president Dr. Mark E. Keenum had quotes included in the school’s official announcement tells us the plan all along was the announcement to be made after the Bulldogs’ season came to an end and not a moment sooner.
It’s great timing, too. The NCAA transfer portal opens for all student-athletes today and will remain open until July 1. The transfer portal class O’Connor brings in will go a long in determining the level of success Mississippi State has next year.
And that should excite Bulldog fans everywhere.
NIL
Oklahoma Avoided Elimination Again and Gained Valuable Experience at the WCWS
OKLAHOMA CITY — Oklahoma got it done. Again. The Sooners won their ninth-straight elimination game, fending Oregon off with a 4-1 victory on Sunday night at Devon Park. Veteran first baseman Cydney Sanders rocketed a pair of home runs to help lead her squad, which looks a lot different from the last OU group who […]

OKLAHOMA CITY — Oklahoma got it done. Again.
The Sooners won their ninth-straight elimination game, fending Oregon off with a 4-1 victory on Sunday night at Devon Park.
Veteran first baseman Cydney Sanders rocketed a pair of home runs to help lead her squad, which looks a lot different from the last OU group who had to pick themselves off the mat at the 2024 Women’s College World Series against Florida.
Patty Gasso just wishes her team was as excited as her.
“We walk over and we shake hand,” said Gasso after the win. “And we walk in the dugout like, ‘Hey, okay, and I’m like: Do you know what we just did? Does anyone know what we just… we’re in the Final Four.’
“Can somebody celebrate? Can we do something fun? They’re just the most calm, chill — sometimes I’m like, I don’t know that you know. Do you know?”
Most of Gasso’s Sooners are new, but the returners can be forgiven for showing little emotion.
The expectation is to make it to Wednesday’s championship series.
But the 2025 Sooners extended the program’s streak of winning elimination games to nine, as Oklahoma still looms as the so far un-killable horror movie villain in OKC.
“That’s impressive. Nine is pretty dang impressive,” Gasso said. “That means you’re a team that when — that’s character. That is we’re not going to quit, so I love, love, love that.”
To keep the dreams of a fifth-straight national title alive, the Sooners will have to stave off elimination twice more on Monday.
The 12-seeded Texas Tech Red Raiders and star pitcher NiJaree Canady loom in the semifinals, and 2-seeded Oklahoma has no margin for error.
Oregon took a 1-0 lead on Sunday, and while it lasted just half an inning, Gasso’s new faces got a chance to feel what it’s like to trail in an elimination game at Devon Park.
Every twist and turn through OU’s first three games at the WCWS will help Oklahoma’s next generation grow.
“They learned a valuable lesson,” Gasso said. “And that’s the one thing that we’re doing this whole season, learning so many valuable lessons to help this team go into next year so much better than when we started.
“Still, I mean, I’m on an amazing ride. I don’t know how they feel. They don’t share a lot… It’s swaggy, but it’s bizarre at the same time. Trying to figure it out.”
The Sooners learned how to handle Sunday’s elimination game.
Now they’ll have to replicate that success on Monday to get another shot at either Texas or Tennessee. OU will take on Texas Tech at 6 p.m.
Should the Sooners emerge victorious, they’ll immediately turn around and battle the Red Raiders again at Devon Park to try and take down Canady and reach a sixth-straight championship series.
“They just sometimes don’t make a lot of noise.” Gasso said. “Every once in a while they’ll create something. But they were definitely more focused and ready (against Oregon).”
NIL
USC Trojans Lose To Oregon State In Corvallis Regional Final, Now Face Elimination
The USC Trojans lost to the Oregon State Beavers on Sunday night 14-1. USC had a chance to clinch a spot in the 2025 NCAA Tournament Super Regionals but were no match for the Beavers. The Trojans will have another chance on Monday. USC was one of the last teams to make the NCAA tournament […]

The USC Trojans lost to the Oregon State Beavers on Sunday night 14-1. USC had a chance to clinch a spot in the 2025 NCAA Tournament Super Regionals but were no match for the Beavers. The Trojans will have another chance on Monday. USC was one of the last teams to make the NCAA tournament field and now they are just one win away from advancing.
The Oregon State Beavers on the other hand are the No. 8 overall seed in the entire NCAA tournament field and are the hosts of this Corvallis Regional. Oregon State lost their opening game against Saint Mary’s on Friday, but proceeded to win their next two against TCU on Saturday and then their rematch against St. Mary’s Sunday afternoon before dominating USC in the night cap.
Bottom 9th: Oregon State 14, USC 1
Schwartzberg pops out to shortstop.
Riske hit into fielders choice.
Hedges struck out.
Higgins singled to center.
Top 9th: Oregon State 14, USC 1
Macias grounds out.
Reeder struck out swinging.
Singer reaches on infield single. Arquette scored.
Caraway walked. Arqeutte to third. Turey to second
Weber flies out to right.
Turley walked. Arqeutte to second.
Arquette singles to center.
Bottom 8th: Oregon State 13, USC 1
Elliot strikes out.
Martinez struck out looking.
Basseer struck out swinging.
Top 8th: Oregon State 13, USC 1
Tait struck out swinging.
Peterson doubles. Singer scored.
Macias flied out.
Reeder flied out.
Singer doubled. Caraway scored.
Caraway walked.
Bottom 7th: Oregon State 11, USC 1
Lopez strikes out.
Covarrubias beats out infield single. Hedges to second.
Lopez strikes out swinging.
Higgins struck out swinging.
Hedges singles to right.
Top 7th: Oregon State 11, USC 1
Weber hit into double play.
Turley singles to center. Peterson scored. Arquette to second.
Arquette reaches first on fielders choice. Talt out at second. Macias scores. Peterson to third.
Talt walked. Macias to third. Peterson to second.
Peterson reaches first on a bunt single. Macias to second.
Macias walks.
Bottom 6th: Oregon State 9, USC 1
Higgins strikes out.
Tejeda grounds out to first. Lopez to third. Basseer to second.
Martinez strikes out looking.
Basseer singles to left.
Lopez walks.
Top 6th: Oregon State 9, USC 1
Reeder flies out to right.
Singer lines out.
Caraway homered to left. Arquette and Turley scored.
Weber struck out swinging.
Turley walks.
Arquette advances to second.
Arquette singles to left field.
Bottom 5th: Oregon State 6, USC 1
Covarrubias strikes out swinging.
Lopez strikes out looking.
Martin-Grudzielanek strikes out.
Hedges walks. Tejeda to third. Higgins to second.
Higgins singles to right. Tejeda to second.
Tejeda singles to left.
Top 5th: Oregon State 6, USC 1
Talt grounds out to first.
Peterson reaches first on infield single.
Macias struck out swinging.
Reeder strikes out swinging.
Bottom 4th: Oregon State 6, USC 1
Basseer to second on wild pitch. Martinez strikes out looking.
Basseer singles to right.
Lopez flies out.
Covarrubias flies out.
Top 4th: Oregon State 6, USC 1
Singer strikes out looking.
Caraway strikes out looking.
Weber hits into force out. Arquette to third. Turley out at second.
Turley walks.
Arquette advances to second.
Arquette singles to left.
Bottom 3rd: Oregon State 6, USC 1
Lopez grounds out to first.
Hedges strikes out swinging
Martin-Grudzielanek grounds out.
Top 3rd: Oregon State 6, USC 1
Dalt grounds out to second.
Peterson walks.
Macias walks.
Reeder strikes out swinging.
Singer sacrifices to the pitcher, Caraway to third. One out.
Caraway doubles to right center. Weber scores.
Weber doubles to left center.
Turley homers to left.
Bottom 2nd: Oregon State 4, USC 1
Higgins in for Dowd, flies out to left.
Tejada reaches first on infield single. Martinez to thrid on error.
Martinez singles to left. Basseer scores.
Basseer triples to center.
Lopez strikes out swinging.
Covarrubias grounds out to short.
Top 2nd: Oregon State 4, USC 0
Arquette strikes out swinging.
Talt out on squeeze bunt. Macias scores. Peterson to third. Two outs.
Peterson singles to center. Reeders scores. Macias to third. Peterson advances to second.
Macias reaches on bunt after fielders choice comes home. Not in time, Caraway scores. Reeder to second.
Reeder beats out bunt single. Weber scores. Caraway to third with one out.
Singer sacrifice bunt to pitcher. Weber to third. Caraway to second.
Caraway hits infield single. Weber to second.
Weber singles to center.
Bottom 1st: Oregon State 0, USC 0
Lopez pops out to first.
Martin-Grudzienlanek strikes out.
Hedges doubles to right. Dowd out at home.
Dowd singles to right.
Top 1st: Oregon State 0, USC 0
Turley strikes out swinging.
Arquette flies out to right.
Talt grounds out to second.
MORE: USC Trojans Could Face More SEC Teams If Brian Kelly Gets His Way
MORE: What Big Ten Coaches Said About Lincoln Riley, USC Trojans
MORE: USC Trojans Elite 2026 Recruiting Class: Highest Rated Commits
The Trojans won each of their two games so far at the Corvallis Regional against the TCU Horned Frogs on Friday and the Saint Mary’s Gaels on Saturday, advancing to the championship Sunday night.
With this regional being a double elimination and USC not having lost a game yet, the Trojans will have two opportunities to advance. Their first opportunity was Sunday night. Even with the loss, they will be back at it tomorrow in a winner take all against these same Oregon State Beavers.
The USC Trojans have had one of the most successful programs in the history of college baseball. USC has appeared in the College World Series 21 times and won it 12 times. The. However, it has been a long time since the Trojans had this type of success. Their last College World Series appearance came in 2001, with 1998 being their last championship.
The last decade of USC baseball has especially been difficult. By making the NCAA tournament this season, USC snapped a tournament drought that dated back to 2015. Furthermore, USC had a Super Regional appearance dogfight that goes back 20 years to the 2005 season.
This 2025 season, USC has an overall record of 37-21 and a Big Ten conference record of 18-12. They finished fourth in the Big Ten in their first season as a member of the conference.
NIL
The new playbook
The Vestavia Hills High School football program has produced several high-profile players over the years, but one stands out above the rest in terms of the recruiting process he faced. Defensive end Jordan Ross was one of the most highly sought prospects in America before he signed with the University of Tennessee in late 2023. […]


The Vestavia Hills High School football program has produced several high-profile players over the years, but one stands out above the rest in terms of the recruiting process he faced.
Defensive end Jordan Ross was one of the most highly sought prospects in America before he signed with the
University of Tennessee in late 2023. He put together an illustrious career at Vestavia, and with that came plenty of attention.
“His recruitment was eye-opening,” Vestavia Hills football coach Robert Evans said. “He and his family handled the process with much grace.”
While Ross’ recruitment gaining him plenty of attention was nothing abnormal, the type of attention was different than it would have been five or 10 years ago. Top football prospects formerly gained notoriety and hype for National Signing Day decisions. Now, it has more to do with monetary discussions surrounding name, image and likeness.
Elite prospects like Ross aren’t quite as affected by the new landscape of college athletics — one that has seen opportunities for high schoolers diminish over the years. But he is the exception to the new rule.
“We try to have honest discussions about the landscape of recruiting, including how difficult it is for walk-ons to make a roster now,” Evans said. “Players and parents alike both need to have an understanding of how the process has been affected by the portal and NIL, and what the realistic options are …
“From my perspective, recruiting has not changed for the really high-end prospect or the D3 prospect. Everyone in between has been pushed down a level or two. The kid signing with UAB 10 years ago is fortunate to have a D2 offer now.”
Evans knows the territory well. As a two-sport star himself at Vestavia, he received interest from schools like Auburn before landing a scholarship to Samford University, where he was a standout in both football and baseball. Today, his options might be limited.
“There are fewer scholarship spots,” said ESPN recruiting analyst Tom Luginbill. “Schools used to divide
scholarships among high school prospects. Now, they save 12 to 14 for portal players. High school kids have fewer options, and many are being forced into choices they wouldn’t have made otherwise.”
SHIFTING SAND
Coaches are no longer building around potential. They’re buying certainty. Between the rise of the transfer portal, the explosion of name, image and likeness (NIL) dollars and the impending House v. NCAA court settlement — which could allow direct revenue-sharing paychecks from schools to athletes — the entire scholarship model has changed.
For high school seniors, that means fewer opportunities. Unless you’re elite, the message is clear: wait your turn — or get left behind.
In place of the old system is a new billion-dollar industry in which high school prospects are still commodities — just ones with less value than they held before the money started flowing.
Not all college programs play on the same field. The Power Four conferences — the SEC, Big Ten, Big 12 and ACC — have TV deals, booster collectives and NIL opportunities.
Below them are Group of Five schools like UAB, Jacksonville State or Troy — with fewer scholarships, smaller budgets and less exposure. Then come FCS, D2 and junior colleges, where many now land by necessity.
THE PORTAL JAM
For decades, high school football was the bedrock of college recruiting. Talent rose, coaches scouted, scholarships followed and dreams materialized on National Signing Day.
That world is gone.
It started with COVID. In 2020, the NCAA granted all athletes an extra year of eligibility. That decision created a massive traffic jam. Fifth-year seniors stayed. Sixth-year players reclassified. Scholarships that would have gone to high school seniors disappeared.
Then came NIL. In July 2021, athletes could finally earn money off their name, image and likeness. But what was meant to reward marketability became a loosely disguised pay-for-play market.
“Monetary compensation is no longer based on results,” Luginbill said. “It’s not about ‘if I produce, schools will want me.’ Now, it’s ‘how much are you going to pay me to play here?’ There’s no accountability from the player’s side, and that’s not what NIL was intended for — certainly not in recruiting.”
At the same time, the transfer portal exploded. The NCAA removed the sit-out rule for first-time transfers, and a flood of player movement followed. A new reality emerged: Why recruit a high school senior you’ll have to develop when you can buy a 22-year-old with experience?
Evans said that is proving true at Vestavia. Despite being a tradition-rich program with a history of sending players to Division I, he said Ross is really the only player he’s had during the NIL era to get much recruiting attention.
“I would be using the portal too if I was coaching in college,” he said. “When you are the provider for your family, would you rather play with a 21-year-old man who has played well at a Group of Five school or a high school kid who still needs development? The answer is really easy.”
And that’s where it becomes a numbers game for high school prospects.
“The math doesn’t add up,” Luginbill said. “There just aren’t enough roster spots. Kids are being misled, believing they’re worth more than they are. This is happening to thousands of players.”
According to On3 Sports, more than 4,000 FBS football players entered the NCAA transfer portal during this cycle — and more than 1,600 are still looking for a home. In men’s basketball, 2,320 players entered the portal this spring, per Verbal Commits — a jump of more than 11 percent from last year and nearly 2.5 times more than five years ago.
This trend extends beyond just football and basketball. Since the NCAA eliminated its one-year sit-out rule in 2021, tens of thousands of athletes across all sports have entered the portal — many of them two, three or even four times. Each year of the NIL era has accelerated the cycle. In 2024, the NCAA opened the door to unlimited transfers.
Combined with the backlog of COVID-era players, the result is a recruiting funnel that narrows further every season. And it’s about to get even tighter, as schools prepare for revenue sharing and potential roster caps tied to the House settlement.
Coach Trent Dilfer came to UAB with a plan to build his program through high school recruiting — but that vision didn’t hold. He watched promising redshirt freshmen get poached, impact players leave mid-development and recruiting timelines shift beneath him. Now, he’s saving scholarships for older transfers. Like most coaches, he’s frustrated by the chaos and eager for structure.
“All I need is guardrails, all I need is boundaries, all I need is where it is,” Dilfer told Birmingham’s CBS 42. “I don’t care where the goal post is, just keep it stationary… Because right now this goal post is going around 360 degrees because there’s zero leadership, there’s zero boundaries, there’s zero guardrails.”
MANAGING EXPECTATIONS
But this isn’t just about numbers. It’s about expectations — and the widening gap between what kids believe they’re walking into and what actually waits.
For years, high school athletes have been surrounded by talk of NIL money, brand building and recruiting leverage. Highlight reels and exposure camps have reinforced a simple message: play well, get noticed, get paid. But most never make it that far.
“High school kids now believe they’re entitled to compensation,” Luginbill said. “But the original intent was that if a college athlete… became a marketable commodity, they could earn income. What we’re seeing now is far removed from that.”
Even for players who eventually cash in, the road usually starts somewhere less glamorous — a Group of Five
school, a redshirt year, a position change, a climb.
“The transfer portal has made it harder for high schoolers to land spots at Power Four programs,” said Jim Cavale, CEO of Athletes.org. “Starting at a Group of Five school and working your way up may be the best path.”
BACK-END FALLOUT
While these dynamics affect every sport, the epicenter is football and men’s basketball — where the bulk of the money flows and the pressure to win immediately is highest.
According to research on signing day trends, once-powerhouse programs are producing fewer high-major signees and more D2, JUCO and NAIA placements. In other sports — baseball, wrestling, lacrosse, even track — the scholarship slots are already shrinking. If roster caps go into effect, they may vanish altogether.
Whatever happens next — roster limits, direct pay, new NIL rules — the path for high school athletes is narrowing fast. And for coaches like Evans, that means more than just navigating offers. It means trying to help his players stay in the game.
That’s why Vestavia Hills hosts two recruiting fairs each season.
“We try to drive interest, not only for our players, but for other high schools as well. There is a shared interest amongst high school coaches to give every opportunity to current players,” Evans said.
Eventually, many on both sides of the recruiting line hope there will be system sanity — or at least clarity. Until then?
“At some point, there will be a riveting documentary about the last 3 years of college football,” Evans said. “The only problem is there is too much content to choose from. I don’t even know where you start.”
NIL
Elite DB recruit says Michigan ‘stood out’ on official visit
Four-star defensive back Davon Benjamin was a surprise addition to the official visitors hosted this weekend by the Michigan football program. Benjamin, a 6-foot, 170-pound defensive back who could play cornerback or safety, was in Ann Arbor for his official visit, and despite being viewed by some recruiting experts as an Oregon lean, the No. […]

Four-star defensive back Davon Benjamin was a surprise addition to the official visitors hosted this weekend by the Michigan football program.
Benjamin, a 6-foot, 170-pound defensive back who could play cornerback or safety, was in Ann Arbor for his official visit, and despite being viewed by some recruiting experts as an Oregon lean, the No. 36 overall recruit in the 2026 class, according to the 247 Sports composite rankings, was impressed by the Wolverines.
“Michigan stood out with how serious they are about player development. They’re all about building you up on & off the field, & you can tell they’ve got a plan to help you succeed long term,” he said to Hayes Fawcett of On3.com.
Elite defensive back impressed by Michigan football visit
Michigan offered Benjamin over a year ago. Texas, Ohio State, Miami, and Oregon are all listed as “warm” on his 247 Sports recruiting profile, along with the Wolverines.
Going into the weekend, it felt like Michigan landing his commitment was going to be a long shot. But all it takes is one visit to change a recruitment. It’s possible that Michigan has done that, although it still feels like Oregon will be tough to beat.
Michigan could use another defensive back in the 2026 class, and there is no shortage of options, Benjamin included, especially since four-star cornerback Brody Jennings is looking around and sounds like he could be flipping his commitment to the Hurricanes.
Jennings also has some other official visits set with Alabama, Florida, and Georgia, all heavy hitters in college football recruiting, and in the NIL space.
Michigan’s NIL prowess will be tested in the coming weeks, but the fact that Benjamin visited and is showing a strong interest could be a sign that things have already started to turn the corner.
NIL
Social Media Reacts to Virginia Baseball Coach Brian O’Connor Leaving For Mississippi State
Things seemed to be trending towards Virginia Baseball head coach Brian O’Connor leaving to take the head coaching job at Mississippi State and it was made official tonight. O’Connor will be the Bulldog’s next head coach and now the Cavaliers will have to search for the successor to one of the top coaches in the […]

Things seemed to be trending towards Virginia Baseball head coach Brian O’Connor leaving to take the head coaching job at Mississippi State and it was made official tonight. O’Connor will be the Bulldog’s next head coach and now the Cavaliers will have to search for the successor to one of the top coaches in the country. O’Connor has been at UVA for the past 22 seasons but is leaving for a new challenge in Starkville.
This is a huge loss for UVA. O’Connor has been one of the best coaches in the country and replacing him is not going to be easy. This job should be attractive to a number of candidates, however.
With one of the biggest coaching moves in recent memory, social media had plenty of reaction to Brian O’Connor leaving for Starkville:
O’Connor had this to say about taking the job at Mississippi State:
“Mississippi State represents everything I love about college baseball — tradition, passion and a relentless pursuit of excellence. I’ve coached against this program and followed it closely for years. The atmosphere at Dudy Noble Field is nationally recognized as the best in the sport. I’m incredibly honored and grateful for the opportunity to lead a program with this kind of legacy and fan base. Mississippi State has set the standard in college baseball, and I can’t wait to get to work, build relationships and compete for championships in Starkville.”
O’Connor took over the Virginia program in 2004 and quickly elevated it into a national power. In 22 seasons, he led the Cavaliers to: O’Connor’s seven College World Series appearances are also the third most among active NCAA head coaches. Virginia had made just three NCAA appearances before his arrival. He also became the second-fastest coach in ACC history to reach 500 career wins.
O’Connor entered the 2025 season with a career record of 885-370-2 and a 362-234-1 record in ACC play. He is one of eight coaches in the history of the ACC to accumulate 700 wins and his .705 winning percentage is the highest among active NCAA coaches.
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