NIL
College basketball’s biggest winners and losers from the 2025 NBA Draft deadline to stay or go
There was plenty of drama during the final few days before the deadline for players to withdraw from the 2025 NBA Draft and return to play another season of college basketball. While Washington State’s Cedric Coward made his intentions of staying in the draft known well before Wednesday’s deadline, others kept fans, coaches and NBA teams […]

There was plenty of drama during the final few days before the deadline for players to withdraw from the 2025 NBA Draft and return to play another season of college basketball. While Washington State’s Cedric Coward made his intentions of staying in the draft known well before Wednesday’s deadline, others kept fans, coaches and NBA teams in suspense during the final hours.
Kentucky star Otega Oweh kept everyone guessing leading up to the Wednesday deadline. The potential second-round pick elected to return to Kentucky where he projects as a possible SEC Player of the Year candidate.
Another contender for that award also turned down the NBA. Auburn guard Tahaad Pettiford turned down a potential late first-round draft spot for NIL deal with the Tigers north of $2 million, a source told CBS Sports’ Matt Norlander.
2025 NBA Draft: Top late decisions of underclassmen deciding if they should withdraw or turn pro
Cameron Salerno

One of the biggest winners of the deadline was Michigan. Former UAB forward Yaxel Lendeborg, the No. 1 ranked player in the CBS Sports transfer rankings, decided to withdraw from the draft and return to college basketball as an All-American candidate. Lendeborg led the nation in double-doubles last season and was projected as a late-first-round pick after a strong showing at the NBA Draft Combine.
Here are selected winners and losers for the deadline for players to make their NBA Draft decisions.
Winner: Alabama’s Labaron Philon pulls off shocker
With 29 minutes remaining until the deadline passed to withdraw from the draft, Alabama’s NIL collective “Yea Alabama” announced that Philon would return to school. A return to Alabama wasn’t even in the cards. Philon wasn’t even a player mentioned as one to watch leading up to the deadline as someone who could return to school because he was firm about staying in the draft.
“I’m all-in on the draft,” Philon told reporters at the NBA Draft Combine earlier this month. “They weren’t surprised. They knew it already.”
With Philon back, it immediately adds firepower to Alabama’s offense. Philon was one of the best freshmen in college basketball last season, and as a projected first-round pick, it’s shocking that he decided to run it back. Alabama is one of the biggest winners for that reason alone.
Winner: Michigan’s patience rewarded
Lendeborg choosing to play another season of college basketball was one of the biggest surprises of the withdrawal deadline. It seemed like he had improved his stock enough to get selected at the end of the first round, but there is no such thing as a guarantee. Players who are projected as fringe first-round picks often rely on promises from NBA teams and their decision-makers to make a final call.
Lendeborg received a NIL package believed to be in the neighborhood of $3 million to return to school, sources told CBS Sports. Michigan loved to play with its double-big lineup last season, and Lendeborg fills a clear need as a double-double machine. With another year for Lendeborg to improve his draft stock, all parties involved could be massive winners in a year from now.
Why Yaxel Lendeborg withdrawing from the 2025 NBA Draft to play for Dusty May at Michigan is right decision
Cameron Salerno

Loser: RJ Luis Jr. makes shocking draft decision
One of the biggest surprises of the withdrawal deadline was Luis staying in the draft. The Big East Player of the Year had a breakout season for St. John’s, but returning to school and raising his stock further would’ve been the best option. After all, when Luis entered the transfer portal, he was sought out by many top-tier programs. Add on how some of those schools may have become desperate late in the recruiting cycle, and Luis could’ve gotten paid and gone to a favorable situation in college.
Nonetheless, it’s hard to knock someone’s dream of wanting to play in the NBA as soon as possible. The best-case scenario is he winds up as a mid-to-late second-round pick. Getting drafted in that range means you face an uphill climb to make an NBA roster and likely play most of the season in the G League. It was trending that Luis would never play another minute of college basketball for quite some time, but it’s still surprising.
Winner: NIL agents get paid
While players earning life-changing NIL money are the biggest winners, their respective agents are also cashing out. Several high-profile NIL deals have been reported this offseason. UCLA star Donovan Dent received around $3 million. Lendeborg cashed in on a deal around the same number. All-American PJ Haggerty bypassed the NBA Draft and transferred to Kansas State for a big payday. As my colleague Isaac Trotter wrote last month, the influx of spending comes on the heels of the House vs. NCAA settlement, which would create a full-fledged revenue-sharing model and potential de facto salary cap. In the meantime, everyone is getting paid.
Expected House v. NCAA court ruling and NIL impact on future teams being felt at 2025 Final Four (ask Auburn)
Isaac Trotter

Loser: Cedric Coward’s gain leads to Duke’s pain
Duke probably wishes Coward never attended the NBA Draft Combine. That’s an exaggeration, but his performance at the event solidified his standing as a potential first-round pick. Coward transferred to Duke after entering the transfer portal but will never suit up for the Blue Devils. The Blue Devils moved quickly to replace Coward’s production with four-star forward Sebastian Wilkins and five-star International sensation Dame Sarr out of Italy. They’ll have the returning firepower needed to compete for a national title, but not getting Coward has to sting.
Winner: Florida is primed to make another title run
The reigning national champion saw its starting frontcourt of Alex Condon and Rueben Chinyelu withdraw from the draft to return to school. Their return solidifies Florida’s frontcourt depth as the best in the country. That group gave opposing teams nightmares during the NCAA Tournament. Add in transfers Boogie Fland and Xaivian Lee, and you have a team capable of making another title run next year.
Alex Condon returns to Florida: Gators may have top frontcourt after big man withdraws from 2025 NBA Draft
Austin Nivison

Loser: Arkansas’ Adou Thiero moves on
The good news for Arkansas coach John Calipari is his streak of players drafted in the first round is likely to continue. Unfortunately for the Razorbacks, that means Thiero is not returning. Calipari’s streak started in 2008 when the Chicago Bulls selected Derrick Rose from Memphis with the No. 1 overall pick. During his 15-year stint at Kentucky, Calipari produced 37 first-rounders, 25 of which were lottery selections.
Thiero is a fringe first-round pick. He has tools that will translate to the NBA, so it wouldn’t shock anyone if a team picking in the late 20s took a chance on him. All and all, Thiero is a big loss for Arkansas. He followed Calipari from Kentucky to Fayetteville and had the best season of his college career.
Winner: SEC stars run it back
Kentucky’s Oweh and Auburn’s Pettiford are both contenders for SEC Player of the Year. Pettiford primarily came off the bench during his freshman season at Auburn but was one of Bruce Pearl’s most impactful players. Pettiford’s role will increase significantly in his second season. Oweh was one of Mark Pope’s key commitments out of the transfer portal during Year 1 at Kentucky and he finished as the team’s leading scorer last season. The Wildcats made some splashes in the transfer portal, but getting a proven two-way talent like Oweh back is a major win for Pope and his staff.
Tahaad Pettiford withdraws from NBA Draft: Sophomore guard returns to Auburn after Final Four season
Matt Norlander

Loser: NBA teams picking in the second round
The NBA Draft talent pool is shrinking with more players are returning to school. And why wouldn’t they? Players drafted in the second round face an uphill climb to make an NBA roster. Most of their time is spent in the G League. Players like Oweh, Karter Knox and Milos Uzan decided to run it back instead of taking the risk of falling out of the first round. It’s a smart decision on their part, but it makes life even harder on NBA teams in search of second-round gems. Expect an increased focus on international prospects in the second round going forward.
NIL
Ohio State football team loses out on big-time five-star recruit
The Ohio State football program has been trying to beef up its 2026 recruiting class as the summer continues. They continue to try to land some of the biggest recruits left on the board, despite some lacking NIL plans. The Buckeyes had the fifth-best recruiting class heading into Sunday. Five-star linebacker Xavier Griffin made his […]

The Ohio State football program has been trying to beef up its 2026 recruiting class as the summer continues. They continue to try to land some of the biggest recruits left on the board, despite some lacking NIL plans. The Buckeyes had the fifth-best recruiting class heading into Sunday.
Five-star linebacker Xavier Griffin made his recruiting decision on Sunday afternoon. He was choosing between the Buckeyes, Texas, Alabama, and Florida State. Heading into the day, he was an Alabama lean, but Ohio State was hoping they did enough late to grab him.
Griffin is listed as the second-best linebacker in the country. He stands at 6’3 and 200 pounds and is from Gainesville, Georgia. Ohio State was the only northern team that he had in his final list of schools. That was always going to be hard to overcome. In the end, it was too much to overcome.
The Ohio State football team loses out on five-star linebacker Xavier Griffin
Instead of picking the Buckeyes, Griffin decided to commit to Alabama. The Crimson Tide were the favorites to land him, so they ended up with him anyway. Ohio State would have loved to have gotten Griffin, but they weren’t expecting to land him, nonetheless.
If the Buckeyes are going to land another five-star recruit in this class, they would prefer it to be Felix Ojo, the second-ranked tackle in the country. Even though he had a bad day during a recent Rivals camp, he is still good enough that he could start day one if they needed him to.
James Laurinaitis has done enough recruiting in the last couple of years to know that he certainly can recruit at an elite level. Losing out on one recruit isn’t the worst thing in the world. He landed a five-star recruit just last year.
NIL
Louisville Basketball gets great news from NCAA to cap off tremendous offseason
Throughout the college basketball offseason, one major storyline to watch has been the NCAA’s waiver process for select players. Just a few days ago, the NCAA denied a waiver for Memphis center Dain Dainja to get another year, which forced him to move on to the pros. Earlier this offseason, the NCAA had already denied […]

Throughout the college basketball offseason, one major storyline to watch has been the NCAA’s waiver process for select players. Just a few days ago, the NCAA denied a waiver for Memphis center Dain Dainja to get another year, which forced him to move on to the pros.
Earlier this offseason, the NCAA had already denied a waiver to Louisville forward Aly Khalifa. This was originally a surprise, as he had redshirted this past season after transferring from BYU. However, reportedly, having already taken a redshirt year at Charlotte previously caused issues with his eligibility.
The good news for the Cardinals is that, following an appeal of the original denial, the NCAA reversed its decision.
Could not have happened to a better person. The NCAA and the appeal committee did the right thing for this young man. Aly Khalifa’s amazing story and journey continues…and will inspire thousands! https://t.co/l3zTBaPEFc
— Pat Kelsey (@patkelsey) June 27, 2025
Louisville is a consensus preseason top-25 team, thanks in part to a great transfer portal haul that includes Isaac McKneely and Ryan Conwell. 5-star prospect Mikel Brown Jr. is set to run the offense, while Kasean Pryor returns after suffering a season-ending injury.
The hope is that Khalifa will be the missing link to make the offense as good as possible. He’s one of the best passing big men in the country, and when he was at BYU, he played a key role in their elite offense, averaging 4.0 assists per game as a big man.
Khalifa and Pryor are the leading bigs for the Cardinals next season. Joining them in the frontcourt are a trio of international prospects, including Vanglis Zougris, Sanada Fru, and Mouhamaed Camara. If any of them break out into key contributors, then this team will be a contender to compete for another ACC title.
Khalifa’s stats don’t scream “all-league” on paper, but that won’t be his role. He gives the team another facilitator and takes pressure off the freshman Brown on the offense, which may be the biggest beneficiary. This news caps off what has been a great offseason for Coach Pat Kelsey and the Cardinals.
NIL
The College Basketball regular season is expanding to 32 games
More changes are coming to men’s and women’s college basketball. Over the past few months, multiple changes have occurred in college basketball, including the landmark revenue-sharing programs that will begin in July. Federal Judge Claudia Wilken approved the House v. NCAA settlement at the beginning of June. It allows schools to directly pay athletes from […]

More changes are coming to men’s and women’s college basketball. Over the past few months, multiple changes have occurred in college basketball, including the landmark revenue-sharing programs that will begin in July.
Federal Judge Claudia Wilken approved the House v. NCAA settlement at the beginning of June. It allows schools to directly pay athletes from a revenue-sharing pool capped at $20.5 million for the 2025-2026 season.
The bulk of the money will be divided among men’s and women’s basketball, football, and wrestling, with the cap projected to increase every year.
In response, the four major sports formed “Flight Funds” programs as a charitable avenue for donors to give directly to the programs or a general fund.
In addition to the revenue-sharing programs, an NCAA oversight committee made multiple changes to men’s college basketball, focusing on the pace of play.
The rule changes that were put in place include adding a coach’s challenge that can be used at any point during the game in response to an out-of-bounds call, basket interference, goaltending, or a player in the restricted area.
After the new rules were put in place, the NCAA Division I Council also approved a regular season game expansion.
NEWS: The College basketball regular season is expanding to a 32-game limit, @MattNorlander reports
Teams will not be required to, but the move allows programs to schedule more nonconference games starting in the 2026-27 season.https://t.co/sU1GXsVRue pic.twitter.com/pAmG0vJTOy
— On3 (@On3sports) June 25, 2025
CBS Sports’ Matt Norlander reports that a committee approved expanding the regular season from 31 to 32 games, beginning in the 2026-2027 season. The move was made to encourage teams to schedule better non-conference games later in the season.
The expansion ends a 19-year span of a 31-game maximum for the regular season.
Starting in the 2026-2027 season, teams can schedule an extra game, but they will not be forced to do so. Most teams are expected to increase their schedule to the new 32-game maximum.
The extra game allows teams to play a better opponent later in the season and potentially add more highly-ranked Quad wins to their NCAA Tournament resume.
Norlander notes that money is a big driving factor for the 32-game maximum. With more games comes more revenue, which can be used to pay athletes.
More Hawkeyes News:
NIL
Latest I’m hearing on 5-star EDGE Trenton Henderson
Here’s the latest of what I’m hearing on Trenton Henderson: LSU has put together a significant NIL package that—to be as transparent as possible—the competitors weren’t willing to match. This is a fluid situation and lots can still happen. LSU feels confident in where it stands with Henderson in the final days, but it looks […]

Here’s the latest of what I’m hearing on Trenton Henderson:
LSU has put together a significant NIL package that—to be as transparent as possible—the competitors weren’t willing to match.
This is a fluid situation and lots can still happen. LSU feels confident in where it stands with Henderson in the final days, but it looks as if LSU will likely be the destination if this ages consistently.
Would be a massive blow.
NIL
Michigan Football Recruiting Heater Continues After $6M Donation
© Junfu Han / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images Audio By Carbonatix The Michigan football team is hot on the recruiting trail as the month of June comes to a close. The Wolverines have racked up more than a half-dozen commitments over the last week. Coincidentally, they received a massive $6 million pledge from […]


© Junfu Han / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Audio By Carbonatix
The Michigan football team is hot on the recruiting trail as the month of June comes to a close. The Wolverines have racked up more than a half-dozen commitments over the last week.
Coincidentally, they received a massive $6 million pledge from big time booster Matt Lester amid the heater. The program continues to flaunt its deep pockets while cashing in on the recruiting trail.
The donation came as a way to cover costs associated with the newly renovated and expanded football locker room. It was made as a way of recognizing the 2023 national championship team.
More on the gift and donor from MGoBlue.com:
Through Princeton Management, a real estate property management and development company, Matt [Lester] offers a summer internship program for U-M football student-athletes. He is also a founding member of the Champions Circle NIL collective specifically for football, and supports men’s and women’s basketball, swimming and diving, and women’s gymnastics through NIL.
Lester is a major donor. He’s also a founding member of the NIL collective that funds the football team’s payroll.
The Wolverines have been known to pay for top talent in the past. We’ll get to see an example of that investment in the 2025 college football season when freshman Bryce Underwood takes the field.
The school reportedly offered $12 million to land his commitment. It’ll hope to see it pay off with another title. More help is on the way in the 2026 recruiting class.
Michigan football is on a recruiting heater.
BREAKING: Five-Star EDGE Carter Meadows has Committed to Michigan, he tells me for @on3recruits
The 6’6 235 EDGE chose the Wolverines over Ohio State, Penn State, & South Carolina
“I thank God for guiding me through it all. I’M HOME. Go Blue!!
”https://t.co/vP9hIvX9sb pic.twitter.com/TaK4mGP9J6
— Hayes Fawcett (@Hayesfawcett3) June 29, 2025
Seven new players have committed to the program this week, headlined by five-star defensive pass rusher Carter Meadows. The Wolverines beat out the rival Buckeyes for that pledge.
The other six players include the top prospect in the state of Hawaii, the second-ranked players in Missouri and Massachusetts, and four-star Texas wideout Zion Robinson.
Michigan now holds commits from the:
-No. 1 recruit in Hawaii
-No. 1 recruit in Montana
-No. 2 recruit in Missouri
– No. 2 recruit in Massachusetts
– No. 4 recruit in IllinoisMeet the commits: https://t.co/S7Md7GZ3Eg pic.twitter.com/WKPAoUnHNy
— TheWolverine.com (@TheWolverineOn3) June 28, 2025
With the newest group in the bag, the Michigan ’26 class ranks ninth in all of college football. The investment into players and facilities is paying off in the recruiting rankings. They’ll hope to see similar results on the field.
NIL
BYU QB Jake Retzlaff to Enter Transfer Portal, Per Reports
BYU QB Jake Retzlaff to Enter Transfer Portal, Per Reports originally appeared on Athlon Sports. BYU quarterback Jake Retzlaff is planning to enter the transfer portal, according to ESPN’s Pete Thamel. Sources say he has informed several members of Kalani Satake’s coaching staff and Cougars players of his plan to leave. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement This comes after Salt […]

BYU QB Jake Retzlaff to Enter Transfer Portal, Per Reports originally appeared on Athlon Sports.
BYU quarterback Jake Retzlaff is planning to enter the transfer portal, according to ESPN’s Pete Thamel. Sources say he has informed several members of Kalani Satake’s coaching staff and Cougars players of his plan to leave.
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This comes after Salt Lake Tribune’s Kevin Reynolds reported that Retzlaff was facing a seven-game suspension for violating BYU’s Honor Code tied to a civil lawsuit.
An attorney representing Retzlaff denied allegations that his client sexually assaulted a woman in 2023.
In response to a lawsuit in the Third Judicial District Court in Utah, Retzlaff’s lawyer issued a statement via a court filing on Friday. “Mr. Retzlaff specifically and categorically denies each and every and all allegations that he bit, raped or strangled [the woman], which are ridiculous and bizarre allegations, all of which are false and untrue.”
After the lawsuit was filed, BYU issued a statement saying, “The university takes any allegation very seriously, following all processes and guidelines mandated by Title IX.” However, they didn’t get into specifics on the situation. “Due to federal and university privacy laws and practices for students, the university will not be able to provide additional comment.”
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Retzlaff enters his senior season after throwing for nearly 3,000 years and 20 touchdowns to 12 interceptions last year. BYU was one win away from their first Big 12 championship appearance.
Related: Ty Goettsche Opens Up About Five-Star QB Ryder Lyons, BYU’s Surge (Exclusive)
Sitake and offensive coordinator Aaron Roderick must prepare to move forward without Retzlaff. McCae Hillstead might be the next QB on the depth chart. The transfer from Utah State threw for 399 yards and four touchdowns during his freshman season. Treyson Bourguet and Bear Bachmeier will also compete for the starting job.
BYU opens the 2025 football season on Saturday, August 30 against Portland State.
This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 29, 2025, where it first appeared.
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